Entrenched In The Truth

Not Spectators - Members

1 h 4 min · 8. kesä 2026
jakson Not Spectators - Members kansikuva

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Most people who attend church regularly have never once been asked to do anything more than show up and give. Attend the service. Enjoy the experience. Fill out a connection card. Come back next week. It is a model built for consumers — and it has produced exactly what every consumer model produces: people who are passive, dependent, and completely unprepared for the life of discipleship that Jesus Christ actually calls them to. In Week 4 of the Built series, Pastor Kevin Cox works through one of the most structurally important passages in Paul's ecclesiology — Ephesians 4:11–16 — and dismantles the consumer model from the inside out. This message exposes a centuries-old mistranslation that quietly reassigned the work of ministry from the congregation to the clergy, uncovers the Greek word katartismos and what it reveals about the true purpose of pastoral leadership, and confronts the doctrinal vulnerability that passive church attendance creates in believers who have never been equipped to stand. The goal of the church, Paul says, is not a larger crowd. It is a mature body — every joint supplying, every part working, the whole structure building itself up in love toward the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ. That body is not built by spectators. It is built by members.

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jakson Living Sacrifice kansikuva

Living Sacrifice

Seven weeks ago we began a journey together — back to the blueprint, back to the foundation, back to what God actually designed the church to be. We have covered a lot of ground. We established that this church belongs to Christ and that He is its active Head. We examined the four devotions of the early church and asked whether we are genuinely devoted to them. We confronted the spectator culture and called every member into active, gift-contributing participation in the body. We looked at what it actually means to love one another the way Jesus commanded. And last week we talked about what it looks like to depend on the Spirit's power rather than our own competence. All of it has been building toward this message. This week — Week 7 of our Built series — we come to the message that holds everything else together. Romans 12:1–2. The Living Sacrifice. Paul opens with a single word that gathers eleven chapters of the most sustained theological argument in the New Testament — therefore — and presses it toward one inescapable conclusion. Given everything God has done. Given the mercy He has shown. Given the redemption, the adoption, the Spirit, the promise of glory — here is the only proportionate response: present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God. Not a feeling. Not a spiritual experience. A decision. Specific. Dated. Embodied. Everything you are, placed on the altar of the One who gave everything for you.

Eilen1 h 27 min
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Not By Might, Not By Power

Why did Jesus tell His disciples to wait — at the exact moment the most urgent mission in human history was beginning?In Week 6 of the Built series, Pastor Kevin Cox confronts one of the most counterintuitive truths in all of Scripture: the kingdom of God does not advance because the church works harder. It advances because the church depends more. Drawing from Zechariah's word to a discouraged Zerubbabel facing an impossible rebuilding project, and from Jesus' command to His disciples to wait in Jerusalem before launching the mission of the church, this message confronts the subtle idolatry of ministry competence — the belief that strategy, talent, and organizational excellence can produce what only the Holy Spirit can actually produce.This message unpacks the Hebrew words behind Zechariah's most famous verse, traces the Greek word dunamis — the power Jesus promised His disciples in Acts 1:8 — and calls the church back to a posture this generation has largely lost: genuine, expectant dependence on the Spirit of God.

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The One Another Church

We are living in the loneliest moment in recorded human history. More connected than any generation before us — and more isolated than any generation before us. The U.S. Surgeon General has called it a public health epidemic. And into that exact cultural moment, the church carries one of the most countercultural claims in the world: a love for one another that the surrounding culture cannot produce and cannot fully explain.In Week 5 of the Built series, Pastor Kevin Cox takes the congregation into the upper room of John 13 and into the most relationally demanding passage in Paul's letters — Romans 12:9–16 — to ask what it actually looks like for a church to love the way Jesus commanded. This message confronts the gap between performed community and genuine community, unpacks the Greek word anupokritos — love without a mask — and walks through nearly a dozen specific "one another" practices that define the relational culture God designed for His church: bearing burdens, showing honor, weeping with those who weep, rejoicing with those who rejoice, and crossing every social line the world uses to divide.Jesus said the world would know His disciples by one thing — not their doctrine, not their production quality, but their love for one another. This message is a call to become that kind of community.

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Moving From Knowledge to Application

What's the gap between everything you know about the Bible and actually living it? In this teaching from Joshua 1:8 and Psalm 1:1–4, Pastor Kevin Cox identifies the bridge God designed to move us from knowledge to transformation — biblical meditation. This is not Eastern emptying of the mind, but the ancient Hebrew practice of zakar (remembering), hagah (inward reflection), and siach (going over a matter deeply) — a determined, disciplined engagement with Scripture that produces genuine insight, Spirit-illumined understanding, and practical application. Using Proverbs 15:1 as a hands-on example, Pastor Kevin walks through five concrete meditation methods you can begin practicing this week. If you've ever felt stuck between knowing the truth and living it, this message is for you.

11. kesä 20261 h 2 min
jakson Not Spectators - Members kansikuva

Not Spectators - Members

Most people who attend church regularly have never once been asked to do anything more than show up and give. Attend the service. Enjoy the experience. Fill out a connection card. Come back next week. It is a model built for consumers — and it has produced exactly what every consumer model produces: people who are passive, dependent, and completely unprepared for the life of discipleship that Jesus Christ actually calls them to. In Week 4 of the Built series, Pastor Kevin Cox works through one of the most structurally important passages in Paul's ecclesiology — Ephesians 4:11–16 — and dismantles the consumer model from the inside out. This message exposes a centuries-old mistranslation that quietly reassigned the work of ministry from the congregation to the clergy, uncovers the Greek word katartismos and what it reveals about the true purpose of pastoral leadership, and confronts the doctrinal vulnerability that passive church attendance creates in believers who have never been equipped to stand. The goal of the church, Paul says, is not a larger crowd. It is a mature body — every joint supplying, every part working, the whole structure building itself up in love toward the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ. That body is not built by spectators. It is built by members.

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