North Pointe Beyond Sunday

The Church of Smyrna

42 min · 27. touko 2026
jakson The Church of Smyrna kansikuva

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In this episode of the Beyond Sunday podcast, Pastor Robby and Pastor James continue reflecting on Pastor Steve’s recent sermon series in Revelation, focusing this week on the church of Smyrna. They begin by noting that this letter is unusual because Jesus does not rebuke the church, but instead encourages it. The conversation centers on the suffering of the believers in Smyrna. Robby and James discuss the pressure to conform to Roman worship, the persecution that followed their refusal, and the poverty that came from losing jobs and social standing. They emphasize that Jesus connects his own suffering and resurrection to the church’s suffering, reminding them that their hardship will not শেষ in death. A major theme is how Jesus sympathizes with human suffering because he suffered himself. They discuss the idea that earthly pain is temporary and that believers are promised eternal life and glory. They also talk about the church’s call to view richness differently, since Jesus tells the Smyrna believers that they are poor but rich. The discussion then turns to Polycarp, an early church father and leader in Smyrna who was later executed for refusing to renounce Christ. Robby and James talk about his faithfulness, the witness of early Christian martyrs, and how suffering has often been a powerful testimony in church history. Later, they explore the call to pre-decide how to respond to suffering, to fear God rather than people, and to keep an eternal perspective. They close by returning to the hope of Christ’s resurrection and his promise to be with his people to the end of the age.

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jakson The Church of Thyatira kansikuva

The Church of Thyatira

Pastor Robby and Pastor James begin by discussing Sunday’s sermon in their Seven Churches of Revelation series, focusing on the church of Thyatira. They note Jesus’ introduction as the one with eyes of fire, which they say signals that hidden sin will be addressed. They talk through the church’s strengths and its major problem: it tolerated a false teacher called Jezebel. They explain that she led people toward sexual immorality and idolatry, and they connect the name to the Old Testament Jezebel as a symbol of rebellion and leading God’s people astray. They also emphasize that Jesus had given this false teacher time to repent. A major part of the conversation centers on compromise, holiness, and tolerance. They use the sermon’s food contamination illustration to show that even a little impurity matters, and they apply that idea to sin and false teaching. They say Christians cannot excuse sin because they do other good things, and they discuss how a tolerant church can become a compromised church. They also discuss the need to balance truth and love. They argue that telling the truth is not unloving when it is done gently and with care, and they compare it to a doctor giving a serious diagnosis. They say believers should not “love people into the grave,” but should tell the truth in a way that leads to life. The conversation turns to the tension between holiness and inclusivity. They define holiness as being set apart and say the church must maintain standards rather than lowering them to fit culture. At the same time, they stress that Jesus welcomes people in and then changes them, not leaving them as they are. They close with application, urging listeners to identify where they are compromising, share struggles with a trusted friend or small group, and memorize Hebrews 12:14: “Pursue peace with everyone, and holiness.” Learn more about North Pointe Church at northpointefl.org [http://northpointefl.org], and join us on Sunday mornings at 9:00 or 11:00. Do you have any questions or comments? Drop us a line at pod@northpointefl.org [pod@northpointefl.org].

10. kesä 202645 min
jakson The Church of Pergamum kansikuva

The Church of Pergamum

This episode of the Beyond Sunday podcast looks back at the Sunday sermon in the church’s series on the seven churches of Revelation, focusing on the letter to the church in Pergamum. Pastor Robby and Pastor James begin by recapping the setting of the passage and the unusual description of Jesus as the one with a sharp, double-edged sword. They spend time explaining that image as symbolic language for God’s word, which convicts, judges, and exposes the thoughts and intentions of the heart. They connect this to the idea that Jesus sees not only outward actions, but also the reasons behind them, and that the letter begins with a warning because Pergamum is addressed in a serious way. The conversation then turns to Pergamum itself, described as a city marked by persecution and by the presence of pagan worship. They say the church remained faithful in some ways, but had also allowed compromise in private life and private worship. The sermon’s warning is that they had not denied Christ openly, but had drifted in hidden ways. From there, they discuss how compromise often starts subtly. They talk about the need for prayer, Scripture, and trusted community to reveal areas where believers may be drifting. They also emphasize transparency, accountability, and the importance of having people who can speak into a person’s life. Another major theme is repentance. They explain that repentance is presented as an invitation rather than a rejection, and that God’s knowledge of believers includes both their suffering and their sin. The episode closes by focusing on identity: believers are called to live first as followers of Christ, not as citizens of culture, and to let that identity shape behavior in public and private.

2. kesä 202647 min
jakson The Church of Smyrna kansikuva

The Church of Smyrna

In this episode of the Beyond Sunday podcast, Pastor Robby and Pastor James continue reflecting on Pastor Steve’s recent sermon series in Revelation, focusing this week on the church of Smyrna. They begin by noting that this letter is unusual because Jesus does not rebuke the church, but instead encourages it. The conversation centers on the suffering of the believers in Smyrna. Robby and James discuss the pressure to conform to Roman worship, the persecution that followed their refusal, and the poverty that came from losing jobs and social standing. They emphasize that Jesus connects his own suffering and resurrection to the church’s suffering, reminding them that their hardship will not শেষ in death. A major theme is how Jesus sympathizes with human suffering because he suffered himself. They discuss the idea that earthly pain is temporary and that believers are promised eternal life and glory. They also talk about the church’s call to view richness differently, since Jesus tells the Smyrna believers that they are poor but rich. The discussion then turns to Polycarp, an early church father and leader in Smyrna who was later executed for refusing to renounce Christ. Robby and James talk about his faithfulness, the witness of early Christian martyrs, and how suffering has often been a powerful testimony in church history. Later, they explore the call to pre-decide how to respond to suffering, to fear God rather than people, and to keep an eternal perspective. They close by returning to the hope of Christ’s resurrection and his promise to be with his people to the end of the age.

27. touko 202642 min
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Questions about Politics

On this episode of the Beyond Sunday podcast, Pastor Robby and Pastor James begin a discussion about politics from a Christian perspective. They frame the conversation around how believers should engage in political issues, especially in a climate where politics seems to touch many areas of life. They first discuss whether pastors and Christians should talk about politics at all. Robby says it depends on the context, but notes that political issues are often difficult to avoid. He also explains that churches can speak about political positions, but cannot endorse specific candidates because of legal restrictions. The conversation then turns to the church’s role in relation to government. James says the church should serve as a moral compass, pointing to biblical examples such as Nathan confronting David. They emphasize that positions like pro-life teaching are presented as theological and moral convictions, not merely political preferences. They also discuss what Christians should engage in politically and what they should reject. Both speakers stress the importance of truth, unity, and wisdom, and warn against making arguments that are not clearly supported by Scripture. They caution against online debates that are driven more by the desire to win than by love for others. Later, they address party affiliation, voting, and endorsements. Robby says Christians do not have to belong to a particular party, but should evaluate parties based on biblical values. They agree that voting matters, that Christians should take part thoughtfully, and that no political candidate should receive blind trust. They close by saying they will continue the discussion in a later episode with more practical ground rules for Christians engaging in politics. Learn more about North Pointe Church at northpointefl.org [http://northpointefl.org], and join us on Sunday mornings at 9:00 or 11:00. Do you have any questions or comments? Drop us a line at pod@northpointefl.org.

22. touko 202652 min
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The Church of Ephesus

In this episode of the Beyond Sunday podcast, Pastor Robby and Pastor James begin by introducing a new sermon series on the seven churches in Revelation. They explain that the series comes after a church trip to the sites of those churches and that the first message focused on Ephesus. They give background on Ephesus as a wealthy port city that was deeply tied to Roman polytheism and the worship of Artemis. They say the gospel challenged both the city’s religious life and the economy connected to idol-making, and they note that Revelation’s letters were written to specific churches and situations. The main focus of the discussion is Jesus’ message to the church in Ephesus: they were commended for hard work, patience, and refusing false teaching, but they had lost their first love. Robby and James describe this as a church that had become outwardly faithful but inwardly cold, with religion reduced to duty and routine. They then discuss the need to keep truth and love connected. They say truth without love becomes cruel, while love without truth becomes empty and irrelevant. They also connect this to the church’s mission, emphasizing that the church is meant to equip believers to reach outward rather than become a protected fortress. The conversation turns to the idea of the priesthood of all believers. They explain that believers are not meant to depend on a special class of Christians to mediate their faith, but are called to speak about God themselves and live out the gospel. They also warn against a two-tier view of Christians and against treating church as a place where only leaders do the work. Near the end, they compare a life that only takes in teaching to the Dead Sea, which receives water but does not give it out. They conclude that the church endures when love flows outward to others, and that both truth and love must remain central to Christian life and mission.

19. touko 202648 min