One More Point

Mens Womens Ministry

39 min · 14. kesä 2026
jakson Mens Womens Ministry kansikuva

Kuvaus

This conversation explores the vital importance of gender-specific ministry spaces within our church community. While we gather together in mixed settings most of the time, there's something powerful about creating intentional spaces where men can be men and women can be women. The discussion reveals how women often struggle with questions of worth and value, battling loneliness and the lie that they have nothing to offer. Meanwhile, men wrestle with isolation, pride, and the constant temptation to prove themselves through performance rather than resting in God's grace. What emerges is a beautiful picture of how biblical community should function - not just gathering for the sake of gathering, but coming together with purpose so we can scatter well into our families, workplaces, and neighborhoods. The challenge is clear: we need to move beyond comfortable circles and safe conversations. We're called to see the newcomer, invest in cross-generational relationships, and love Jesus more than we love our hobbies or our need for approval. Whether it's studying 2 Corinthians together or serving at a community event, these ministry spaces become training grounds where we discover our identity isn't found in what we do or how we measure up, but in whose we are.

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16 jaksot

jakson Mens Womens Ministry kansikuva

Mens Womens Ministry

This conversation explores the vital importance of gender-specific ministry spaces within our church community. While we gather together in mixed settings most of the time, there's something powerful about creating intentional spaces where men can be men and women can be women. The discussion reveals how women often struggle with questions of worth and value, battling loneliness and the lie that they have nothing to offer. Meanwhile, men wrestle with isolation, pride, and the constant temptation to prove themselves through performance rather than resting in God's grace. What emerges is a beautiful picture of how biblical community should function - not just gathering for the sake of gathering, but coming together with purpose so we can scatter well into our families, workplaces, and neighborhoods. The challenge is clear: we need to move beyond comfortable circles and safe conversations. We're called to see the newcomer, invest in cross-generational relationships, and love Jesus more than we love our hobbies or our need for approval. Whether it's studying 2 Corinthians together or serving at a community event, these ministry spaces become training grounds where we discover our identity isn't found in what we do or how we measure up, but in whose we are.

14. kesä 202639 min
jakson "I always believed in God, but I hated Him."-Nate & Julieth Kruse kansikuva

"I always believed in God, but I hated Him."-Nate & Julieth Kruse

What happens when our faith journey takes us far from home, literally and spiritually? This conversation explores the profound challenges of identity, belonging, and authentic relationship with God through the lens of two remarkable stories. We discover how growing up as a third culture kid—caught between multiple worlds and cultures—can leave us feeling rootless and disconnected, even while serving in ministry. The honesty here is refreshing: one person shares about leading worship, attending Bible college, and doing all the right Christian things while simultaneously experiencing a crisis of faith so deep it led to anger at God and a year away from church. Yet through this darkness, we see God's patient mercy at work. The turning point came not through a dramatic spiritual experience, but through raw honesty—admitting the anger, the doubts, the feeling of being lost—and through people who refused to let go. We learn that Christian community isn't just a nice addition to our faith; it's absolutely essential. We cannot walk this journey alone. Whether we're navigating cultural displacement, wrestling with our inherited faith, or simply trying to figure out who we are apart from our family's beliefs, we need mentors who will speak hard truths in love, friends who will pursue us when we're pulling away, and a church family that sees us and invites us in. The message is clear: authenticity with God and vulnerability with others are the pathways through which healing flows.

1. kesä 202649 min
jakson Don't Be A Moron kansikuva

Don't Be A Moron

As we conclude our journey through the Sermon on the Mount, we encounter Jesus presenting us with stark choices that define the trajectory of our spiritual lives. Through powerful metaphors of gates, sheep, trees, and houses, we're confronted with an uncomfortable truth: proximity to religious activity is not the same as relationship with Christ. The narrow gate isn't narrow because God is exclusive, but because it requires something countercultural—complete surrender. We're challenged to examine whether we're building our lives on the solid foundation of knowing Jesus or merely stacking up impressive religious résumés. The metaphor of two houses facing identical storms reveals that our foundation determines our survival, not our ability to avoid difficulty. What makes this passage particularly convicting is the warning about those who will say 'Lord, Lord' and point to their prophecies, miracles, and mighty works, only to hear 'I never knew you.' This isn't about doing more; it's about being rooted in relationship. The call to examine our fruit, recognize false teachers by their long-term impact, and ensure our houses are built through the costly work of digging deep into the Rock reminds us that authentic faith requires more than Sunday attendance—it demands daily surrender and persistent prayer.

17. touko 202646 min
jakson Yo' Momma Prays kansikuva

Yo' Momma Prays

What if the prayers we've been offering aren't being answered because we've misunderstood the very nature of prayer itself? This exploration of Matthew 7:7-11 challenges us to move beyond one-time requests and embrace the radical persistence Jesus commands. The Greek verbs 'ask, seek, knock' aren't casual suggestions—they're active imperatives calling us to continual, escalating pursuit of God. Like a child who first calls out, then searches the house, then knocks on the closed door, we're invited into an increasingly intimate quest. But here's where it gets uncomfortable: Jesus illustrates this persistence through stories of shameless begging and relentless badgering. These aren't flattering portraits, yet they reveal a profound truth—God isn't annoyed by our persistence; He's honored by it. The sermon unpacks six potential barriers to answered prayer: unconfessed sin, unforgiveness, dishonoring our spouse, failing to actually pray, praying with wrong motives, and missing that God might have something better planned. Each barrier invites honest self-examination. Are we quick to confess? Do we harbor bitterness? Do we honor our spouse as a co-heir of grace? Most challenging is recognizing that sometimes our unanswered prayers aren't rejections but redirections toward something greater than we could imagine. This isn't about formulas or spiritual hacks—it's about knowing the Father's heart so deeply that we can't help but run to Him, again and again, with everything we carry.

10. touko 202647 min