Revive Church Podcast Network

Recognizing, Joining, and Supporting What God is Doing - 06.28.26 - Tim Corbin

45 min · Eilen
jakson Recognizing, Joining, and Supporting What God is Doing - 06.28.26 - Tim Corbin kansikuva

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The sermon walks through Acts 11 and shows that God’s people are called to recognize, join, and support what God is doing in the world. After the Gentiles receive the Holy Spirit in Acts 10, the church in Jerusalem has to decide how it will respond to God moving in a way they did not expect. Peter helps them recognize that this was not his idea or strategy, but the clear work of God, and their criticism turns into worship in Chapter 11.  From there, the Gospel spreads to Antioch through unnamed believers, showing that God often does His greatest work through ordinary people who simply speak about Jesus. Barnabas arrives, sees the grace of God, encourages the church, and brings Saul into the work so disciples can be made and strengthened. The chapter ends with the Gentile church supporting the Jewish believers during a famine, showing that the Holy Spirit moves the church toward worship, mission, generosity, and service. The central invitation is to pray, “Holy Spirit, what do You want to show me?” and then have the courage to recognize, join, and support what He is already doing.  Find out more about us at revivearvada.org

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jakson Recognizing, Joining, and Supporting What God is Doing - 06.28.26 - Tim Corbin kansikuva

Recognizing, Joining, and Supporting What God is Doing - 06.28.26 - Tim Corbin

The sermon walks through Acts 11 and shows that God’s people are called to recognize, join, and support what God is doing in the world. After the Gentiles receive the Holy Spirit in Acts 10, the church in Jerusalem has to decide how it will respond to God moving in a way they did not expect. Peter helps them recognize that this was not his idea or strategy, but the clear work of God, and their criticism turns into worship in Chapter 11.  From there, the Gospel spreads to Antioch through unnamed believers, showing that God often does His greatest work through ordinary people who simply speak about Jesus. Barnabas arrives, sees the grace of God, encourages the church, and brings Saul into the work so disciples can be made and strengthened. The chapter ends with the Gentile church supporting the Jewish believers during a famine, showing that the Holy Spirit moves the church toward worship, mission, generosity, and service. The central invitation is to pray, “Holy Spirit, what do You want to show me?” and then have the courage to recognize, join, and support what He is already doing.  Find out more about us at revivearvada.org

Eilen45 min
jakson Fixed vs. Growth Mindset - 06.14.26 - Kyle Morris kansikuva

Fixed vs. Growth Mindset - 06.14.26 - Kyle Morris

The sermon uses the contrast between a fixed mindset and a growth mindset to show that, with Jesus, no person, situation, relationship, sin pattern, or mission field is beyond transformation. In Acts 9, Saul’s story moves from violent opposition to bold witness, reminding us that what looks final to us is never final to God. The message highlights how Saul’s preparation, opposition, and eventual acceptance through Barnabas all point to the power of the Gospel to change anyone and anything. Peter’s healing of Aeneas and the raising of Tabitha further show that Jesus breaks into situations that seem completely fixed, bringing healing, life, and faith. The sermon centers on Acts 9:31, calling Revive to be a church that walks in both the fear of the Lord and the comfort of the Holy Spirit, pursuing holiness while encouraging and championing one another. In the end, the invitation is to reject fixed mindsets, believe Jesus is still saving, healing, restoring, and transforming, and come alongside someone this week with the encouragement of the Spirit.  Find out more about us at revivearvada.org

15. kesä 202649 min
jakson We are worse than we think, but more loved than we could ever imagine - 06.07.26 - Kyle Morris kansikuva

We are worse than we think, but more loved than we could ever imagine - 06.07.26 - Kyle Morris

The sermon walks through the conversion of Saul in Acts 9, showing that Saul was not searching for Jesus, but Jesus was searching for him. Saul was a highly educated, deeply religious Pharisee who sincerely believed he was serving God while violently persecuting the church, yet Jesus met him on the road to Damascus and transformed him by grace. The message emphasizes that if there is hope for Saul, there is hope for all, reminding us to keep praying for prodigals and lost loved ones because no one is beyond the reach of Christ. Saul’s story also shows that the Gospel both confronts and consoles us: we are worse sinners than we think, but more loved than we could ever imagine. Through Ananias and Barnabas, the sermon highlights the courage and cost of extending grace, forgiving enemies, and welcoming transformed people into the family of God. In the end, Saul becomes Paul, a bold witness for Jesus, showing that the same Gospel that saves us also compels us to ask, “Lord, what do you want me to do?”  Find out more about us at revivearvada.org

8. kesä 202650 min
jakson The Desert Road - 05.31.26 - Tim Corbin kansikuva

The Desert Road - 05.31.26 - Tim Corbin

This sermon walks through Acts 8:26-40 and the story of Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch, showing that the mission of Jesus is truly unstoppable because the Holy Spirit is always leading His people toward those He is already preparing. Tim highlights how Philip obeyed when God called him away from a fruitful ministry in Samaria and onto a hidden, inconvenient desert road, reminding us that God’s mission is not measured by crowd size but by faithfulness to follow His voice. The Ethiopian man was searching, hungry, and reading Isaiah 53, and Philip simply came alongside him as a “spiritual tour guide,” pointing him to the good news of Jesus. The sermon challenges us to listen for the Spirit, pay attention to the people God has placed in our lives, ask “Who is my one?”, and take next steps of obedience, including baptism. In the end, the Ethiopian goes on his way rejoicing, Philip continues preaching, and the Gospel keeps moving because God is still drawing people to Jesus through ordinary believers who are willing to follow Him down the desert road.  Find out more about us at revivearvada.org

1. kesä 202639 min
jakson The Gospel to Everyone and Everywhere - 05.24.26 - Kyle Morris kansikuva

The Gospel to Everyone and Everywhere - 05.24.26 - Kyle Morris

This sermon from Acts 8 shows how God used persecution, suffering, and even the death of Stephen to push the gospel beyond Jerusalem and into Judea and Samaria, proving that what the enemy meant for evil, God used to move His mission forward. As the church scattered, ordinary believers carried the good news with them, reminding us that the mission belongs to every Spirit-filled follower of Jesus, not just pastors or church leaders. Through Philip’s ministry in Samaria, we see that the gospel crosses boundaries, brings joy where it is least expected, and confronts counterfeit spirituality that wants spiritual power without surrender. The story of Simon exposes the danger of being near the things of God without truly being submitted to God, while the Samaritans receiving the Holy Spirit shows that Jesus is building one united church under one Lord. The call of the sermon is clear: every Christian is sent by Jesus, empowered by the Holy Spirit, and invited to live and love like Jesus right where they are, carrying the gospel to everyone and everywhere.  Find out more about us at revivearvada.org

26. touko 202643 min