A Seattle Church

Discipleship Over Comfort

52 min · 17 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Discipleship Over Comfort

Descripción

Guest Pastor, Brady Rector, Continues our Church on Fire series in Acts 5, as we witness a Church on Fire refusing to let fear, opposition, or suffering extinguish the work of God. The apostles are arrested, threatened, beaten, and publicly opposed, yet they continue proclaiming Jesus with courage and joy. This message challenges us to examine whether we’re living for the approval of people or the applause of God, reminding us that true discipleship isn’t about knowing more about Jesus, but actually following Him no matter the cost. Through the bold obedience of the early church, we’re invited to take our faith out from under the bowl, trusting that what God ignites cannot be put out. Even in suffering, God refines us, spreads His fire through us, and transforms our pain into deeper joy, mercy, courage, and intimacy with Christ.

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177 episodios

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Continuing our Church on Fire series in Acts 6:1-7, we encounter a pivotal moment in the early church where Greek-speaking widows were being neglected in the daily distribution of food. This wasn't just a logistical problem but a moment of real injustice within a thriving, growing community. What makes this passage so relevant is its honest portrayal that even in revival, even when miracles are happening and the church is expanding, people can still slip through the cracks. The apostles' response teaches us something revolutionary: growth doesn't automatically mean health. They refused to either spiritualize away the problem or burn themselves out trying to fix everything alone. Instead, they chose wisdom, appointing seven men characterized not by talent or charisma, but by wisdom, character, and being full of the Spirit. This challenges our modern culture that celebrates giftedness over character. The message confronts our tendency to overachieve, to earn validation through endless work, and to carry burdens we were never meant to bear alone. It reminds us that God has always seen the overlooked, from Hagar in the wilderness to David in the fields. When we feel unseen despite our achievements, we're invited to remember that God looks at the heart, not the outward appearance. The call is clear: we must share leadership, empower others, and remember that some of our holiest work may never receive human applause, but God sees it all.

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episode Discipleship Over Comfort artwork

Discipleship Over Comfort

Guest Pastor, Brady Rector, Continues our Church on Fire series in Acts 5, as we witness a Church on Fire refusing to let fear, opposition, or suffering extinguish the work of God. The apostles are arrested, threatened, beaten, and publicly opposed, yet they continue proclaiming Jesus with courage and joy. This message challenges us to examine whether we’re living for the approval of people or the applause of God, reminding us that true discipleship isn’t about knowing more about Jesus, but actually following Him no matter the cost. Through the bold obedience of the early church, we’re invited to take our faith out from under the bowl, trusting that what God ignites cannot be put out. Even in suffering, God refines us, spreads His fire through us, and transforms our pain into deeper joy, mercy, courage, and intimacy with Christ.

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We return to our Church on Fire sermon series in Acts 5. This passage confronts us with one of Scripture's most uncomfortable stories: the deaths of Ananias and Sapphira. With this difficult passage lies profound grace. We're invited to examine the deadly difference between image management and authentic integrity. The contrast is striking—Barnabas, whose very name means 'son of encouragement,' freely gives everything out of genuine joy, while Ananias and Sapphira, whose names ironically mean 'God is gracious' and 'beauty,' choose performance over honesty. The issue wasn't that they kept some money back—it was theirs to do with as they pleased. The tragedy was their decision to pretend, to seek honor for a sacrifice they didn't actually make. This passage challenges us to ask: Are we more concerned with being seen by others for who we pretend to be, or being known by God and community for who we truly are? The remedy isn't perfection but humility—the courage to confess our brokenness rather than curate our image. In a culture obsessed with virtue signaling and social media performance, this ancient story speaks powerfully to our modern struggle. God can work with our honest failure, but hypocrisy grieves His heart because it blocks the very vulnerability through which healing flows.

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Loving God with Your Soul

How is your soul? Not how was your week, not how you're feeling, but how is the very essence of who you are—the soil of your existence? Drawing from the Parable of the Sower in Matthew 13, we're invited to examine whether our souls are truly receptive to the transformative work God wants to do within us. The message challenges a common misconception: we don't have a soul, we are a soul. Our entire being—body, mind, emotions, and spirit—forms an integrated whole that God desires to cultivate. Like John Wesley discovered on his journey from religious striving to genuine transformation, many of us know all the right things and do all the right behaviors, yet our soil remains unreceptive. We may have been in church our whole lives, yet find ourselves stuck in the same patterns, the same struggles, the same spiritual plateau. The diagnosis is clear: we have the right beliefs and the right behaviors, but the wrong soil. God isn't looking for our performance; He's looking for our receptivity. He's sowing seeds of His kingdom into our lives constantly, but the question remains—are we hard-hearted, shallow-rooted, or overcrowded with the worries and wealth of this world? Or are we becoming good soil that produces fruit thirty, sixty, even a hundredfold?

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