A Seattle Church

The Myth of Magic

48 min · 14 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Myth of Magic

Descripción

We live in a world that constantly promises us shortcuts to power, transformation, and fulfillment. This message from Acts 8 confronts us with the story of Simon the Sorcerer, a man who wanted God's power without God's presence, who sought the gifts without the Giver. The passage challenges us to examine what paths we're taking in our spiritual journey. Are we following the well-trod path of surrender and intimacy with Jesus, or are we being seduced by the easier route that promises transformation without vulnerability, healing without repentance, and resurrection without death? The central revelation here is that every city and every person lives under a spell of some kind. For us in modern times, these spells might be individualism, scarcity mindset, workaholism, or the technological ease that promises instant answers without the hard work of formation. We're invited to recognize that we cannot gain God's power without His person and without His passion. True transformation requires us to die to ourselves, to surrender control, and to trust that the difficult path of discipleship is actually the good path. This isn't just about avoiding obvious sins; it's about recognizing how we've become consumers rather than disciples, how we want friendship with benefits from Jesus rather than covenant relationship. The call is clear: repent from the magic that manipulates spiritual forces for personal gain, and instead embrace worship that says 'I surrender' rather than 'I leverage.' We're reminded that we can be baptized and still not fully surrender, that we can join the movement and still seek the power of our old life. The invitation is to become transitional characters who break the curse in our families and our city, saying 'it ends with us' and stepping into the freedom that only comes through the Holy Spirit.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de A Seattle Church!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

180 episodios

episode The Myth of Magic artwork

The Myth of Magic

We live in a world that constantly promises us shortcuts to power, transformation, and fulfillment. This message from Acts 8 confronts us with the story of Simon the Sorcerer, a man who wanted God's power without God's presence, who sought the gifts without the Giver. The passage challenges us to examine what paths we're taking in our spiritual journey. Are we following the well-trod path of surrender and intimacy with Jesus, or are we being seduced by the easier route that promises transformation without vulnerability, healing without repentance, and resurrection without death? The central revelation here is that every city and every person lives under a spell of some kind. For us in modern times, these spells might be individualism, scarcity mindset, workaholism, or the technological ease that promises instant answers without the hard work of formation. We're invited to recognize that we cannot gain God's power without His person and without His passion. True transformation requires us to die to ourselves, to surrender control, and to trust that the difficult path of discipleship is actually the good path. This isn't just about avoiding obvious sins; it's about recognizing how we've become consumers rather than disciples, how we want friendship with benefits from Jesus rather than covenant relationship. The call is clear: repent from the magic that manipulates spiritual forces for personal gain, and instead embrace worship that says 'I surrender' rather than 'I leverage.' We're reminded that we can be baptized and still not fully surrender, that we can join the movement and still seek the power of our old life. The invitation is to become transitional characters who break the curse in our families and our city, saying 'it ends with us' and stepping into the freedom that only comes through the Holy Spirit.

14 de jun de 202648 min
episode It Wasn't Supposed to Be This Way artwork

It Wasn't Supposed to Be This Way

What happens when we do everything right, yet life still falls apart? Through the story of Stephen in Acts 7, we encounter a faithful servant who checked every box, served with integrity, and spoke truth with divine wisdom, only to face brutal persecution and death. His story shatters the formula fallacy we often cling to, the belief that right living plus hard work automatically equals desired outcomes. We've all been there, haven't we? The diagnosis that shouldn't have happened. The relationship that ended despite our best efforts. The job loss after years of integrity. The unanswered prayers for healing. Stephen's experience reveals a profound truth: faithfulness doesn't guarantee earthly success, but it does guarantee divine presence. In his final moments, Stephen sees Jesus standing at the right hand of God, the only time in Scripture where Jesus isn't seated. This legal posture of a witness advocating for another reveals that even when our stories don't end as we planned, Jesus stands with us, for us, as our eternal advocate. The invitation isn't to follow a formula, but to release our grip on outcomes and trust the One who never leaves us, even in crushing disappointment.

7 de jun de 202642 min
episode When Fire Scatters Seeds artwork

When Fire Scatters Seeds

What if the most devastating moments in our lives are actually God's way of planting us exactly where we need to be? This message takes us deep into Acts 8, where we discover that persecution meant to destroy the early church became the very mechanism God used to spread the gospel beyond Jerusalem's walls. Through the powerful imagery of South Africa's King Protea flower, which requires fire to release its seeds, we see a stunning parallel: sometimes we need the heat of crisis to break open what God has locked within us. The scattered believers weren't running in defeat; they were being intentionally sown across new territories. Philip, a simple deacon who served tables, found himself in Samaria, a place Jews actively avoided for 700 years, yet this became the site of miraculous breakthrough and great joy. We're challenged to examine our own scattering seasons, those painful transitions we've interpreted as punishment or failure, and recognize them instead as divine planting. The grassroots church, the everyday believers, became the primary missionaries who shook the world. This isn't about waiting for official programs or perfect timing; it's about the overflow of an encounter with Jesus that we simply cannot contain. Wherever the Spirit plants us, whether in boardrooms or dark alleys, Christ has already been there before us, preparing the soil for harvest.

31 de may de 202645 min
episode Empowering the Called artwork

Empowering the Called

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.

24 de may de 202636 min
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.

17 de may de 202652 min