Bear Creek Community Church

Unstoppable Church 21 | How the Early Church Handled Conflict (And What We Can Learn) | Acts 15

32 min · 15 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio Unstoppable Church 21 | How the Early Church Handled Conflict (And What We Can Learn) | Acts 15

Descripción

Conflict is unavoidable. Whether it's at home, at work, or even inside the church - you're either coming out of a conflict, going into one, or preparing for one. But here's the truth that changes everything: conflict is not the problem. Your response to it is. In this episode, Pastor David walks through Acts 15 and the Jerusalem Council - one of the earliest and most significant conflicts in church history - to uncover five biblical principles for handling conflict the way the early church did. From expecting conflict to infiltrating it with wisdom, these aren't just principles for the church. They're principles for your marriage, your friendships, your workplace, and your family. Because Jesus didn't call us to be peacekeepers. He called us to be peacemakers. In this episode: * Why conflict is guaranteed - and why that's okay * The difference between a peacekeeper and a peacemaker * 5 steps the early church used to resolve conflict * Why the church has 45,000 denominations (and what that tells us about conflict avoidance) * The one word the church has misrepresented for too long Part of our Unstoppable Church series through the Book of Acts at Bear Creek Community Church (BC3) in Lavon, Texas.

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54 episodios

episode Unstoppable Church 28 | Acts 24 | Drop the Gloves artwork

Unstoppable Church 28 | Acts 24 | Drop the Gloves

Pastor David Watson opens with a candid story about his first fight with his wife Taylor, using it to set up a question that hits close to home for all of us: what do we do when relational conflict gets out of hand? Walking through Acts 24 — where Paul stands trial before the governor Felix — Pastor David draws out three practical tips for fighting well. First, we need a mediator we trust, someone who can see above our emotions and beyond our position to help bring restoration. Second, we need to speak in turn, because as James 1 reminds us, everyone should be "quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to anger." Third, and hardest of all, we need to make a resolve — because procrastination will never lead to reconciliation, and no response is still a response. But Pastor David pushes deeper than tips and techniques. The real question isn't just how we fight, but what we're fighting for. Fighting to win — like Ananias and his legal team — blows up marriages, implodes friendships, and burns relational bridges beyond repair. Fighting to restore — like Paul, who came to Jerusalem simply wanting to celebrate with the people he loved — is the way of Jesus. And the reason we can fight to restore is because Jesus already fought for us first, settling our case on the cross before we even had a defense to offer.

13 de jul de 202640 min
episode Unstoppable Church 27 | Acts 23:23-35 | What To Do When Life Isn't Fair artwork

Unstoppable Church 27 | Acts 23:23-35 | What To Do When Life Isn't Fair

What To Do When Life Isn't Fair - How a New Perspective Leads to Contentment Pastor David Watson opens with a question we've all wrestled with: what do we do when life isn't fair? He breaks down what we really mean when we say that — either we feel we deserve something we're not getting, or life hasn't met the expectations we quietly set for it. Using the story of Paul's unjust arrest and royal-yet-humiliating escort to Caesarea in Acts 23, Pastor Watson builds a compelling case that Paul had every right to feel that life was deeply unfair. Beaten five times, whipped with rods, shipwrecked three times, and now staring down the rest of his life from a jail cell, Paul's circumstances were objectively brutal. And yet, from that very jail cell, Paul writes in Philippians 4:12, "I have learned the secret of being content, whether well fed or hungry, whether in abundance or in need." Pastor Watson argues that Paul's secret wasn't a change in circumstances — it was a change in perspective. He offers two keys to unlocking that perspective shift: endure and enjoy. Endurance, he reminds us, is a Biblical value — not gritting your teeth and grinding through pain, but looking through your circumstances the way Jesus looked through the cross, knowing there was hope on the other side. And enjoyment comes when we stop measuring life against what we think we deserve and start measuring it against what we've actually earned. Romans 6:23 reminds us that "the wages of sin is death" — and yet God, in His grace, offers eternal life through Christ Jesus instead. Life isn't fair, Pastor Watson concludes, and we should thank God for that.

29 de jun de 202645 min
episode Unstoppable Church 26 | Acts 22:30-23:22 | 3 Kinds of Christian Hypocrites artwork

Unstoppable Church 26 | Acts 22:30-23:22 | 3 Kinds of Christian Hypocrites

Pastor David Watson opens with a familiar phrase — "do as I say, not as I do" — and uses it to launch into a pointed question: why are Christians hypocrites? Working through Acts 23, he identifies three types of hypocrites present in the passage. The first is the religious hypocrite, embodied by the high priest Ananias, who knew the law inside and out but whose corrupt motives led him to beat people down rather than draw them in. Pastor Watson shares a story from a tattoo parlor where a man told him he was the most authentic follower of Jesus he had ever met — precisely because so many others had acted like Ananias, wielding the Bible as a weapon rather than extending the love of Jesus. The second category is the ridiculous hypocrite, seen in the forty men who bound themselves under a curse to kill Paul without eating or drinking. Pastor Watson points out the obvious absurdity — these men were breaking God's commandments in the name of serving God. He connects this to modern phrases like "live your truth," arguing that when our truth conflicts with God's truth, we've simply made ourselves our own God. The third category, the redeemed hypocrite, is seen in Paul himself. When Paul snaps back at Ananias and then quickly corrects himself, citing Scripture, he models what it looks like to fall short and own it honestly. Pastor Watson's conclusion is clear: Jesus doesn't expect perfection, but He does call us to progress — to practice what we preach, and to live in the grace and forgiveness He purchased on the cross.

22 de jun de 202647 min
episode Unstoppable Church 25 | We All Need a Jesus Story | Acts 21-22 artwork

Unstoppable Church 25 | We All Need a Jesus Story | Acts 21-22

In a sermon from Acts 22, Pastor David Watson opens with a disarming question: if you had one chance to tell someone you loved about the good news of Jesus, what would you say? Rather than pointing to theological frameworks or rehearsed Bible verses, Pastor David turns to the Apostle Paul, who — standing on the steps of a Jerusalem jail, freshly arrested and facing a hostile crowd — chose to simply tell his own story. Paul's testimony, Pastor David notes, is the second most told story in the entire New Testament, second only to the story of Jesus himself, and its power comes from one simple truth: real stories have real power. Pastor David walks through the three-part framework Paul uses to tell his story in Acts 22. First, Paul lays out his backstory — a zealous persecutor of early Christians, educated under the great scholar Gamaliel, and on his way to Damascus to arrest more followers of the Way. Then comes the climax: a blinding light on the Damascus road, a voice calling his name, and a face-to-face encounter with the risen Jesus. Finally, Paul points to the greater story — a life now commissioned to bring the gospel to the Gentiles, no matter the cost. Pastor David argues that every believer has these same three parts to their story, whether their Jesus moment was a single dramatic instant or a slow, unfolding season of transformation. The sermon closes with a practical and personal challenge. Pastor David draws on a viral clip from comedian Theo Vaughn, who — after studying John 5 — said publicly, "I think I'm ready for a new story." Pastor David suggests that Jesus is asking the same question of everyone in the room: do you want a new story? And for those who already have one, the call is to stop buying into the lie that your past disqualifies you. Your homework for the week is to write out your story using Paul's framework — backstory, Jesus story, and greater story — because, as Revelation 12:11 reminds us, the followers of Jesus overcome not just by the blood of the Lamb, but by the word of their testimony.

1 de jun de 202638 min
episode Unstoppable Church 24 | Jesus is Better | Acts 19 artwork

Unstoppable Church 24 | Jesus is Better | Acts 19

Pastor David Watson opens with a simple but universal observation — everybody wants better. Better health, better finances, better marriages, better relationships with God. Using that as his launching pad, he dives into Acts 19 and three stories Luke records about the city of Ephesus, all of which carry the same theme: Jesus is better. Whether it's the twelve disciples who had been baptized into John's baptism but never encountered the Holy Spirit, the seven sons of Sceva who tried to borrow the name of Jesus without knowing Him, or the silversmith Demetrius rallying an entire city into two hours of confused shouting over a goddess that no longer exists — Luke's message is clear. Every substitute falls short. Every cultural noise eventually fades. But Jesus never does. Pastor David ties it all together with a single sermon-in-a-sentence: when you live for a different world, you'll live better in this one. Pointing to Matthew 6:33, where Jesus says, "Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness," and echoing Paul's words in Romans 12, he calls the church to genuine transformation — not religious performance, not cultural conformity, but a real and living relationship with Jesus. His closing challenge is both personal and missional: transforming a city starts with a transformed you. Learn more about Bear Creek Community Church in Lavon, TX. https://www.bc3.church/

18 de may de 202649 min