Crossroads Church Aiken

S2 E22 Regime Change: Who Am I?

39 min · 5 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio S2 E22 Regime Change: Who Am I?

Descripción

Colossians 1:4-8Many believers struggle with feeling unqualified to share their faith, asking "Who am I to tell others about Jesus?" The story of Epaphras, a converted Gentile from a pagan background, shows that God uses ordinary people to carry His extraordinary message. Epaphras didn't need a perfect resume or theological training - he simply shared the gospel and transformed three cities. You don't need to be eloquent or powerful because the Word of God carries the power, not the messenger. Your identity comes from who you serve, and if you serve Jesus Christ, you're qualified to share the hope you possess with others who desperately need it.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Crossroads Church Aiken!

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

36 episodios

episode S2 E21 What is your Foundation? Guest Billy Sampson artwork

S2 E21 What is your Foundation? Guest Billy Sampson

1 Corinthians 3:10-15 Every believer will face the Judgment Seat of Christ, where our works and service will be evaluated for rewards. This isn't about salvation, which is already secure in Jesus, but about how we've lived after being saved. Paul compares our lives to building construction - we all start with the same perfect foundation of Christ, but we choose what materials to build with. Gold, silver, and precious stones represent works done for God's glory with pure motives, while wood, hay, and stubble represent selfish or prideful service. God judges by quality and motive, not quantity or size. The key question is why we do what we do - are we serving for recognition or truly for Christ's glory? Our works follow us into eternity, creating a legacy that impacts generations.

27 de may de 202645 min
episode S2 E20 Regime Change: Writing My Epistle artwork

S2 E20 Regime Change: Writing My Epistle

Colossians 1:1-3 Paul's prison letters to the Colossians and Ephesians reveal the power of unwavering commitment to God's calling. Despite being literally chained to a Roman guard, Paul continued his ministry by writing some of the most influential letters in the New Testament. He wrote to the Colossian church even though he had never visited them personally, demonstrating that gospel fellowship transcends geographical boundaries and that we can minister to believers we have never met face to face. The Colossian believers faced multiple threats including false teaching that denied Christ's sufficiency, syncretistic heresy that blended different beliefs together, worship of angelic hierarchies, extreme ascetic practices, and requirements to follow Jewish ceremonial laws. Paul's central message emphasized that Christ must be supreme in all things and needs no supplements or additions to His work. He measured church health not by attendance numbers or programs, but by the visible fruit of the gospel in people's lives and their spiritual maturity. Paul's example challenges modern believers to examine what might be chaining them and preventing them from fulfilling God's calling. His commitment remained strong regardless of persecution, physical limitations, or difficult circumstances. He prioritized the spiritual welfare of others over his own comfort and safety, living by the principle that to live is Christ. This calls us to consider our own faithfulness to God's calling and whether we allow excuses, fears, or circumstances to silence our witness for Christ.

18 de may de 202638 min
episode S2 E18 Shaken Foundation Exhaustion to Exultation artwork

S2 E18 Shaken Foundation Exhaustion to Exultation

Psalm 13 Life has a way of leading us into overwhelming seasons where tomorrow feels uncertain and today seems unbearable. David, the shepherd boy who became king, understood this intimately as he wrote Psalm 13 while literally hiding in caves and running for his life from King Saul. His experience reveals a profound truth about how God works in our lives during difficult seasons. David's journey from anointing to throne wasn't immediate. After Samuel anointed him as king, he returned to shepherding, served in Saul's court, and eventually found himself as a fugitive. This pattern of blessing followed by waiting is common in God's work - He often calls us to something greater, then places us in holding patterns where He can develop our character. David faced the tension between his divine calling and his current circumstances, experiencing betrayal from the very king he served faithfully. Psalm 13 demonstrates David's honest struggle with God's apparent silence, crying out four times with the question How long? Yet this raw honesty is exactly what God desires from us. David's progression teaches us to express our frustrations honestly, remember God's unchanging character, and trust His perfect timing. The remarkable transformation from questioning God's presence to declaring praise happens not because circumstances change, but because David remembers God's faithfulness. His cave experiences became construction zones for his character, preparing him for kingship. Similarly, our dark seasons serve a purpose in God's plan, building something eternal within us while we learn to trust His mercy even before seeing the outcomes we desire.

4 de may de 202644 min