Grow Anyway
In this Mother’s Day message from John 2 at Oasis Church Kingman, we continue the journey from “why” Jesus to “my” Jesus by exploring what it means to be invited into a growing relationship with Christ. The chapter opens with Jesus’ first miracle at a wedding in Cana. Water becomes wine, and through this sign Jesus begins revealing His glory. But the miracle is about more than provision—it is about invitation. Jesus is not simply performing signs to impress people; He is inviting people into relationship. The message begins by reflecting on the God-given design of women as life-givers. The Hebrew phrase Ezer Kenegdo, often translated “helper,” carries the deeper idea of a lifesaver or rescuer. Women bring life, nurture, and restoration into broken places. That theme connects beautifully to Jesus, who steps into human brokenness to bring life and transformation. As the chapter unfolds, we see two very different responses to Jesus. Some witnessed the miracles and believed only in His name superficially. They liked what He could do, but they did not truly know Him. John tells us that Jesus would not entrust Himself to them because He knew their hearts. They wanted signs without surrender, miracles without relationship. This message presses into the difference between knowing about Jesus and actually knowing Him. The invitation of Jesus is relational and reciprocal. Through belief and surrender, we are born again into the family of God. Just as a child is born into relationship with a parent and gradually grows through attachment, trust, and formation, spiritual growth happens through ongoing relationship with Christ. The teaching draws a powerful connection between early childhood development and spiritual maturity. In the first years of life, children experience extraordinary growth physically, mentally, and emotionally. In the same way, believers are invited into intentional growth with God. Relationship is not automatic. It is formed through time, trust, obedience, and consistent connection. The message also explores the idea of imprinting and attachment. Just as unhealthy attachments shape human development, misplaced spiritual attachments shape our relationship with God and others. But the gospel offers hope: no matter what unhealthy patterns or attachments exist, Jesus invites people into healing, maturity, and transformation starting today. Growth with God is not random or magical. It is intentional. Spiritual disciplines, time in God’s presence, and obedience to what He has already revealed are all part of becoming spiritually mature. Jesus is not simply inviting people to admire Him. He is inviting people to follow Him, grow with Him, and become transformed by Him. Oasis Rhythm Learn – What is my faith currently built on—signs, emotions, knowledge, or surrender? Grow – How much time am I actually spending with God versus simply knowing about Him? Overflow – What is one thing God has already shown me that I need to start living out? Subscribe for weekly teachings and Bridge Bible studies from Oasis Church as we grow in relationship with Christ and learn to live transformed lives.
15 episodios
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