Castlebar Christian Fellowship

He Calls You Friend

1 h 0 min · I går
episode He Calls You Friend cover

Beskrivelse

In this message from Romans 5:1–11, Pastor Cathal Duffy shares a powerful illustration from the American War of Independence involving a preacher named Peter Miller, who walked 60 miles to secure an execution pardon from George Washington for his "worst living enemy"—a local man who bitterly hated and persecuted him. While a noble act of mercy, Pastor Cathal shows it is only a faint shadow of what Jesus did for us: Christ did not merely walk for His enemies; He died in their place on the cross to secure their full pardon and make them friends of God. Moving from the foundational reality of being justified by faith alone, the message highlights how the wall of partition and the fear of judgment have been permanently removed, leaving believers with absolute peace with God and open access to His presence. Pastor Cathal challenges the church to be the most positive people in the world, rejecting a legalistic mindset or a "hang-dog expression" that relies on performance or assumes God's love grows hot and cold based on human behavior. Using the analogy of a tea bag that reveals its true strength only when landed in hot water, he explains that biblical hope is not fragile wishful thinking, but an unshakeable guarantee that allows us to actively rejoice in life's pressures, knowing that suffering produces endurance, sterling character, and a deeper confidence in God's promises. Through the Holy Spirit, an abundant, unrationed stream of unconditional love has been poured into our hearts, reminding us that we are loved with an everlasting love and called to live out our obedience as a joyful response of pure gratitude for a completed rescue that allows God to look at us and call us friend.

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101 Episoder

episode He Calls You Friend cover

He Calls You Friend

In this message from Romans 5:1–11, Pastor Cathal Duffy shares a powerful illustration from the American War of Independence involving a preacher named Peter Miller, who walked 60 miles to secure an execution pardon from George Washington for his "worst living enemy"—a local man who bitterly hated and persecuted him. While a noble act of mercy, Pastor Cathal shows it is only a faint shadow of what Jesus did for us: Christ did not merely walk for His enemies; He died in their place on the cross to secure their full pardon and make them friends of God. Moving from the foundational reality of being justified by faith alone, the message highlights how the wall of partition and the fear of judgment have been permanently removed, leaving believers with absolute peace with God and open access to His presence. Pastor Cathal challenges the church to be the most positive people in the world, rejecting a legalistic mindset or a "hang-dog expression" that relies on performance or assumes God's love grows hot and cold based on human behavior. Using the analogy of a tea bag that reveals its true strength only when landed in hot water, he explains that biblical hope is not fragile wishful thinking, but an unshakeable guarantee that allows us to actively rejoice in life's pressures, knowing that suffering produces endurance, sterling character, and a deeper confidence in God's promises. Through the Holy Spirit, an abundant, unrationed stream of unconditional love has been poured into our hearts, reminding us that we are loved with an everlasting love and called to live out our obedience as a joyful response of pure gratitude for a completed rescue that allows God to look at us and call us friend.

I går1 h 0 min
episode The Father of Faith cover

The Father of Faith

In this Father's Day message from Romans 4, Pastor Cathal Duffy uses a humorous rhyme about a frog paddling out of a bowl of milk to dismantle the deeply flawed idea that we can somehow rescue ourselves or earn our way to heaven through hard work and performance. Unpacking the accountancy term "credited," Cathal explains that biblical justification means God takes the flawless righteousness of Jesus Christ and deposits it directly into our empty accounts as a completely free gift of grace. While historical culture often airbrushed figures like Abraham and King David into perfect superheroes, scripture shows they were highly flawed men who were accepted purely because they cast themselves on God's unmerited mercy. Quoting C.S. Lewis to demonstrate that faith is the art of holding onto truth despite shifting moods, Cathal challenges the church to look past impossible circumstances – just as Abraham looked past his own "dead" body and Sarah's dead womb – and fully trust in the resurrected power of a great God.

21. juni 20261 h 0 min
episode The Solid Rock cover

The Solid Rock

Preaching from Psalm 33, Cathal Duffy delivers an encouraging message titled The Solid Rock, focusing on God's sovereign rule over a chaotic and shaky world. Drawing a parallel to the uncontainable excitement seen in football stadium crowds, Cathal highlights that a redeemed and forgiven church has the ultimate reason to fill God's house with vibrant, joyful, and fresh praise. The sermon breaks down exactly why we can completely trust the Lord: His Reliable Word & Creative Power: God's words perfectly match His works, holding the creative authority to speak creation into existence. His Superior Plans: While human schemes, political shifts, and military might inevitably fail, the eternal gospel plan of God's heart stands completely firm across all generations. His Perfect Knowledge: God's thorough understanding of our lives translates into complete, loving pastoral care and protection. Ultimately, the message moves the believer from an enthusiastic shout of praise into a state of quiet, active Christian confidence—fully resting on the character of the Giver rather than the stability of our circumstances.

14. juni 20261 h 0 min
episode The Rock Christ Jesus cover

The Rock Christ Jesus

Guest speaker David Stevenson brings an incredibly liberating and encouraging word from Matthew 16:13–20, unpacking what it truly means to be used by God. Set against the highly superstitious, pagan backdrop of Caesarea Philippi, Jesus presents His disciples with the ultimate question: “Who do you say I am?”. David unpacks Peter’s landmark confession—"You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God"—and clarifies the vital text that follows. In the original Greek, Peter is called Petros (a small stone), while the church is built upon Petra (a massive rock structure)—meaning the church is not anchored on a flawed human being, but constructed on the immovable rock of Christ Jesus Himself. David uses this framework to directly tackle the lie that we must be flawless or "special" to have a purpose in God's kingdom. He fires off a rapid list of heavily flawed, ordinary Bible characters—from Noah’s drunkenness and Moses’ stutter to Elijah’s deep depression, Rahab's prostitution, and Peter’s own volatile temper—proving that God consistently chooses the unqualified and qualifies them through grace. David powerfully notes the stark difference between the enemy and the Holy Spirit: the devil acts as the accuser who throws past, forgiven sins in our faces, whereas the Holy Spirit convicts us solely to draw us up closer to Christ. Comparing believers to distinct, hand-chosen building stones rather than mass-produced bricks, David concludes with a passionate altar call. He reminds the congregation that Jesus did not just conquer the gates of Hades to save us by the skin of our teeth, but to completely smash the chains of past trauma, addiction, and shame, launching us into a victorious, abundant life.

7. juni 20261 h 0 min
episode Stand Firm cover

Stand Firm

Continuing the series in Ephesians, Cathal Duffy delivers a realistic and encouraging message on the spiritual battles embedded in ordinary, everyday Christian living. Cathal addresses two common extremes – being completely obsessed with the enemy or dismissing spiritual warfare entirely – and calls believers to take the biblical reality seriously. Using the historical framework of World War II, he compares the cross to D-Day: the decisive, ultimate victory over Satan has already been won, even though fierce skirmishes continue until Christ returns in judgment. Believers live in the tension between the "now and the not yet," but they are never left without resources. Cathal breaks down the command to “be strong in the Lord,” explaining that this continual empowering is something God does to us as we draw close to Him. He walks through the pieces of the full armour of God – truth, righteousness, the gospel of peace, faith, salvation, and the Word of God – showing how they shield our minds and lives. Ultimately, the message concludes with an urgent call to persistent prayer, highlighting that while prayer is not listed as a weapon, it is given the greatest prominence as the ultimate expression of our dependence on God.

31. mai 20261 h 0 min