City On A Hill Sermons

Formed, Not Fixed - Damon Davis

41 min · 3. maj 2026
episode Formed, Not Fixed - Damon Davis cover

Description

Romans 8:28 is often quoted as a promise that everything will eventually work out in our favor—but that’s only part of the story. In this message, Pastor Damon unpacks the deeper meaning behind the verse, revealing that the “good” God is working toward is not merely better circumstances, but transformation. Paul continues the thought in verse 29, showing that the true goal is that we would be conformed to the image of Christ. God is not just rearranging situations—He is shaping people. The focus is not on what happens to us, but what God is producing in us. Even when outcomes don’t make sense, God is still working. Just as creation was called “good” despite its potential for hardship, and the potter reshapes marred clay, God is forming something greater in us through every season. This message will shift your perspective—from chasing better results to trusting God’s greater purpose. The promise isn’t that life will get easier. The promise is that you will become more like Him.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the City On A Hill Sermons community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

289 episodes

episode Breaking False Covenants - Damon Davis artwork

Breaking False Covenants - Damon Davis

In this sermon, the message comes from Exodus 34, where God makes covenant with His people and warns them not to enter into covenant with the inhabitants of the land. The Lord declares that His name is Jealous, revealing that His jealousy is not insecurity or envy like we often think of in human terms, but His holy refusal to share His people with any rival. He is zealous over the covenant He has made, and He calls His people to destroy every altar, break every image, and remove every snare that would pull their hearts away from Him. The sermon reminds us that what we come into agreement with can become a covenant in our lives. God does not want His people joined to disease, depression, anxiety, doubt, or anything that sets itself up as a rival to His promise. Where sickness tries to speak, He offers healing. Where depression tries to rule, He brings joy. Where anxiety rises, He gives peace. Where doubt takes hold, He calls us back to faith. Through passages like Psalm 115 and Psalm 135, the message shows the danger of trusting in lifeless idols and reminds us that we become like what we worship. God’s jealousy is His passionate love calling us away from every false covenant and back into full devotion to Him.

14. juni 202636 min
episode Whereas I Was Blind, Now I See - Damon Davis artwork

Whereas I Was Blind, Now I See - Damon Davis

In this sermon, the message comes from John 9 and the story of the man who was blind from birth. When the disciples saw his condition, they immediately tried to assign blame, asking whether his blindness was caused by his sin or his parents’ sin. But Jesus revealed a greater purpose: this man’s condition would become a place where the works of God would be made manifest. The sermon reminds us that some things we have walked through may not have been for our destruction, but so God could receive glory through our encounter with Him. The message also points to the way Jesus healed the man, using clay made from the dirt and sending him to wash in the pool of Siloam. Not every encounter with Jesus is clean, polished, or sanitary. Sometimes healing involves mud, process, obedience, and a willingness to go wash. This sermon reminds us that Jesus is not afraid of our mud moments. He will meet us in the dirt, bring us out of the miry clay, set our feet upon a rock, and give us a testimony that says, “Whereas I was blind, now I see.”

7. juni 202634 min
episode The Death of Self - Damon Davis artwork

The Death of Self - Damon Davis

In this sermon, the message looks at the words of Jesus in Matthew 16:24-26, where He calls His disciples to deny themselves, take up their cross, and follow Him. While the phrase “my cross to bear” is often used today to describe a hardship or burden someone has to live with, this sermon points back to what those words would have meant when Jesus first spoke them. A cross was not a symbol of inconvenience or struggle. It was a sign of death, surrender, shame, and the complete end of self-rule. The sermon challenges us to see that Jesus was not simply calling His followers to endure difficulty, but to let the self-life be crucified. The part of us that fights to preserve itself, live on its own terms, and demand its own way is the part that must be denied. Through Matthew 16 and Luke 9, the message reminds us that following Jesus means losing the life we tried to save, so that we may truly find life in Him. Taking up the cross daily is the declaration that our old demands no longer rule us, and that we now belong fully to Christ.

4. juni 202631 min
episode Shut Your Pine Hole Lip - Damon Davis artwork

Shut Your Pine Hole Lip - Damon Davis

In this sermon, the message centers on the command of Psalm 46:10: “Be still, and know that I am God.” In a world filled with confusion, constant noise, social media, opinions, fear, and endless voices, the believer must learn that not every voice deserves attention. Just as Jesus stood in the storm in Mark 4 and spoke, “Peace, be still,” there are times when the voices of fear, doubt, and confusion must be brought under the authority of Christ. The sermon reminds us that doubt speaking does not mean someone is not a believer. It simply means there is a voice that must be silenced. Through the power of God, we are called to cast down imaginations, pull down strongholds, and bring every thought into obedience to Christ. Some voices are not meant to be reasoned with, entertained, or allowed to keep speaking. By the authority God has given us, we can declare peace, put a muzzle on fear, and be still in the knowledge that He is God.

31. maj 202635 min
episode A Savior That’ll Get in the Dirt - Damon Davis artwork

A Savior That’ll Get in the Dirt - Damon Davis

In this sermon, “A Savior That’ll Get in the Dirt,” the message looks at John 13 and the powerful moment when Jesus washed His disciples’ feet. While this passage is often taught as an example of humility and service, this sermon goes deeper into the tension of the room. The Lord of all knelt down in the place of a servant, showing us that God is not distant, unreachable, or standing over us like a divine officer waiting to condemn us. Instead, Jesus reveals Himself as the King who serves and the Savior who is willing to come low. The focus of the message is Peter’s resistance when Jesus came to wash his feet. The feet represented the lowest, dirtiest part of the person, the place that came in contact with the dust of the earth. Jesus was not just washing away dirt, He was washing away the belief that the dirt could keep Him away. This sermon reminds us that Christ desires complete union with His people, even in the lowest and dustiest places of our lives. He is not afraid of our dirt, and He meets us there to cleanse, restore, and bring us fully into fellowship with Him.

28. maj 202638 min