First Baptist Church of Jacksonville

Matthew 5:16

36 min · 28. juni 2026
episode Matthew 5:16 cover

Description

Let your light shine before others so that they may see your good works and glorify God. In this message from Matthew 5:16, Pastor Scott Connell reveals that light's nature is to illuminate darkness—and as followers of Jesus, you are the light of the world. Your light shines through three dimensions: character transformation grounded in the fruits of the Spirit, words of truth spoken in love, and acts of compassion and generosity. This calling belongs to the church collectively—you are "a thousand points of light" in Jacksonville. But light only fulfills its purpose when it shines; hidden under a basket, it's useless. Whether through sin, compromise, laziness, fear, or helplessness, many conceal their light. Jesus calls you to engage your dark world beneficially through good works performed from a pure heart that wants God glorified, not yourself.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the First Baptist Church of Jacksonville 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

397 episodes

episode Matthew 5:16 artwork

Matthew 5:16

Let your light shine before others so that they may see your good works and glorify God. In this message from Matthew 5:16, Pastor Scott Connell reveals that light's nature is to illuminate darkness—and as followers of Jesus, you are the light of the world. Your light shines through three dimensions: character transformation grounded in the fruits of the Spirit, words of truth spoken in love, and acts of compassion and generosity. This calling belongs to the church collectively—you are "a thousand points of light" in Jacksonville. But light only fulfills its purpose when it shines; hidden under a basket, it's useless. Whether through sin, compromise, laziness, fear, or helplessness, many conceal their light. Jesus calls you to engage your dark world beneficially through good works performed from a pure heart that wants God glorified, not yourself.

28. juni 202636 min
episode Dreams: How God Does and Does Not Reveal Himself While We are Sleeping artwork

Dreams: How God Does and Does Not Reveal Himself While We are Sleeping

Dreams reveal God's purposes, prepare the world for Jesus, and point to the need for his Word. In this message from Genesis 41, Pastor Heath Lambert reveals three truths about biblical dreams: God uses dreams for revelation—speaking clearly to covenant people like Joseph and confusingly to outsiders like Pharaoh to exalt a covenant member and glorify himself; God uses dreams throughout Scripture to prepare for Jesus—from Joseph's dreams to the dreams surrounding Jesus's birth, all pointing toward the Messiah; and God is not using dreams for new communication today—after Jesus's resurrection, the Bible records no more dreams from God because we now have the complete revelation in Christ. Once Jesus came, died, and rose, we no longer need dreams. What we need is the Word of God and knowledge of who Jesus is and what he did for us.

28. juni 202640 min
episode Help for Hard Times artwork

Help for Hard Times

You're at your low point when suffering teaches you what you need most. In this message from Genesis 40, Pastor Heath Lambert shows how Joseph's simple statement—"Do not interpretations belong to God?"—reveals three transformations: Let hard times teach you to be humble by removing pride and self-exaltation; let hard times teach you to care by noticing others' troubles instead of fixating on your own; and let hard times teach you to honor God by giving him credit and telling the truth even when it costs you. Joseph goes from a boastful dreamer to a humble servant, and his low point of imprisonment becomes the path to his exaltation. Just as Jesus suffered to prove God rescues his people, your low point is not the end of your story—God is in the business of bringing his people through.

21. juni 202637 min