- Oct 26, 2025Does God really care how I love my neighbor? (Mark 12:28-33; Luke 10:25-37)
- Oct 12, 2025Does God really care when my life is unfair? (Psalm 73)
- Oct 5, 2025A Conversation about Generosity
- Sep 28, 2025What’s In Your Hand? (John 6:1-13)
- Sep 21, 2025Generous with my abilities (pt 1) Roman 12:1-8
- Sep 7, 2025“Worship God; Use Money” (Matthew 6:19-24; 1 Timothy 6:6-10; 17-19)
- Aug 31, 2025The Wisdom of Generosity (Psalms and Proverbs)
- Aug 24, 2025Daniel Epilogue: Living where it isn’t home (Jeremiah 29:1-14; Philippians 3:17-21)
- Aug 17, 2025Have Hope: God is always there (Daniel 10-12)
- Aug 10, 2025A Prayer for the Ages (Daniel 9)
- Aug 3, 2025God is never far away (Daniel 8)
- Jul 27, 2025Hope in the middle of confusion (Daniel 7)
- Jul 20, 2025The Power of Consistency (Daniel 6)
- Jul 13, 2025God’s Graffiti (Daniel 5)
- Jul 6, 2025Once Upon A Tree (Daniel 4)

We cannot separate our declaration of our love for God from exercising love for our neighbors. As we review a most familiar parable, we discover how relevant it is to our current life circumstances.
Does God really care when my life seems unfair? In Psalm 73, a man named Asaph struggles with the inequities of life and finds that God is always there.
Pastor Scott and Joe Fick have a conversation about generosity based on Joe's experience as one who raises support for ministry.
From a very familiar scene that is recorded in all four gospels, we learn a practical lesson. God will take whatever we generously give to him and redeem it and multiply it for his glory and sometimes our amazement.
When we are transformed by the renewing of our minds, we discover again that everything, including our abilities, is God's. We serve him best when we are generous with even our abilities.
As we continue our series on Generosity, we discover that we need to keep a God-centered perspective on all we have.
In our first sermon in this new series on generosity, Pastor Scott reminds us from God's Word that generosity is at the very heart of who our God is.
In our Epilogue of Daniel, we look at how Jeremiah's letter to the exiles would have informed how Daniel chose to live. We will also see how Paul's reminder of our heavenly citizenship should guide us in our daily living in our current context.
In the final vision of Daniel. the reader is reminded that throughout the ebb and flow of history, God is still in control, and his plan is still intact. We can have hope in a God who, even when our world seems chaotic, promises us a future with Him.
In the middle of a prayer of confession for the sins of the Nation Israel, Daniel receives a vision for the future that leaves many of us confounded.
In a more detailed vision about the future Daniel reveals to us that regardless of the events on earth, God is in control and never far away.
In the first of Daniel's visions we are met with weird animals, a boastful horn, and the majesty of our God and one like a son of man that brings hope in the middle of confusion.
In a fresh look at Daniel and the Lion's Den, Pastor Scott reminds us that the most important aspect of the story is the consistent character of Daniel.
In this very familiar story from the book of Daniel, we discover more than just an amazing miracle of handwriting. We discover the importance of learning from the past and humbly applying the truth we know.
In the second dream recorded in the book of Daniel, King Nebuchadnezzar's pride is dealt a harsh blow. God does not smile on human pride.