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God's House Christian Church Podcast

God's House Christian Church Podcast

By: God's House Christian Church
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Sermon from God's House Christian Church in Upstate South Carolina.God's House Christian Church Spirituality
Episodes
  • Guest Speaker - Its Due Season
    Mar 30 2026

    The concept of due season represents God's perfect timing for bringing His promises to fruition in our lives. Paul's instruction in Galatians 6:9 provides a roadmap for navigating this divine timing through three essential elements: persistence, promise, and perseverance.


    The challenge begins with not being weary in well doing - continuing to do what's right even without immediate results. Many believers lose focus by shifting their attention from God to circumstances, jobs, or bank accounts. However, when we're operating in God's will, He won't allow us to quit, even when we want to throw in the towel. The promise follows with the guarantee that we shall reap in due season. This isn't conditional language but a divine assurance that harvest time is coming.


    The growing process requires patience and protection. Just as a pineapple takes two years to develop its sweetness, some of God's promises operate on extended timelines because they're designed to last. During this waiting period, we must guard against the enemy's discouraging whispers and trust that God is developing something within us that cannot be rushed. The warning against fainting reminds us that receiving God's blessings requires preparation - making room by releasing old habits, outdated thinking, and anything that hinders our growth. Ultimately, the profound truth emerges that we're not waiting on our season; our season is waiting on us to mature into it.


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    32 mins
  • Lent EP5 - Gods Still Working
    Mar 23 2026

    After seasons of examining failures and working through repentance, it's time to embrace a hopeful truth: God is still actively working in your life, even during moments when His presence feels distant. The apostle Paul's confident declaration in Philippians 1:6 serves as an anchor for believers - God will complete what He started in you. This isn't empty encouragement but a divine promise backed by God's unchanging character.


    The process of spiritual growth, known as sanctification, involves progressive transformation into Christ's likeness. Unlike passive clay in a potter's hands, believers get to participate in this shaping process by choosing to yield to God's work rather than resist it. Through practices like prayer, fasting, and repentance, we position ourselves to be moldable, opening our lives to divine transformation. God's ultimate goal isn't to make you a slightly improved version of yourself, but to radically conform you to the image of His Son.


    This transformation manifests through developing the fruit of the Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. Rather than trying to complete yourself through willpower alone, identify specific areas where the Holy Spirit needs to work and cooperate with His transforming power. Your confidence in this process doesn't rest on your own strength or track record, but on God's unwavering faithfulness to finish what He began.

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    43 mins
  • Lent EP4 - Church Say Sorry
    Mar 16 2026

    The most successful churches sometimes need to repent the most, as demonstrated by the church in Ephesus in Revelations 2:1-7. Despite their impressive resume of hard work, patient endurance, and doctrinal soundness, Jesus delivered a devastating critique: they had abandoned their first love. The Ephesians were doing things right but for the wrong reasons - they could identify heresy but couldn't show compassion, were technically correct but relationally cold. Their service had become mechanical rather than motivated by love for God and people.


    Just as individuals can sin and need to repent, churches as corporate entities can sin corporately and must repent corporately - not just to God, but to the people they have harmed. Matthew 5:23-24 establishes that reconciliation must come before worship. When church people hurt people, prayer alone isn't sufficient; actual apologies and amends are required. True corporate repentance involves acknowledging specific failures, taking responsibility, apologizing publicly to harmed groups, and committing to observable change.


    Churches throughout history have participated in various forms of harm while thinking they were doing God's work - supporting systemic injustice, protecting abusers, excluding marginalized groups, ignoring suffering, and providing harsh judgment instead of grace. Specific acknowledgment is needed for specific harms to specific people groups, including LGBTQ individuals, abuse survivors, racial minorities, and the poor. Observable change must follow apologies, including seeing previously ignored needs, opening doors to the least of these, choosing faithfulness over popularity, partnering with justice organizations, and diversifying leadership. The watching world seeks honest churches that acknowledge failures and actually change, not perfect institutions or religious performance.

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    40 mins
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