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Recent episodes
"The Ascension" Sunday Morning June 21st
Jun 26, 2026
44m 26s
"Christ Builds His Church" Sunday Morning June 14th
Jun 16, 2026
51m 41s
"The Beauty of Christ-Like Relationships" Sunday Morning June 7th
Jun 11, 2026
55m 58s
"God's Word for His People" Sunday Morning May 31st
Jun 5, 2026
23m 13s
"Kingdom Citizens of Truth" Sunday May 24th
Jun 3, 2026
49m 50s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/26/26 | ![]() "The Ascension" Sunday Morning June 21st | The sermon explores the theological significance of Christ's ascension, arguing that this event marks the beginning of his heavenly ministry rather than its conclusion. It details how Jesus is currently exalted as King, actively reigning over all creation and interceding for believers as High Priest. The message emphasizes that the ascension enables the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, granting the church power for witness and direct access to God's presence. Furthermore, it assures believers of their eternal security through Christ's preservation and the promise of a prepared home in heaven. Ultimately, the teaching encourages confidence in Christ's future return to establish final justice and judgment. | 44m 26s | ||||||
| 6/16/26 | ![]() "Christ Builds His Church" Sunday Morning June 14th | The opening chapter of Acts presents us with one of the most powerful transitions in all of Scripture: the passing of the baton from Jesus to His church. Just as Olympic relay runners must execute a flawless handoff at full speed, Christ transfers the ministry of the gospel to ordinary, broken people filled with the Holy Spirit. This passage reveals three foundational truths that anchor our faith journey: we can trust God's timing, even when He calls us to wait; we can trust God's power, because the Christian life isn't about trying harder but about receiving divine strength; and we can trust God's plan, which involves using imperfect people like us as witnesses. The disciples stood gazing into heaven after Jesus ascended, perhaps hoping He would return immediately, but the angels redirected them with a clear message: get your head in the game. The mission field is out there, not up there. We are called to be mobilized, carrying the gospel from our Jerusalem to the ends of the earth. This isn't about white-knuckling our way through life or becoming motivational speakers for Christianity. It's about allowing God to change our hearts in ways only He can, stepping into obedience even when it seems impossible, and trusting that the same power that raised Christ from the dead is available to us today. | 51m 41s | ||||||
| 6/11/26 | ![]() "The Beauty of Christ-Like Relationships" Sunday Morning June 7th✨ | conflict resolutionChrist-like relationships+4 | — | The Beauty of Christ-Like RelationshipsColossians 3:12-15 | — | conflictforgiveness+5 | — | 55m 58s | |
| 6/5/26 | ![]() "God's Word for His People" Sunday Morning May 31st✨ | PentecostHoly Spirit+4 | — | Acts 2 | Galileans | PentecostHoly Spirit+6 | — | 23m 13s | |
| 6/3/26 | ![]() "Kingdom Citizens of Truth" Sunday May 24th✨ | truthfulnessintegrity+3 | — | Community Baptist ChurchKingdom Citizens of Truth+1 | — | truthoath-taking+5 | — | 49m 50s | |
| 6/2/26 | ![]() "The God of Peace and the Crushed Enemy" Sunday Evening May 17th✨ | gospel truthsspiritual warfare+4 | — | Romans 16:17–20 | — | peacevictory+6 | — | 33m 48s | |
| 5/28/26 | ![]() "Through the Eyes of the Beloved Disciple" Sunday Morning May 17th✨ | following Christhumble service+3 | — | Community Baptist Church | — | beloved discipleJesus+5 | — | 51m 57s | |
| 5/22/26 | ![]() "Passing Down a Sincere Faith" Sunday Morning May 10th✨ | spiritual legacygenerational faith+3 | — | — | — | sincere faithspiritual legacy+6 | — | 38m 09s | |
| 5/6/26 | ![]() "Running to Christ" Sunday Morning May 3rd✨ | restorationredemption+4 | — | John 21 | — | restorationredemption+5 | — | 52m 11s | |
| 5/1/26 | ![]() "The Seven Signs" Sunday Morning April 26th✨ | miraclesfaith+3 | — | John's Gospel | — | miraclesJohn's Gospel+4 | — | 49m 44s | |
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| 4/24/26 | ![]() "Worship-Centered Prayer" Sunday Night April 19th✨ | worship-centered prayerconfession of sin+5 | — | Jeremiah | — | worshipprayer+5 | — | 35m 57s | |
| 4/21/26 | ![]() "Seeing, Believing, and Being Sent" Sunday Morning April 19th✨ | faithevidence+5 | — | John 20:19-29 | — | peacefaith+7 | — | 40m 21s | |
| 4/17/26 | ![]() "Effective Prayer" Sunday Evening April 12th✨ | prayerfaith+4 | — | James 5 | — | effective prayerJames 5+6 | — | 25m 01s | |
| 4/16/26 | ![]() "Weeping and Waiting" Sunday Morning April 12th✨ | resurrectiongrief+5 | — | John 20:11-18 | — | resurrectionMary Magdalene+7 | — | 53m 18s | |
| 4/15/26 | ![]() "He Saw and He Believed" Sunday Morning April 5th✨ | resurrectionfaith+4 | — | John 20:1-10 | — | resurrectionEaster+8 | — | 45m 39s | |
| 4/2/26 | ![]() "The Greatest Funeral Ever Recorded" Sunday Morning March 29th✨ | burial of JesusPassover+4 | — | John 19:31-42 | — | Jesusburial+5 | — | 44m 21s | |
| 3/26/26 | ![]() "Received by the Father" Sunday Morning March 22nd✨ | theologyinfant salvation+4 | — | Community Baptist ChurchMatthew 19+2 | — | infantssalvation+6 | — | 57m 51s | |
| 3/19/26 | ![]() "It Is Finished" Sunday Morning March 15th✨ | crucifixion of Christredemptive plan+4 | — | Community Baptist ChurchJohn 19:16-30 | — | crucifixionsalvation+5 | — | 41m 41s | |
| 3/18/26 | ![]() "Prophetic Vision" Sunday Evening March 8th | Daniel chapter 8 presents a prophetic vision revealing God’s sovereign control over world empires and the ultimate fate of His people, using symbolic imagery of a ram, a goat, and a rising little horn to depict the Medo-Persian, Greek, and Seleucid empires, culminating in the reign of Antiochus IV, who desecrates the temple and brings judgment upon Israel. Though the vision portrays a time of intense suffering and divine judgment, it underscores that evil’s reign is finite, measured by God’s perfect timing—specifically 2,300 evenings and mornings, fulfilled in the Maccabean restoration of the temple. The passage reveals God’s mercy in allowing time for repentance, even as He judges the people when their transgressions reach their limit, and calls believers to faithful service amid suffering, knowing that Christ has already won the victory. The vision, though terrifying in detail, ultimately points to God’s faithfulness, the temporary nature of earthly power, and the enduring truth that He remains in control of history. | 32m 28s | ||||||
| 3/10/26 | ![]() "Behold Your King" Sunday Morning March 8th | This powerful exploration of John 19:1-16 confronts us with a profound question that echoes from a kindergarten hallway into the throne room of heaven: who is really the boss of our lives? Through the lens of Jesus's trial before Pilate, we're invited to examine three devastating examples of authority rejection—the soldiers who mocked, Pilate who compromised, and the Jewish leaders who betrayed their own covenant. What makes this passage so compelling is the doctrine of concurrence it reveals: God's sovereign decree and human moral responsibility are not enemies but companions in the unfolding of redemptive history. Jesus stands beaten and humiliated, yet declares the stunning truth that no earthly authority exists except what has been given from above. This isn't just ancient history—it's a mirror held up to our modern hearts that still resist divine authority in favor of personal autonomy. The warning is clear and urgent: rote religion without genuine faith can blind us to the very Savior we claim to worship. When the Jewish leaders declared 'we have no king but Caesar' mere hours after singing 'we have no king but thee,' they revealed how easily religious activity can mask spiritual rebellion. We're challenged to examine whether we've truly bowed our knee to Christ's kingship over every area of life, or whether we're simply going through Christian motions while keeping Jesus at arm's length from our real decisions and desires. | 43m 13s | ||||||
| 3/3/26 | ![]() "The Kingdom Cannot Be Crushed" Sunday Morning March 1st | This powerful exploration of John 18:12-40 confronts us with a stunning contrast between human faithlessness and divine faithfulness. We witness Jesus standing bound in chains before religious and political authorities, yet His kingdom continues to advance unstoppably. The narrative alternates between Christ's interrogations and Peter's denials, showing us that God's kingdom is built not with perfect people, but with struggling believers who fail yet are not abandoned. Peter, who boldly declared he would die for Jesus, crumbles under simple questioning from a servant girl. His three denials remind us that even the most devoted followers wrestle with fear and weakness. Yet this is precisely the point: God's kingdom is composed of people who struggle to love and follow Jesus. If our lives are filled with spiritual struggle, we are in good company. The religious leaders, meanwhile, maintain outward piety while orchestrating the murder of the innocent. They refuse to enter Pilate's residence to avoid ceremonial defilement, yet they are condemning the very Author of the Law they claim to protect. This exposes a sobering truth: we can become so consumed with religious performance that we miss the God we claim to serve. When Jesus declares that His kingdom is not of this world, He reveals that God's purposes cannot be thwarted by earthly powers. The kingdom advances through spiritual transformation, not political maneuvering or social engineering. Most remarkably, in the exchange of Barabbas for Jesus, we see ourselves. A guilty insurrectionist walks free while the innocent Son of God is condemned. This is the gospel in shadow form: Christ taking our place, bearing our condemnation, so we who deserve death might walk free. Whatever injustice we face, God can redeem it for His purposes, just as He transformed history's greatest injustice into humanity's salvation. | 47m 06s | ||||||
| 2/24/26 | ![]() "Safe in Christ" Sunday Morning February 22nd | This sermon explores John 18:1-11, focusing on Jesus' arrest in the Garden of Gethsemane. Unlike the Synoptic Gospels that emphasize Christ's humanity and anguish, John's account highlights Jesus' divine authority and sovereign control over the events leading to the cross. The sermon reveals how Jesus willingly stepped forward to protect His disciples and fulfill His mission, demonstrating that all believers are eternally secure in Christ because they are protected by His power and provided for through His sacrificial love. The central theme emphasizes that Jesus didn't merely endure the cross—He willingly chose it, drinking the cup of God's wrath so believers wouldn't have to face eternal judgment. Key Points: John's Gospel records events to prove that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, so that by believing we may have life Jesus is portrayed as the second Adam who succeeds in the garden where the first Adam failed When Jesus declared "I am" (ego eimi), He used God's covenant name, causing the soldiers to fall to the ground—demonstrating His divine power Jesus protected His disciples by stepping forward and commanding the soldiers to let them go, fulfilling His promise that He would lose none of those the Father gave Him Peter's attempt to defend Jesus with a sword was actually disobedience to Christ's command and misunderstood the nature of God's kingdom Jesus willingly drank "the cup" of God's wrath on the cross, taking the judgment that all sinners deserve Three applications: (1) Jesus doesn't leave us when life grows hard—He leads us through; (2) Jesus doesn't leave us when we wander and fall—He forgives and restores; (3) Jesus doesn't leave us in our sin—He atones and makes us new Scripture Reference: Primary: John 18:1-11 Supporting passages: John 13:1-4 (upper room discourse), John 17:12 (high priestly prayer), John 20:31 (purpose statement), Exodus 3 (I AM), Philippians 2:9-11 (every knee will bow), Psalm 23 (the Lord leads), Psalm 75:8 (cup of God's wrath), Isaiah 51:22 (cup taken from our hand), 2 Corinthians 5:21 (the great exchange) | 43m 39s | ||||||
| 2/23/26 | ![]() "The Mission of the Church" Sunday Morning February 15th | This sermon addresses the fundamental mission of the church as defined by the Great Commission in Matthew 28. Pastor Shawn Alexander emphasizes that the church must understand its clear mission - to make disciples of all nations - and actively participate in fulfilling it both locally and globally. He challenges the congregation to avoid becoming a "luxury tour bus" focused on comfort and maintenance, and instead embrace the urgency of an "ambulance" responding to spiritual life-and-death situations. The mission shapes everything the church does, from worship to ministry to individual Christian living. The sermon concludes by highlighting Community Baptist Church's two-fold approach: engaging the local community through relational evangelism and extending their reach globally through strategic gospel partnerships and church planting efforts. Key Points: Mission shapes everything a church does and defines its character and purpose The Great Commission is a clear imperative: "Go" and "Make" disciples with Christ's authority What's at stake is not just temporal life and death, but eternal spiritual life and death for every person Discipleship is simply moving people one step closer toward Jesus, whether saved or unsaved Churches face the danger of replacing mission with maintenance and comfort God does the saving work, but He uses His disciples as the means to accomplish His purposes Local engagement begins where you are - in your neighborhood, workplace, school, and community Global extension multiplies the gospel through church planting and strategic gospel partnerships The church must be mobilized and urgent, not passive observers on a comfortable tour Both individual and corporate participation in mission is essential Scripture Reference: Matthew 28:16-20 (The Great Commission) Colossians 1:28-29 | 44m 39s | ||||||
| 2/11/26 | ![]() "A Biblical View of Marriage" Sunday Night February 8th | Jesus, in the Sermon on the Mount, elevates the standard of righteousness beyond mere legal obedience, calling His listeners to a deeper, heart-level commitment that reflects God’s original design for marriage. He reaffirms the sanctity of marriage as a divine institution established at creation, where a man and woman become one flesh, and thus no human authority can dissolve what God has joined. While acknowledging that sexual immorality provides biblical grounds for divorce, Jesus emphasizes that reconciliation should always be the first and preferred path, not an escape from responsibility. The sermon underscores that modern cultural views of marriage—marked by unrealistic expectations and easy dissolution—contradict the biblical vision of marriage as a covenant reflecting God’s faithful love. Ultimately, Jesus calls His followers to pursue holiness, grace, and restoration, seeing marriage not as a personal fulfillment but as a sacred reflection of divine loyalty, and urging the church to uphold this truth with both conviction and compassion. | 36m 43s | ||||||
| 2/10/26 | ![]() "One Body, Many Members" Sunday Morning February 8th | This sermon explores the nature of the church as a unified yet diverse body of believers, drawing from Paul's teaching in 1 Corinthians 12. The message emphasizes that Christians are not meant to live as isolated individuals but as interconnected members of Christ's body. The unity of the church is not based on common interests, similar personalities, or shared life stages, but on the organic life found in Christ through the Holy Spirit. At salvation, believers are fully baptized into one body and indwelt by the Spirit, making them complete members regardless of their background or maturity. The sermon challenges the Western mindset of rugged individualism and calls believers to embrace both unity and diversity within the church. True unity requires sacrifice—of preferences, comfort, time, resources, and habits—for the sake of the gospel. The message concludes by emphasizing that a diverse yet unified church becomes a powerful testimony to the watching world of God's supernatural grace and power. Key Points: The church is a living organism, not merely an organization or club; members are vital parts of a body, not just participants in a group Unity in the church is organic, rooted in our life in Christ, not in human similarity or common interests At salvation, believers receive the full indwelling of the Holy Spirit and are completely united to Christ—there are no second-class Christians or partial members Unity does not mean uniformity; God intentionally designed the church to be diverse with many different members and gifts God sovereignly arranged each member in the body according to His choosing; there are no accidental or unnecessary members Preferences, while not sinful, become dangerous when they turn into non-negotiables and idols that threaten unity Real unity requires sacrifice: of comfort, preferences, resources, time, habits, and ultimately selfishness Cultural assumptions can be invisible to those within a culture but obvious to those outside it; we must recognize and set aside cultural superiority A unified yet diverse church displays God's wisdom, grace, and supernatural power to a watching world The church is a partnership, not a performance; members should live as connected parts sharing life together in Christ Scripture Reference: 1 Corinthians 12:12-27 (primary passage) Ephesians 4:15-16 Colossians 1:17-18 Acts 9:4 | 41m 29s | ||||||
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