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Journey 2 (Part 1)-No Other Way Than Through Fire
Jun 22, 2026
Unknown duration
SUNDAY EXTRA: Bonus Round: The Council Nobody Asked For (But Everyone Needed)
Jun 17, 2026
Unknown duration
Journey 1: The Gospel is Launched
Jun 15, 2026
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SUNDAY EXTRA: Finding Comfort in God's Sovereignty
Jun 11, 2026
Unknown duration
SUNDAY EXTRA: What Uncomfortable Obedience Looks Like
Jun 3, 2026
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/22/26 | ![]() Journey 2 (Part 1)-No Other Way Than Through Fire | Guest speaker, Josh Hofford, opens with a word of encouragement to every father in the room — reminding them that their assignment was given by God Himself, that it is eternal and essential, and that God will not run out on them or their children. From there, Josh anchors the message in a sweeping passage covering Acts 15-17, tracing Paul's second missionary journey across roughly 1,300 miles on foot. The big idea Josh returns to throughout the message is this: God often redirects our plans to accomplish His greater mission, and faithfulness matters far more than our comfort. Josh walks through a series of moments where everything seemed to be going wrong for Paul and his team — the painful split with Barnabas, closed doors from the Holy Spirit, imprisonment in Philippi — and shows how God was not moving them out of the way, but moving them into position. Through each setback, God provided: Timothy joined the team, Lydia and her entire household became the first European converts to the gospel, a demon-possessed slave girl was set free, and a Philippian jailer on the verge of suicide came to faith along with his whole family. None of this was what Paul had originally planned. Josh closes by bringing the message home with two pointed questions: Where are you tempted to quit? And what would obedience look like if you pressed on anyway? Drawing from Acts 17:6 — the declaration that Paul and his companions had "turned the world upside down" — Josh reminds the congregation that the gospel still has that same radical power today, and that Hope Church's own mission teams, both in Folsom, California and Southeast Asia, are continuing that very same mission. | — | ||||||
| 6/17/26 | ![]() SUNDAY EXTRA: Bonus Round: The Council Nobody Asked For (But Everyone Needed) | In this bonus episode of the Sunday Extra podcast, Pastor Matt fills in some important context before the church moves into the second missionary journey in Acts 15. Specifically, he walks through the Jerusalem Council found in Acts 15:1-35, where a dispute arose after Jewish believers from Judea began teaching that circumcision according to the law of Moses was required for salvation. Paul and Barnabas strongly opposed this view, and the council — including Peter, Paul, Barnabas, and James — gathered to settle the matter. The council's conclusion was decisive: salvation is by grace alone, through faith in Jesus Christ — Jesus plus nothing. As Peter put it in Acts 15:11, "We believe that we will be saved through the grace of our Lord Jesus, just as they will." While Gentile believers were encouraged to avoid certain practices like food sacrificed to idols and sexual immorality, these were not requirements for salvation but practical steps meant to promote unity and fellowship between Jewish and Gentile believers. | — | ||||||
| 6/15/26 | ![]() Journey 1: The Gospel is Launched | Randall Robinson, a longtime member and Antioch graduate of Hope Church, opens by sharing his own story of being commissioned and sent to Kansas City to help plant a church — a story that mirrors the very passage he's preaching from. Picking up in Acts 13–14, he walks the congregation through Paul's first missionary journey with Barnabas, beginning at the church in Antioch where the Holy Spirit called them out while the believers were already actively worshiping, fasting, and seeking God. From there, Paul and Barnabas traveled through Cyprus and into the region of Galatia, going first to the synagogues and then to the Gentiles, boldly proclaiming the gospel in ways tailored to each audience — while keeping the message itself unchanged. Randall draws out five key points from these two chapters: the mission starts with God's initiative, the gospel must be proclaimed clearly, the gospel will be both received and rejected, the mission advances through resilient faith, and the glory for the results belongs to God alone. He's especially careful to remind the congregation that when people reject the gospel, they are not rejecting the person sharing it — they are rejecting God, and it is God who is ultimately responsible for the outcome. Closing with a personal reflection on God's faithfulness through job loss, illness, and transition, Randall challenges every believer to live sent, learn to share the gospel clearly, expect resistance, and hold the results with an open hand before the Lord. | — | ||||||
| 6/11/26 | ![]() SUNDAY EXTRA: Finding Comfort in God's Sovereignty | No description provided. | — | ||||||
| 6/3/26 | ![]() SUNDAY EXTRA: What Uncomfortable Obedience Looks Like | This week, Pastors Matt, Jeremy, Jake, and Luke dive deeper into Sunday's sermon on Acts 10:1–11:18 — one of the longest continuous narratives in the entire book of Acts (66 verses!). Why did Luke dedicate so much space to the conversion of Cornelius? And what does it mean for us today? In this episode: Why the Cornelius account is a major turning point in Acts — and in all of church history The "But God" moments hidden in this passage (and throughout Scripture) The religious categories of the first century: pagan Gentile → God-fearer → proselyte → ethnic Jew What Peter's mini-sermon in Acts 10:34–43 reveals about the core essentials of the gospel Surprising parallels between Roman military discipline and the Christian life What "uncomfortable obedience" looks like across every stage of life A Bible reading plan check-in: finishing Job and entering the books of Wisdom and Poetry Key Verse: "God has shown me that I should not call any person common or unclean." — Acts 10:28 | — | ||||||
| 6/1/26 | ![]() Turning Point-Gospel to Gentiles | Pastor Matt opens by setting the stage with Acts 1:8, the last recorded words of Jesus before his ascension, where he commands his followers to be witnesses "to the ends of the earth." For the first nine chapters of Acts, the gospel had been spreading rapidly — but almost exclusively among Jewish people. The burning question hanging over the early church was this: What about the Gentiles? Could people who were not ethnically Jewish truly become part of God's family? Acts 10–11 answers that question decisively, Marking one of the greatest turning points in the entire book. Through a pair of divine visions — one given to Cornelius, a Roman centurion and God-fearer stationed in Caesarea, and one given to Peter involving a sheet full of unclean animals — God begins dismantling centuries of cultural, ethnic, and religious walls. When Peter steps into the home of Cornelius and shares the gospel, the Holy Spirit falls on the Gentiles just as he had on the Jews at Pentecost. Peter's response says it all: "Who was I that I could stand in God's way?" Back in Jerusalem, the church initially pushes back, but when they hear the full account, they fall silent and glorify God, saying, "Then to the Gentiles also God has granted repentance that leads to life" (Acts 11:18). Pastor Matt brings the message home with three practical takeaways: God is pursuing people we might tend to overlook; following Jesus means letting him reshape our perspectives and assumptions; and the Holy Spirit directs and confirms God's mission to all people. The call to action is clear — just as someone once crossed out of their comfort zone so the gospel could reach us, it is now our turn to step into uncomfortable obedience and move toward the people God is already pursuing. | — | ||||||
| 5/27/26 | ![]() SUNDAY EXTRA: Why Opposition Might Be the Best Sign You're on the Right Track | In episode 21 of season four of the Sunday Extra podcast, Pastor Matt Sturdivant, Pastor Jeremy, Pastor Jake Myers, and Pastor Luke Myers gather around the table to recap and expand on the previous Sunday's sermon from Acts 9:18-43. The big idea of the message was that God develops who He calls — and while a calling can be immediate, the preparation for that calling is always a process. Four key lessons were drawn from the passage: immediate obedience doesn't guarantee immediate results; God often does His deepest work in hidden seasons; opposition should be reframed as confirmation, not contradiction; and we all need people to help us grow and step into our calling. The team then digs into the portion of Acts 9 that didn't make it into Sunday's sermon — Peter's private ministry in Acts 9:32-43. Peter heals a paralyzed man named Aeneas in the name of Jesus Christ, and raises a beloved disciple named Dorcas back to life in Joppa. Both miracles result in widespread belief, with Acts 9:35 noting that "all the residents of Lydda and Sharon saw him, and they turned to the Lord." Pastor Matt also highlights Acts 9:31 as a powerful summary statement on the state of the early church — walking in the fear of the Lord, encouraged by the Holy Spirit, and multiplying — not merely surviving. The conversation closes with a rich discussion on the "challenge of the decades," a framework originally taught by their founding pastor, which maps out the spiritual and personal challenges unique to each decade of life. The team encourages those under 30 not to despise their development season, and those over 40 to stay faithful even when progress feels slow. They also challenge listeners who feel lonely to take personal responsibility — to get into a group, take a risk, and stop waiting for community to come to them — because as Pastor Matt puts it, you cannot fulfill your calling in isolation. Wisdom Through the Decades (Wisdom Conference) | — | ||||||
| 5/26/26 | ![]() From Calling to Deployment | Pastor Matt opens by honoring Memorial Day, reflecting on John 15:13, where Jesus says, "Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends." He draws a connection between the sacrifice of soldiers and the sacrifice of Christ, reminding the congregation that sacrifice for the good of others is honorable and meaningful. From there, he transitions into the ongoing series through the Book of Acts, picking up in Acts 9:18–42 with the life of Saul following his dramatic conversion on the road to Damascus. The central big idea of the message is this: God develops who He calls. Calling may be immediate, but preparation is a process. Pastor Matt points out that what Acts describes as "many days" was actually closer to three years — a detail filled in by Paul himself in Galatians 1:17 — and that Saul largely disappeared from public view for another 8 to 10 years after that. These hidden seasons, Pastor Matt argues, were not wasted time. God was rewiring Saul's theology, building humility, developing ministry skills, and clarifying his calling. The key truth is that God often does His deepest work in seasons no one sees. Pastor Matt draws four practical lessons from the passage. First, immediate obedience does not mean immediate results — faithfulness precedes fruitfulness. Second, God uses hidden seasons to prepare people for future impact, and a calling may determine your direction, but preparation determines your capacity. Third, opposition should be reframed as confirmation rather than contradiction, because following Jesus will not make life easier, but it will bring new meaning, purpose, and power. Fourth, every believer needs a Barnabas — someone to believe in them, bridge the gap, and speak life into them — and many are also called to be that Barnabas for someone else. | — | ||||||
| 5/20/26 | ![]() SUNDAY EXTRA: Jesus Didn't Just Save You FROM Something — He Saved You FOR Something | In this episode, drawn from his message on Acts 9:1-18, Pastor Matt walked through Saul's conversion with one driving idea: Jesus transforms sinners and sends them on mission. Three lessons anchored the sermon. First, Jesus confronts us in our direction — and as Pastor Matt pointed out, you can be sincere and still be sincerely wrong. Second, Jesus interrupts us with His presence because salvation is a divine act that demands a human response. Third, Jesus redefines our purpose. He doesn't just save you from something; He saves you for something. Woven into the middle of the sermon was the Antioch Training Program graduation, honoring those who completed Hope Church's rigorous five-year vocational ministry training. Rather than holding the ceremony separately, Pastor Matt intentionally placed it within the Sunday morning service so the whole congregation could witness what it looks like when the church rallies together to raise up the next generation. The moment powerfully illustrated that calling isn't reserved for a special few — it belongs to every Christ follower. The podcast discussion also expanded on material that didn't make it into the sermon, including a helpful breakdown of three types of calling, the difference between wisdom and discernment, and a word of caution about praying for God to humble you. As Pastor Matt put it, if God has to do the humbling, it's going to be a lot more painful than if you humble yourself. | — | ||||||
| 5/18/26 | ![]() From Calling to Commissioning | Pastor Matt opens by grounding the sermon in a universal truth from Romans 3:23, which says, "For everyone has sinned. We all fall short of God's glorious standard." From that foundation, he introduces the big idea of the message: Jesus transforms sinners and then sends them on mission — He starts working in you, then works through you. Turning to Acts 9:1-18, Pastor Matt walks through the stunning conversion of Saul, a man who was not merely indifferent to Jesus but was actively "breathing threats and murder" against His followers. On the road to Damascus, Jesus confronted Saul with a blinding light and a piercing question — "Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?" — and in that moment, everything changed. From this passage, Pastor Matt draws three lessons: Jesus confronts us in our direction, Jesus interrupts us with His presence, and Jesus redefines our purpose. The sermon takes a meaningful turn as Pastor Matt connects Saul's story to a present-day celebration — the graduation of Jacob and Katie Willoughby from the Antioch Project, a five-year vocational ministry training program. Just as Saul spent years being trained and prepared before God deployed him fully into his calling, Jacob and Katie have spent five years in deep study, mentorship, hands-on ministry, and character development. Their work with Christian Impact — a college ministry they launched in Fort Worth, Texas — is already bearing fruit, with students coming to faith and growing in their walks with God. Pastor Matt closes with a challenge to the entire congregation: everyone has a calling, everyone has a next step, and no one ever fully arrives on this side of eternity. | — | ||||||
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| 5/13/26 | ![]() Sunday Extra: God's Playing 4D Chess and Philip Had No Idea | In this episode of the Sunday Extra podcast, Pastor Matt Sturdevant and the Hope Church team revisit Acts 8, going deeper into the passages they couldn't fully explore on Mother's Day Sunday. The overarching big idea of the sermon was that God advances His mission through ordinary believers who are willing to faithfully follow wherever He leads. Pastor Matt opens by taking a closer look at Acts 8:4, emphasizing that the early believers went out preaching the Word not out of convenience, but out of genuine conviction — they truly believed Jesus had risen from the dead, and that changed everything. They understood the mission, had been personally transformed by the gospel, and even saw suffering as part of following Jesus. As Pastor Matt puts it, "Persecution scattered them geographically, but it did not silence them spiritually." The team then digs into the story of Simon the Magician (Acts 8:9–25), which Pastor Matt uses to illustrate that whenever the gospel is preached, it will inevitably produce both genuine saving faith and false faith. Simon appeared to believe, was baptized, and followed Philip — but when the apostles arrived and the Holy Spirit was given, Simon's true motivation was exposed: he wanted the power of God, not God Himself. Pastor Matt connects this to the Parable of the Weeds in Matthew 13:24–30, where Jesus warns that weeds will grow alongside wheat until the final harvest. The arrival of Peter and John in Samaria, Pastor Matt explains, wasn't just a validation of Philip's ministry — it was a critical moment that kept the unity of the early church, preventing a split between Jewish and Samaritan believers. Perhaps the richest part of the discussion centers on Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch. Pastor Matt unpacks the enormous significance of who this man was — a high-ranking government official, a eunuch who would have been denied full access to Jewish worship (Deut. 23:1), and a representative of what the Greeks and Romans considered the very ends of the known world. When Philip leads him to faith in Jesus and baptizes him, the Ethiopian continues reading Isaiah and would have soon arrived at Isaiah 56:3–5, a passage that speaks directly to foreigners and eunuchs being given "an everlasting name" in God's house. The team reflects on the goosebump-worthy reality that this man, who had likely left Jerusalem discouraged and excluded, was now not only forgiven and filled with joy, but carried the gospel back to the ends of the earth — fulfilling Acts 1:8 in a way none of them could have fully anticipated. | — | ||||||
| 5/11/26 | ![]() Faithful Wherever God Sends | Pastor Matt opens by asking a question most of us can relate to: have you ever had your plans completely redirected? Using Acts 8 as his text, he shows how the early church faced exactly that when persecution broke out in Jerusalem. Rather than stopping the mission, the scattering of believers actually fulfilled Jesus' own words from Acts 1:8 — that His followers would be witnesses in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and to the ends of the earth. The big idea Pastor Matt anchors the entire sermon to is this: God advances His mission through ordinary believers who are willing to faithfully follow wherever He leads. The central figure of the sermon is Philip the Evangelist — not an apostle, not a headliner, but one of seven men chosen to serve the early church. Despite being displaced by persecution, Philip preached Christ in Samaria, saw lives transformed, and then obeyed what seemed like an illogical call to leave a thriving ministry and head out to a desert road. There, he encountered an Ethiopian official reading from Isaiah and, starting right where the man was, led him to faith in Jesus and baptism. Pastor Matt draws a meaningful contrast between this Ethiopian — a humble, genuine seeker — and Simon the Magician, who was interested in God's power but never truly surrendered. In honor of Mother's Day, Pastor Matt pauses to connect Philip's ordinary faithfulness to the quiet, daily faithfulness of mothers. Just as Paul wrote to Timothy in 2 Timothy 1, tracing Timothy's faith back to his grandmother Lois and his mother Eunice, Pastor Matt reminds mothers that their consistent, unseen obedience carries eternal weight. The sermon closes with a practical call to action: surrender to Jesus, step out in obedience, and identify the "Ethiopian official" in your own life — someone who is searching and whom God has placed in your path. | — | ||||||
| 5/6/26 | ![]() SUNDAY EXTRA: From the Treasure Trove to the Ends of the Earth | Pastor Jake's sermon covering Acts 6–7 centers on the big idea that local faithfulness launches the gospel of forgiveness globally. He walks through the early church's organizational response to a widow-care problem, the false accusations leveled against Stephen, and Stephen's sweeping sermon before the Sanhedrin — a sermon that drew clear parallels between Moses and Jesus while declaring that God works outside of Israel and is not confined to the temple in Jerusalem. Stephen's faithfulness ultimately costs him his life, making him the first Christian martyr, but his death becomes the very spark that propels the gospel outward, fulfilling the promise of Acts 1:8 — "You will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and to the ends of the earth" — as seen in Acts 8:1. The podcast discussion opens up several threads that didn't make it into the sermon. Pastor Jake unpacks the nature of forgiveness, emphasizing that it is not a matter of conjuring up good feelings but rather an act of the will empowered by the Holy Spirit — the emotions and freedom often follow the choice, not the other way around. He also highlights the powerful moment in Acts 7 where Stephen sees heaven open and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God — the only instance of that image in Scripture — suggesting that Stephen was catching a glimpse of his ultimate destination even as his life was on the line. Pastor Matt adds rich historical context, explaining that the widow problem in Acts 6 was not random but the surface-level eruption of four centuries of cultural tension between Hebraic Jews and Hellenistic Jews. He also draws a compelling through-line from Acts to church history and the present day, pointing out that persecution has never stopped the gospel — it has consistently refined and spread it, from the explosion of Christianity in China under Mao to the rapid growth of the church in Iran today. The conversation closes with a challenge for every believer to examine whether their faith depends on comfort or conviction, and to ask honestly: Where has God placed me, and am I on mission right there? | — | ||||||
| 5/4/26 | ![]() The Church Persecuted But Spreading✨ | persecutionfaith+5 | — | SanhedrinHope Church+2 | — | Acts 6Acts 7+8 | — | 50m 21s | |
| 4/29/26 | ![]() SUNDAY EXTRA: Matt's Recharging. Luke's Losing His Voice. Church Happened Anyway.✨ | boldness in missioncommitment to holiness+4 | — | Acts2 Chronicles | — | Acts 3-5sermon+7 | — | 1h 31m 30s | |
| 4/27/26 | ![]() The Church Boldly Expands✨ | boldnessmission+4 | — | ActsProverbs+1 | — | Actsboldness+5 | — | 52m 42s | |
| 4/22/26 | ![]() Sunday Extra: Acts 2: Big Crowd, Bigger Fire, Boldest Sermon Ever✨ | PentecostHoly Spirit+5 | — | Acts 2Galatians 5:16 | — | Holy SpiritActs 2+8 | — | 2h 02m 59s | |
| 4/20/26 | ![]() The Church is Born✨ | birth of the churchHoly Spirit+4 | — | Acts | Galilee | churchHoly Spirit+5 | — | 1h 01m 27s | |
| 4/15/26 | ![]() Sunday Extra: Don't Stand There — He's Coming Back, But He's Not Here Yet✨ | Holy SpiritChristian mission+4 | — | ActsJohn+1 | JerusalemJudea+1 | Acts 1:8Holy Spirit+8 | — | 1h 05m 35s | |
| 4/13/26 | ![]() The Mission Continues✨ | faithHoly Spirit+4 | — | Book of ActsBible in a Jar+5 | JerusalemJudea+2 | ActsHoly Spirit+5 | — | 52m 13s | |
| 4/8/26 | ![]() Easter 2025 at Hope Church — Stories, Surprises & What's Coming Next✨ | resurrectionhope+4 | — | Hope Churchthe book of John | — | Easterresurrection+6 | — | 1h 31m 01s | |
| 4/6/26 | ![]() The Resurrection Demands a Response✨ | resurrectionEaster message+3 | — | Hope ChurchJohn | — | resurrectionEaster+5 | — | 44m 58s | |
| 4/1/26 | ![]() SUNDAY EXTRA: Three T's, Four Knots, and One Very Busy Holy Week✨ | Holy WeekJesus's final hours+3 | — | John | — | Holy WeekJesus+7 | — | 1h 22m 16s | |
| 3/30/26 | ![]() The Final Hours Part 2 | Pastor Matt walks through Jesus's final 12-18 hours before His resurrection, covering three key movements in John 17-19. First, Jesus's high priestly prayer reveals His heart as He prays for Himself, His disciples, and future believers, asking for their protection, joy, and sanctification through God's truth. Second, the betrayal and trials show Jesus willingly going to His arrest—even choosing the garden where Judas knew to find Him—and standing before Pilate while Peter denies Him three times. Third, the crucifixion demonstrates Jesus as the King on the cross, where He declares "it is finished" (tetelestai)—a Greek word meaning the work is completely and permanently accomplished. Pastor Matt emphasizes that Jesus chose the cross out of love, that salvation's work is fully finished with nothing left to add, and that every person must decide what to do with Jesus. He challenges believers to invite others to Resurrection Sunday, noting that one invitation could change someone's eternity. The sermon concludes with an invitation for non-believers to surrender to Jesus, trusting in His completed work for forgiveness and eternal life. | — | ||||||
| 3/25/26 | ![]() SUNDAY EXTRA: The Trinity, the Alamo, and Other Things We Finally Visited | This episode of the Sunday Extra podcast features Pastor Jeremy, Pastor Brian Crop, and Pastor Matt Sturdivant discussing Brian's recent sermon, "The Final Hours Part One," which examines Jesus's final hours of ministry. Brian's central message was that God-honoring love is a verb - something we do rather than just feel. He explored the Greek concept of agape love, which is selfless, willful, and sacrificial, and emphasized how Jesus redefined love as a decision rather than merely an emotion. The discussion delved deeply into the doctrine of the Trinity, with Pastor Matt sharing insights from his seminary paper on the subject. They explained how the Trinity is involved in salvation across past, present, and future - with the Father as the source and planner, the Son as the means and achiever, and the Holy Spirit as the applier of salvation. The Holy Spirit serves as our helper (Paraclete), guiding believers into truth and empowering them for Christian living through His multifaceted ministry, including conviction, regeneration, indwelling, and gifting. A significant portion addressed the relationship between obedience and love for God, drawing from John 14. The pastors clarified the crucial distinction between the means of salvation (grace through faith alone) and the evidence of salvation (visible life change and obedience). They stressed that while we're not saved by works, genuine salvation will produce fruit in the form of good works and transformed behavior, emphasizing that "faith that saves is never alone." | — | ||||||
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