Messages

Every message points to the heart of Jesus and invites us to follow Him more fully. Here you’ll find weekly summaries from our Sunday Messages, all rooted in Scripture, honest about real life, and centered on the hope we have in Christ. Whether you’re catching up or looking for encouragement, we’re glad you’re here.

Sermons Dave Rapids Sermons Dave Rapids

Mark 9:30-32

On All Saints Sunday, we explored Mark 9:30–32, where Jesus tells His disciples that He will be handed over, killed, and rise again—but they don’t understand. They wanted victory without a cross, glory without grief. This message reminded us that God’s plan still works, even when it looks like it doesn’t. The cross wasn’t a tragedy; it was the triumph of love. Faith doesn’t mean avoiding suffering—it means trusting God in it.

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Mark 8:1-10

In Mark 8:1–10, Jesus feeds four thousand people in Gentile territory, showing that His compassion has no borders. The disciples had seen Him multiply loaves before, but when the crowd looked different, their faith faltered. Jesus reminds them—and us—that His mercy isn’t limited by background or belonging. What He did for Israel, He now does for the nations. The same question still echoes today: “How many loaves do you have?” Whatever we bring—our time, our gifts, our obedience—He multiplies for the sake of others. The Gospel isn’t running out; there’s more than enough to go around.

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Sermons Dave Rapids Sermons Dave Rapids

Mark 6:30-44

In Mark 6:30–44, Jesus feeds five thousand people with just five loaves and two fish—not to show off power, but to reveal His heart. The disciples saw scarcity; Jesus saw opportunity. He didn’t need their help, but He invited them into the miracle. The same is true for us: what looks like “not enough” in our hands becomes more than enough in His. Jesus doesn’t just provide for us—He provides through us, filling others even as He fills us. The miracle happens when we stop waiting for more and start trusting the One who is already enough.

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Mark 4:35-41

In Mark 4:35–41, the disciples cry out in fear, “Teacher, don’t you care if we drown?” It’s the same question many of us ask when the storms of life hit—when loss, pain, or disappointment leave us wondering if God is still good. This message reminded us that Jesus never promised calm seas, but He did promise His presence. The storm didn’t wake Him, but their unbelief did. Real faith isn’t the absence of fear; it’s trusting that the One who commands the wind and waves is in the boat with us. The cross proves that our suffering isn’t meaningless—and that something better is coming.

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Mark 3:13-19

In Mark 3:13–19, Jesus calls twelve disciples who could not have been more different—fishermen and scholars, a tax collector and a zealot, doubters and dreamers, even a betrayer. Yet He binds them together under one purpose: to be with Him and to be sent by Him. This passage reminds us that discipleship begins with presence before performance and intimacy before activity. Jesus doesn’t just call individuals; He creates a community. The mission of God was never meant to be done alone. Even now, He is still forming a people who speak hope, bring healing, and stand firm—together.

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Mark 2:1-12

In Mark 2:1–12, four friends lower a paralyzed man through a roof to reach Jesus. But before healing his body, Jesus speaks to his soul: “Son, your sins are forgiven.” The crowd expected power; Jesus offered something deeper—restoration. The real miracle isn’t that the man walked—it’s that he was made whole. Forgiveness is the greater healing, and it still changes everything. Jesus still says, “Get up.” And when He does, shame lifts, hearts awaken, and lives are never the same.

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Mark 1:1

The Gospel of Mark begins with no manger or Magi, just one bold announcement: “The beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God.” This message reminded us that the gospel isn’t blurry—it’s a person. Jesus doesn’t just bring good news; He is the good news. In His baptism, He stepped into the water to stand where sinners stand, identifying with our brokenness so that we could stand secure in the Father’s love. And in the wilderness, He stood firm where every other human fell. The heavens are open, the Father’s voice still speaks, and the Gospel has a name—Jesus.

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Daniel in the Lions Den

In the final message of Retold: The Sunday School Stories You Thought You Knew and the Gospel You Didn’t See Coming, Pastor Dave preached from Daniel 6 and reminded us that the lions’ den isn’t a story about Daniel’s strength but about God’s faithfulness. “Faith that bends under pressure breaks,” he said, “but faith that kneels under pressure stands.” Just as God shut the lions’ mouths for Daniel, Jesus has conquered the greater den of death for us. The stone isn’t the end, and the lions don’t get the last word—the living God does.

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GO

In a message titled Go, Pastor Dave reminded the church that Jesus’ final command is still our first calling: “Go and make disciples of all nations.” We go not because we’re strong, but because He reigns. We go because more than 3.2 billion people have never heard the name of Jesus. “The blood of Jesus didn’t purchase a possibility—it purchased a people,” Pastor Dave said. “The only question is, will you live for that day when every tribe and nation stands before the throne?” The call is simple and urgent: start here, start now—one person, one prayer, one step of faith at a time.

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Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego

Pastor Dave preached from Daniel 3, reminding us that God never forgets His people in the fire. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego were thrown into the flames for refusing to bow, but the fire that was meant to destroy them became the place where God’s presence was most visible. “The real story isn’t whether God will keep you out of the furnace,” Pastor Dave said. “The story is that He will never leave you in it. The same God who met them in the flames walks with you in yours.”

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