Discussion questions and conversation starters

King of Kings Part 3
In The King Who Is Eternal, we’re reminded that Jesus isn’t a distant or past ruler—He is the eternal King whose grace is still transforming lives today. No matter your past, His grace can rescue, restore, and rewrite your story, proving that no one is too far gone. Because His grace is still active right now, we’re called not only to receive it—but to extend it and invite others to experience it too.

King of Kings Part 2
In The Matchless King, we’re reminded that Jesus isn’t just one option among many—He stands alone in authority, power, and worth. While the world offers competing “kings” like success, control, and identity, none can compare to the peace, freedom, and purpose found in surrendering to Him. When we truly recognize who He is, the only right response is to lay everything down and let Him reign fully in our lives.

King of Kings Part 1
In King of Kings – The King Who Serves, we see that Jesus redefines greatness by showing that true leadership is found in humility and service. When others avoided the broken and rejected, Jesus saw them, welcomed them, and was moved with compassion. This message reminds us that when we take a step toward Jesus, call on His name, and walk in faith-filled obedience, we encounter the King who serves and transforms lives.

The Dirty Truth About Love Part 4
Offense isn’t accidental—it’s bait. In this message, we’re reminded that our real battle is not against people, but against spiritual forces, and that offense is one of the enemy’s most effective traps. We prepare for it, confront it, forgive it, and uproot bitterness by increasing our faith—because you will never truly feel forgiven until you learn how to forgive.

The Dirty Truth About Love Part 3
Conflict isn’t the problem in our relationships—how we handle it is. In this message from our Dirty Truth About Love series, Pastor Chad reminds us that conflict reveals what’s already inside of us and gives us a choice: react in the flesh or respond with humility and wisdom. Healthy families aren’t conflict-free—they’re conflict-healthy, learning to stay connected, take ownership, and grow stronger together instead of drifting apart.

The Dirty Truth About Love Part 2
In The Dirty Truth About Love – Week 2: Dealing with the Dirt, we look at the story of Ruth and Naomi to uncover how unhealthy patterns can quietly sabotage our relationships. This message challenges us to stop staying stuck, stop going back to what God has already freed us from, and instead make a bold decision to move forward into the life He’s calling us to. Real love requires courage — courage to break cycles, choose freedom, and cling to God even when the future feels uncertain.

The Dirty Truth About Love Part 1
In Part 1 of this series, we’re reminded that real love isn’t clean, convenient, or comfortable—it shows up ready to serve. Through Rebekah’s example, we see that love takes initiative, runs toward need, and keeps serving until the work is done. This message challenges us to water what matters most by carrying yesterday’s weariness, today’s weight, and helping create a better way forward—because love that lasts is love that gets its boots muddy.

Go for the Gold Part 5
In Go for the Gold – Part 5: Going All In, we’re challenged to stop living halfway and start pressing fully into the life God is calling us to. Drawing from Paul’s words in Philippians, this message reminds us that going all in means forgetting what’s behind, focusing on what’s ahead, and pressing on with purpose, refusing to settle for silver when God is calling us to gold. Faith isn’t about perfection—it’s about persistence, commitment, and choosing to run the race with everything we have.

Go for the Gold Part 4
This message reminds us that the faith, purpose, and calling God has placed inside us is worth the fire and worth the fight. Using the biblical picture of refining gold, we see how God uses crushing, fire, and purification to remove what doesn’t belong so His image can be reflected in our lives. Through prayer, fasting, perseverance, and community, we’re challenged to stop surrendering what’s valuable and instead fight for the gold God is producing in us and the generations after us.

Go for the Gold Part 3
In this message, we’re reminded that the enemy is after our gold—our testimony, our worth, our worship, and what God has entrusted to us. Using the story of the golden calf, we see how impatience, compromise, and misplaced priorities can cause us to surrender what God intended to be sacred. This sermon calls us to stop living in “waiting mode,” guard what matters most, and boldly declare, “Hands off my gold,” choosing to consecrate our lives fully to God instead of consuming the gifts He’s given us.

Go for the Gold Part 2
In Digging Wells, we see how Isaac reopened the wells of his father Abraham during a season of famine, reminding us that spiritual growth often requires revisiting what God has already established. Spiritual wells—personal, powerful, practical, purposeful, and perpetual—are the places where we draw daily strength, direction, and life from God. This message challenges us to dig deep, guard our hearts, keep our wells clean, and return again and again to the living water that only Jesus can provide.

Go for the Gold Part 1
This message calls the church into a deeper, more intentional season of prayer and fasting, reminding us that spiritual breakthrough doesn’t come from effort alone but from dependence on God. Prayer aligns our hearts with God’s will, and fasting removes distractions so we can hear Him more clearly. When God’s people humble themselves, seek Him first, and pray with expectation, He responds with direction, renewal, and power.
