God's House Christian Church Podcast
God's House Christian Church Podcast

God's House Christian Church Podcast

God's House Christian Church

Overview
Episodes

Details

Sermon from God's House Christian Church in Upstate South Carolina.

Recent Episodes

Advent The Coming King EP2 - No More War
DEC 8, 2025
Advent The Coming King EP2 - No More War
In times of darkness and desperation, we often become vulnerable to false hope and quick fixes that promise relief but cannot truly deliver. The prophet Isaiah spoke to a nation living in literal darkness under Assyrian conquest, yet proclaimed that those in darkness would see a great light. This prophecy pointed to the coming Messiah, described with four powerful names: Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, and Prince of Peace. Each name reveals crucial aspects of who Jesus is and the hope He brings to a broken world. The challenge we face today mirrors what Israel experienced - the temptation to put our ultimate hope in earthly solutions rather than trusting in God's promises. We might look to political leaders, financial security, or other temporal things for salvation, turning good things into false gods. However, our true citizenship is in heaven, and our true King has already been crowned. While we should engage responsibly in civic life, we must maintain the right perspective about where our ultimate hope lies. We live in the tension of already but not yet - Jesus has come and won the victory, but the full realization of His kingdom is still to come. As citizens of heaven, we're called to be like movie trailers, giving others a glimpse of what's coming in God's kingdom. This means living differently than the world around us, working for peace and justice while maintaining our hope in Christ's return. We can love our country without worshipping it, engage in politics without making it our religion, and work for justice without thinking any earthly movement is the kingdom of God.
play-circle icon
39 MIN
Advent The Coming King EP1 - Hope In Hiding
DEC 1, 2025
Advent The Coming King EP1 - Hope In Hiding
The human response to shame has remained consistent since the Garden of Eden - we hide and blame others rather than face our failures honestly. When Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit, their immediate reaction was to hide from God's presence among the trees. When confronted, Adam blamed both God and Eve, while Eve blamed the serpent. This deflection pattern continues today as we hide behind achievements, humor, anger, busyness, or carefully crafted social media personas to mask our struggles and shame. The remarkable truth in this ancient story is that God pursued His hiding children with love. When He asked where are you, it wasn't because He didn't know their location - He was giving them opportunity to stop running and realize He was still seeking them. Even more amazing is that before Adam and Eve could process their disobedience or beg forgiveness, God spoke a promise of redemption. He declared that the seed of woman would crush the serpent's head, providing the first gospel message in Scripture. This promise required a long wait - thousands of years passed before Jesus came to fulfill it. Generations lived and died, empires rose and fell, but God's people continued waiting in hope. The season of Advent teaches us that waiting is sacred, not wasted time. During seasons of waiting, our faith grows and our confidence in God increases. Rather than fighting these periods or filling them with distractions, we can embrace them as opportunities to practice trust, remember God's faithfulness, and join believers across centuries in anticipating Christ's return. The key is taking responsibility for our failures through honest confession rather than blame, which opens the door to God's grace and healing.
play-circle icon
32 MIN
Thanks In All Things EP2 - When God Feels Silent
NOV 17, 2025
Thanks In All Things EP2 - When God Feels Silent
Feeling like God has gone silent is one of the most isolating experiences in faith. It's that particular loneliness when your prayers seem to hit the ceiling, your Bible feels lifeless, and you wonder if God has simply stopped caring about you personally. This isn't about doubting God's existence—it's questioning whether He still cares about your individual circumstances and struggles. The beautiful truth is that questioning God isn't wrong. One-third of the Psalms are laments where people express raw, honest emotions about their situations. Job questioned God, Jeremiah wrote an entire book of complaints, and even Jesus cried out about feeling forsaken. A lament isn't doubt—it's faith under pressure. When you're calling out to God, you're still reaching toward Him, which is actually a demonstration of faith rather than its absence. The path forward involves three crucial steps: bringing your honest struggle directly to God without sanitizing your emotions, intentionally remembering God's past faithfulness by creating a tangible list of His provision, and trusting that He's working invisibly even when you can't trace His footprints. Just as God led the Israelites through the Red Sea with unseen steps, He's leading you through circumstances where His methods don't match your expectations and His timing seems baffling. The word 'yet' becomes a powerful bridge between your honest lament and your hard-won trust, allowing you to say things like 'I feel alone, yet nothing separates me from His love.'
play-circle icon
35 MIN
Thanks In All Things EP1 - Joy When Life Is Hard
NOV 10, 2025
Thanks In All Things EP1 - Joy When Life Is Hard
When life throws unexpected challenges our way - whether through health crises, financial struggles, relationship problems, or workplace stress - finding joy can feel impossible. Yet the apostle Paul instructed believers to rejoice always, pray without ceasing, and give thanks in all circumstances, even while writing to people facing persecution and threats. This isn't about forcing happiness or pretending difficulties don't exist, but understanding the difference between rejoicing in our circumstances versus rejoicing in God's faithfulness despite them. The path to joy during hardship involves several key practices. First, we must resist the natural tendency to isolate ourselves when struggling, instead staying connected to community where others can encourage us and redirect our focus from problems to God's presence. Second, we need to continue serving others even when we feel depleted, engaging with different types of people through what Paul calls messy, hands-on Christianity. Third, we must maintain constant communication with God through prayer - not formal recitations, but ongoing awareness of His presence in every moment. Gratitude serves as a foundation for joy, requiring us to establish rhythms of thanksgiving by naming specific things we're grateful for each day. We can even find gratitude in difficult situations by focusing on how God might work through them. However, this supernatural joy cannot be manufactured through human determination alone. It requires dependence on the Holy Spirit to produce His fruit in our lives. Joy and suffering can coexist, just as laughter and tears often mix at funerals or children find play even in hospital settings. When we can't feel joy, God's faithfulness remains constant, and He promises to complete the work He began in us.
play-circle icon
35 MIN