Week 4 — Examination

A short set of questions to sit with for a week. One per day, Monday through Friday. Saturday to review. Sunday to name the one thing and act on it. The questions are not designed to be skimmed. The point of the middle three is to make the answer to the last one honest. Monday, April 27 Where in my life do I still look the same as I did a year ago? Habits, reactions, thought patterns, relationships. ...

April 26, 2026 · 2 min

Enough - Week 1 in Colossians

Scripture References Colossians 1:1-12 Hebrews 6:18-19 Ephesians 2:10 Introduction Opening conversation contrasted “avoiding bad” with “becoming good.” Group agreed true goodness is found only through deeper relationship with Jesus, not self-effort. Leader distributed a five-question “heart-check” card during the week; tonight’s discussion revisited those questions. New 8-10-week series launched in Colossians titled “Enough–Jesus Is Enough.” Key Points / Exposition 1. Pursuing Goodness vs. Avoiding Sin Avoiding sin is easier to conceptualize than actively pursuing Christ-formed goodness. Goodness flows from intimacy with Jesus; we are “created for good works” (Eph 2:10). Golf illustration: Do we live to “make the birdie” (seize Kingdom opportunities) or simply “avoid the three-putt” (minimize failure)? 2. Weekly Reflection Questions Where did I do well? Where did I feel “not enough”? How did I treat people (or myself)? Where did I turn for comfort? Did I create space for God? Several members shared work-related victories and stresses, noting prayer as primary comfort. 3. Hope, Faith, and Love Triad (Col 1:5; cf. 1 Co 13:13) Faith: trust in Christ. Love: outward action toward people. Hope: confident expectation of our heavenly inheritance. Biblical hope is certain (Heb 6:18-19); worldly hope is uncertain. 4. Background on Colossians Colossae: small, mostly Gentile, second-generation church–likely founded by Epaphras, not Paul. Letter written from Paul’s Roman imprisonment (“prison epistle”). Central issue: Jesus-plus add-ons; believers were settling rather than failing. Paul’s opening prayer (1:9-12) asks for: Complete knowledge of God’s will. Spiritual wisdom and understanding. Fruitful lives that honor the Lord. Strength, endurance, patience, joy, and gratitude rooted in their rescue from darkness (1:13-14). 5. Praying for the Church and Being “Qualified” Paul’s continual prayer for a church he never visited challenged the group to pray for Lake Pointe’s partner churches; no one presently does so regularly. “Qualified” (Col 1:12): In Christ we are fully authorized to minister, despite feelings of inadequacy. “Qualified” poll: Only one person initially felt qualified to serve; group recognized this as emotional, not theological, gap. Major Lessons & Revelations Shift daily mindset from “don’t mess up” to “pursue Christ-centered excellence.” We cannot manufacture goodness by self-effort; it flows from abiding in Jesus. Biblical hope is anchored and certain–not wishful thinking. God calls us “qualified” by grace, not by feelings of readiness. Interceding for unknown churches connects us to the global body of Christ. Practical Application Shift daily mindset from “don’t mess up” to “pursue Christ-centered excellence.” Use the five-question card each week; leader will post on GroupMe. Begin praying by name for at least one Lake Pointe partner church. Act even when feeling unqualified–“do something better than nothing.” Anchor hope in Jesus’ finished work; let that hope fuel love for others. Conclusion & Call to Response Read Colossians 1:13-23 in advance of the next meeting. Reflection theme for next week: “What drives your decision-making?” (questions will be posted on GroupMe). The measure of the day is not avoiding mistakes but abiding in the Son. Prayer Adopt Paul’s prayer (Col 1:9-12) for one another: knowledge of God’s will, spiritual wisdom, endurance, patience, joy. Continued growth of Lake Pointe partner churches; salvation and strength for persecuted believers (Nigeria mentioned). Individual needs: workplace pressures, family interactions, and deeper personal communion with God. References & Resources Colossians series: “Enough–Jesus Is Enough” (8-10 weeks). Weekly reflection card posted on GroupMe by group leader. Insights We cannot manufacture goodness by dodging evil; when we surrender and walk with Christ, His life flows through us and transforms our motives, habits and days, making the impossible invitation “be holy” our lived reality. Trying to manage sin exhausts the soul, but time spent beholding the Father renews courage; He turns ordinary minutes into seeds of faith, love and hope that bless everyone around you. The Spirit reminds you that heaven’s inheritance is already assigned, so live boldly; you are qualified by grace, not resume, to bear fruit and display Christ’s beauty wherever He stations you today. When choices arise, fix your hope on Jesus rather than the fear of failure, and watch how His powerful joy converts ordinary opportunities into stages for God’s glory and people’s good. Continuous prayer is not mere duty; it is joining Christ’s heartbeat for His church, calling heavenly resources into struggling congregations until every believer grows from settling for “okay” to shining with resurrection power. Remember, the measure of the day is not avoiding mistakes but abiding in the Son; in His presence even missed putts and messy meetings become canvases for redemption and testimonies of grace.

April 11, 2026 · 4 min

The Greatest Reversal

Scripture References Luke 24:1-8 Luke 9:22; Luke 9:24 Luke 18:31-33 John 14:6 Romans 8:11 Introduction Pastor Josh welcomes the Lake Pointe family and guests on Easter, emphasizing worldwide celebration of Christ’s resurrection. Explains annual Easter survey card that shapes future teaching series and campus expansion. Frames the day around humanity’s love for comeback stories, preparing hearts to see Jesus’ resurrection as history’s ultimate reversal. Key Points / Exposition 1. The Greatest Comeback in History Illustrates cultural love for reversals (Rose Bowl, Robert Downey Jr., Duke basketball upset). Declares: “If the tomb is empty, anything is possible.” Jesus’ resurrection has generated more songs, books, paintings, and even the AD/BC calendar divide. 2. Witnesses at the Empty Tomb (Luke 24:1-8) Women (“original Spice Girls”) arrive with spices, find stone rolled away. Angels’ question: “Why do you look for the living among the dead?” Application: People still seek life in dead places–sex, success, status. Reminder that Jesus repeatedly foretold His death and resurrection (Luke 9 & 18) yet disciples missed it–warning believers not to miss the main thing. 3. Doubt Addressed with Demonstration Disciples initially dismiss women’s report as “nonsense.” Jesus doesn’t ignore doubt; He invites investigation (stone rolled away for doubters to see). Three historical evidences for resurrection: All original apostles (12 of 12) willingly died for their eyewitness testimony. Jesus’ brothers (James, Jude) worshiped Him as God and were martyred. Empty tomb–every other religious leader’s remains are enshrined; Christ’s is famously vacant. 4. Crucified for Us–and Instead of Us Detailed historical explanation of Roman crucifixion: scourging, cat-o-nine tails, carrying the cross-beam, nails through nerve centers, public humiliation, asphyxiation. Jesus endured nakedness, scourging, mockery with a Tersorium (sour wine on a latrine sponge), and prayed, “Father, forgive them.” The cross satisfies God’s justice (payment for sin) and reveals God’s love (He paid it Himself). Jesus’ last cry “It is finished,” not “I am finished”–payment completed, mission ongoing. 5. Resurrection Power for Today (Romans 8:11) Frederick Buechner quote: “The worst thing is never the last thing.” Four “last words” the resurrection overturns: Guilt–no condemnation remains. Addiction–power that raised Jesus now breaks chains. Pain–suffering temporary; a resurrection will heal all. Death–believers will rise bodily as Christ did. Personal illustration: Pastor’s 96-year-old grandfather’s passing; hope in reunion. 6. Call to Respond – The ABCD Card A: Already a Christian. B: Begin a relationship with Christ today. C: Considering; need more time. D: Don’t intend to decide. Emphasizes honest self-assessment; leads B-responders in a salvation prayer. Major Lessons & Revelations Centrality of Jesus’ death and resurrection–nothing else in church life matters more. Doubt is not disqualification; bring questions to the empty tomb. Historical, rational grounds bolster faith; Christianity is fact, not fable. Resurrection guarantees ultimate victory over sin, suffering, and death. Practical Application Examine personal standing with Christ (A-B-C-D). Stop seeking life “among the dead”–redirect desires to Jesus. Share resurrection evidence with skeptical friends. Trust resurrection power to confront specific guilt, habits, or pains this week. Complete survey card to shape future ministry and campuses. Conclusion & Call to Response Resurrection invites every listener into the greatest reversal of all–new life in Christ. Listeners encouraged to mark decision, lift hands publicly, and begin discipleship journey. Church celebrates visible responses as heaven rejoices. Prayer “God, I admit I’ve lived for other things, but I believe Jesus died for my sin and rose again. From this day forward, I put You first. Thank You for adopting me as Your child. Empower me by the same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead. Amen.” ...

April 3, 2026 · 4 min

Six Days With God Are Better Than Seven Without Him

Scripture References Exodus 20:8-11 Genesis 2:1-3 Exodus 16:21-30 Luke 6:1-5 Mark 2:27-28 Romans 14:5 Hebrews 11:6 Introduction Pastor opens with lighthearted “hurry-sickness” quiz to show how frantic modern life has become. Confesses the sermon first confronted him personally: “Physician, heal thyself.” Sets context: part of the “Investigating Jesus” series, examining what put Jesus at odds with religious leaders. Announces the focus–God’s gift of Sabbath rest–and promises rapid-fire Bible exposition. Key Points / Exposition 1. The Sabbath Is a Command Fourth of the Ten Commandments (Ex 20). Word “holy” (Hebrew kavod) means “cut apart/separate”; Sabbath should be distinct from the other six days. Carries equal weight with prohibitions against murder, adultery, stealing, etc. Christians rarely justify breaking other commandments, yet casually violate this one. Illustration: people feel awkward asking a pastor to commit adultery but think nothing of asking him to break his Sabbath. 2. The Sabbath Is a Law of Creation Instituted before Sinai: God Himself rested (Gen 2:1-3). If the Creator pauses, creatures must as well. Attempts to override the seven-day rhythm (e.g., French Revolution’s ten-day week) produced economic collapse and mental-health crises. Modern studies: productivity plunges after 50-hour weeks; six-days-on/one-day-off maximizes output. Seventh-day Adventist longevity study: approx. 5-6 extra years correspond to the cumulative Sabbaths they actually keep. Calculator demonstration shows God “gives the days back.” 3. The Sabbath Teaches Us (and Our Children) to Walk by Faith First biblical mention tied to manna (Ex 16): gather double on day six, trust God on day seven. Refusal to rest = disbelief that God will provide. Principle: “If you work on the Sabbath, God stops helping; if you rest, God works for you.” Chick-fil-A case study: closed Sundays yet second-largest, most profitable U.S. chain–proof that six days with God beat seven without Him. Memorable maxim: “A Sabbath is to your schedule what a tithe is to your budget.” 4. The Sabbath Is a Blessing, Not a Burden Jesus corrects legalists (Luke 6; Mark 2): “The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.” Pharisees multiplied 1 rule to 39 micro-rules to 615 sub-rules (Mishnah), turning gift into slavery (e.g., Shabbat elevators, bottles of water under car seats). Jesus, “Lord of the Sabbath,” restores it as delight. Major Lessons & Revelations God embeds rest into creation for human flourishing. True Sabbath combines ceasing from labor and enjoying God’s presence; it is worship, not mere leisure. Obedience releases tangible blessings–health, creativity, provision, witness to unbelievers. Trust, not toil, is the foundation of productivity and spiritual vitality. Practical Application Choose a day (needn’t be Sunday, cf. Rom 14:5) and protect it. Prepare in advance–hard, focused work during the other six days enables real rest. “No work” rule: anything that feels like vocation or burdensome obligation pauses. Power down digital distractions; devices often kill both work and rest. Sabbath dinner tradition: gather fun Christian friends/families, share testimonies of what God is doing, let children witness adults praising Jesus. Engage in life-giving, refreshing activities (example: “boats, fishing, naps–imitate Jesus”). Worship–scripture reading, gathered church, prayer. A day off without God is a “bastard Sabbath” (Eugene Peterson). Conclusion & Call to Response The Father offers His children a weekly gift; refusing it slowly kills body and soul. Challenge: take your first genuine Sabbath this week–trust God for ONE day. Expect renewal, deeper faith, and a testimony of God’s provision. Prayer “Father, bend our wills to Yours. Teach us to trust You for a day, to cease striving, and to welcome Your presence. May the blessing of Sabbath transform our families, our work, and our witness. In Jesus’ name, Amen.” ...

March 7, 2026 · 4 min

Go Again: Understanding Unanswered Prayer and the Father's Heart

Scripture References Luke 11:1-13 Exodus 14 1 Kings 18 Mark 5 Daniel 6 Hebrews 10:19-22 Mark 11:25 Proverbs 21:13 1 Peter 3:7 Psalm 66:18 James 1:6-7 James 4:3 Job 38 Genesis 25:21 Isaiah 55:8-9 Introduction Context: Week 2 of the “Investigating Jesus” series, preaching cross-sections of Luke to help skeptics and believers examine Christ closely before Easter. Pastoral moment: The church’s gracious response to last week’s hard teaching on marriage led 60 co-habiting couples to register for a forthcoming mass wedding – evidence that obedience to Scripture yields fruit. Today’s focus: Prayer can be exhilarating when answered, but agonising when heaven seems silent. The sermon asks, “If Jesus is real, why didn’t He answer my prayer?” Key Points / Exposition 1. Prayer Begins With “Father” In the Old Testament God is called “Father” only 14 times; Jesus makes it the very first word of prayer (Luke 11:2). New-covenant reality: believers address God as children, not merely servants or defendants. Temple imagery: Gentile Court to Outer Court to Inner Court to Holy Place to Holy of Holies. Only the High Priest accessed the Most Holy Place once a year. Christ’s death tore the veil (Heb 10:19-22); now every believer walks straight in with “Dad-level” access. 2. Six Biblical Reasons Prayers May Seem Unanswered a. Broken Relationships Unforgiveness blocks fellowship (Mark 11:25). Ignoring the poor closes God’s ear (Prov 21:13). Husbands mistreating wives hinder their own prayers (1 Pet 3:7). b. Unconfessed or Cherished Sin Category of sonship remains, but quality of communion suffers (Ps 66:18). “Cherish” = protect, excuse, or hide a sin instead of repenting. c. Doubt Faith activates God’s power; doubt neutralises it (Jas 1:6-7). Biblical pattern: Red Sea, Jordan River, ten lepers – miracles followed acts of faith. d. Wrong Motives Prayer is not a tool to indulge self-pleasure (Jas 4:3). Mature disciples experience a Copernican shift: life orbits God’s glory, not vice-versa (“Hallowed be Your name”). e. God Answers Differently Than Expected Job receives God’s presence, not explanations (Job 38). Testimony: Pastor’s decade-long infertility prayers were met with adoption – different answer, better story (Gen 25:21 parallel). f. God Wants Perseverance – “Go Again” Luke 11:5-10 (ask, seek, knock) uses ongoing Greek imperatives. Elijah paradigm (1 Kings 18): between promise and payoff lies the process of persistent prayer. The servant saw “a cloud the size of a man’s hand” only on the seventh ascent – small sign, huge downpour. 3. Theology of Process Between the promise and the payoff, God shapes the pray-er, not just the circumstance. Abandoning the process forfeits the payoff. Major Lessons & Revelations God’s fatherhood redefines prayer as intimate access, not distant petition. Holiness matters; unreconciled sin or relationships can mute petitions. Faith is the conduit of divine power; doubt disables it. Motive alignment – seeking God’s kingdom first – purifies requests. Silence is not absence; sometimes God is answering in a higher, better way. Persistence is commanded; small beginnings (a tiny cloud) often precede great breakthroughs. Practical Application Reconcile swiftly – forgive, apologise, restore generosity toward the needy. Conduct a heart audit: confess and renounce cherished sins. Feed faith – immerse in Scripture, testimonies, worship; starve doubt. Re-frame requests: “Your will, Your kingdom, Your glory.” Trust God’s alternative answers; journal unexpected providences. Go again: set regular prayer rhythms, keep lists, circle promises until clouds form. Conclusion & Call to Response God invites His children to storm the throne room with confidence. If your horizon still looks empty, don’t quit – go again. The cloud is coming, and with it the downpour of God’s perfect, timely answer. ...

February 28, 2026 · 4 min

A Disciple Assembles a Band of Brothers / Sisters

Gathering Information Live, online snow-day study from Josh & Jana Howerton’s home (“Howerton Casa”), Dallas-area, early Feb 2023 Interactive stream across multiple platforms; comments fed to leader in real time Scripture References Luke 5:1-11 Luke 6:12-16 John 21:1-19 James 5:16 Proverbs 27:17 Proverbs 12:18 Proverbs 13:20 Matthew 5:29-30 Romans 8:1-3 2 Peter 1:3 2 Corinthians 6:14 1 Peter 1:13 Introduction Snow and ice cancelled in-person services, so the Howertons invited everyone into their living room for a “life-group style” Bible study. Viewers asked to grab Bibles, coffee, and drop comments (location, snow-day activities, questions). Light-hearted moments: showing a newly mounted gemsbok, naming suggestions (“Zulu,” “Howie,” “Paul”). Celebrations shared: 7,148 people at Night of Prayer & Worship (Rockwall campus) Two volunteers (John Mixon & Kelly Vrooman) got engaged that night Healing testimony: Jackson, 19, 18-months free of fentanyl, instant relief from 10/10 back pain Jana’s ongoing ministry to couples battling infertility Key Points 1. Central Thesis A disciple of Jesus “assembles a band of brothers or sisters.” If Jesus did, we must. ...

January 25, 2026 · 5 min