Pastor Drew Poppleton lays out Revelation, chapters 4 and 5. (You really ought to watch the video to get the full effect.) In this first part of a 3-part focus on this passage, he demonstrates how encounters with God have a certain flow to them, a flow that we might emulate in our corporate worship.
Author: Drew Poppleton (Drew Poppleton)
Isaiah 6 – Isaiah’s Vision
Pastor Drew Poppleton expounds on Isaiah 6, which aligns with a pattern seen in many encounters with God. Thus, the pattern has come to be seen as a guide for our worship (for our “liturgy”).
Genesis 28:10-22 – Jacob’s Dream
Pastor Drew Poppleton presents Genesis 28 to us and asks us to consider the implications Jacob’s Dream has for our daily lives and our experience of worship in church.
Mark 8:27-38 – Jesus the Messiah
Pastor Drew finishes up our summer series through the Gospel of Mark by helping us relive the experience of the disciples. May those with eyes, see.
Mark 8:11-21 – Jesus and the Pharisees
Pastor Drew Poppleton continues our series in the Gospel of Mark by unpacking a passage that might be confusing at first, but actually ties together many other elements of the Good News in Jesus. May those with ears hear, and those with eyes see.
Mark 7:24-30 – Jesus and Dogs
Pastor Drew Poppleton continues the series through the Gospel of Mark by conveying the good news shared with us through the Syrophoenician woman.
The Formational Goal: Maturing In Christ
This is the 3rd sermon of a 3-part series. It will make much more sense if you listen to the other two. The goal of this particular sermon is to name specific qualities of the person who is mature in Christ. Most churches simply encourage people to “get saved.” But experiencing salvation is ONLY THE...
The Formational Pathway
This sermon is the second in a group of three sermons. Thus, it only makes sense after listening the first. … in this sermon, Drew Poppleton makes the case that in order to be formed as God intends, we must die to self and put on Christ.
The Human Condition — January 12, 2020
This sermon lays the foundation for the next two sermons about spiritual formation. Before we can understand the kind of formation God wants in our lives, we need to clear about our current condition. This sermon is presents a “biblical anthropology”—i.e., and understanding of humans based on the first three chapters 1-3.