This is a sermon podcast from South Fellowship Church.
In this week’s message, we begin a new series on neighboring as we sit with the Parable of the Good Samaritan in Luke 10. Pastor Alex invites us to rethink what it means to share our faith, starting not with pressure or performance but with genuine care for the people around us. As Jesus reshapes our understanding of who our neighbor is, we’re encouraged to take a simple first step and begin praying for those right in front of us.
In John 21, we return to Peter after his denial and the quiet way Jesus meets him on the shore. Around a charcoal fire, Peter is invited to face his failure and hear again the call to love and follow. As we sit with this moment, we’re drawn into a conversation about shame, restoration, and the grace that meets us right where we are.
In this Easter message, we move through the Gospel of John and sit with a familiar tension: what happens when God doesn’t show up when we expect Him to? As we follow the stories of Lazarus, Mary, and Thomas, we’re invited to bring our own questions, doubts, and disappointments into the story. Rather than rushing past the waiting, this message creates space to stay present and trust that Jesus meets us in His time.
Video Alex references in his sermon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=23UNLLbOS3w
In John 18, we step into the moment of Jesus’ arrest and see a very different picture of power than we might expect. In this message, Pastor Aaron Bjorkland reflects on a King who does not resist, defend, or grasp for control, but instead moves toward the cross with quiet authority. As we notice our own impulse to hold on tightly and manage what feels uncertain, we’re invited to consider a different way of living. This sermon explores what it looks like to follow Jesus in surrender and to trust that self-giving love carries a deeper kind of strength.
In John 17, we’re invited into Jesus’ prayer just before the cross, where He lifts His eyes not only for His first followers but for all who would come after, including us. In this message, Pastor Alex reflects on Jesus’ desire for unity and what it means to live as a people shaped by love and grace in the middle of the world around us. As we consider the tension of holding onto truth while extending grace, we’re invited to pursue a kind of unity that reflects the heart of Jesus and points others toward Him.
In John 16, Jesus prepares His disciples for what lies ahead and reminds them that life with Him was never meant to be lived on our own strength. In this message, Pastor Alex reflects on what it looks like to live a life that truly depends on God’s presence. As we consider the areas of our lives that feel overwhelming or beyond our capacity, we’re invited to see those moments not as failures but as openings for deeper trust. This sermon explores how prayer, rest, and honest reliance on God can reshape the way we carry our responsibilities and relationships each day.
In this Lenten message from John 15, Pastor Sean reflects on Jesus’ image of the vine and branches and the often difficult process of pruning in the Christian life. As a gardener cares for a vine so it can bear more fruit, God sometimes removes things that once felt meaningful or life-giving. Through personal story and reflection, this message invites us to consider what it looks like to remain connected to Christ through seasons of change and letting go. Rather than striving to produce growth on our own, we’re reminded that lasting fruit grows from staying rooted in Jesus and learning to love one another well.
How do we actually grow into the likeness of Jesus? In this sermon from John 14, Pastor Alex reflects on the slow, sometimes frustrating process of spiritual transformation and Jesus’ promise of the Holy Spirit as our Helper. As we move through this season of renewal, we’re invited to reconsider what change really looks like and how God’s work and our participation fit together. Rather than striving harder or waiting passively, this message explores a life shaped by partnership with the Spirit and a steady openness to the kind of transformation only God can bring.
In John 14, Jesus speaks tenderly to His disciples as He prepares to leave, offering words that have echoed through generations: “I go to prepare a place for you.” In this message, Pastor Alex reflects on the hope woven into that promise and what it means for us to live with ongoing access to God’s presence. As we sit with Jesus’ words about being the way, the truth, and the life, we’re invited to wrestle with both the boldness and the beauty of that claim. This teaching encourages us to move beyond a transactional view of faith and into a daily, lived relationship with a God who is near.
In John 13, Jesus kneels to wash His disciples’ feet, offering a quiet picture of the kind of love that carries Him all the way to the cross. In this message, Pastor Aaron reflects on what it means to be loved “to the uttermost,” even when our failures are fully seen. As Peter wrestles with receiving what he cannot earn, we’re invited to consider how difficult it can be to accept grace. This sermon explores how receiving Jesus’ love shapes the way we serve and love others, grounding us in a grace that meets us at our worst and calls us into a different way of living.
In this message from our series in the Gospel of John, we reflect on Jesus’ final words to the crowd and what it truly means to believe. Faith is framed not as something we possess once, but as a lived journey that moves from simplicity through struggle and toward surrender.