Sermons from Trinity Church by Matt McCullough and others.
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What is the wise way to respond to innocent suffering? This question is central to the book of Job. No one paying attention to the world can deny the reality of innocent suffering?that our experience of the world is far from what we wish it to be, and often our suffering doesn't make sense. If Job's friends show us how not to respond to this realit…
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We're using these days when we can't gather on Sundays to talk about why it's so precious to meet together, and why we do what we do when we gather. Join Matt McCullough as he sits down with Bill Heerman, one of Trinity's elders, to discuss corporate prayer.
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Several times in this text Jesus gives the same simple command: don?t be anxious. To those of us who struggle with anxiety, that can sound a bit like blaming the victim. Who would really choose to be anxious, after all? But what Jesus offers isn?t a dismissive charge to get over it. Nor is it a comprehensive explanation of everything that goes into…
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Jesus raises Lazarus, thus revealing his divinity, and thus giving us every confidence to trust in him.
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Matt McCullough and Jonathan Worsley discuss biblical preaching.
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Deep in every human is a longing for more than what we experience in this world. In this text Paul pinpoints our longing--a longing for life. It's a longing only the risen Jesus can fulfill. (Originally 2017-04-16.)
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This psalm of David gives us a profile of inner peace, and where we can find it.
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We're using these days when we can't gather on Sundays to talk about why it's so precious to meet together, and why we do what we do when we gather. Join Matt McCullough as he sits down with Dave Hunt and Matt Merker to discuss singing to each other.
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Peter says it's possible to rejoice and to grieve at the same time. But only if you have a living hope. Do you?
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