Advent: Week 4 - Love

God loved us first, He loves us always, His love is forever. He invites us to love him back, imagine how much fuller life is when we do!

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God loved us first.

God loves us anyway.

God’s love is forever.

Reading: 1 John 4

Discussion Questions:

  1. What is your favorite “love story”? Think of a movie, book, or TV show. How did the characters demonstrate love well (or not)?

  2. Reflect on God’s love for us as described in 1 John 4. It surpasses any love story of this world. Why might it be difficult to accept God’s love or fully embrace being loved that well?

  3. Loving others is the fruit of God’s love in us. What measures in your life indicate how well you are “loving God back”? 

  4. In what ways does 1 John 4 leave you feeling challenged?

Advent: Week 3 - Joy

Joy isn’t the same as happiness—it's deeper, stronger, and rooted in God’s presence, not our circumstances. In this Advent message, discover how gratitude for what God has done and hope for what He will do leads us to a joy we can actually choose and truly live in.

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Discussion Questions:

1. Where in your life do you most often confuse happiness with joy? How does that affect the way you interpret God’s work in your life?

2. Habakkuk chose joy even when his circumstances were falling apart. What is one circumstance in your life right now where joy feels difficult—but not impossible—to choose? What would “choosing joy” look like this week?

3. What are three things—big or small—you are genuinely grateful for today? How does gratitude shift your emotional or spiritual posture?

4. When you think of God, do you naturally think of Him as joyful? If not, what shapes your perception—and how might embracing God’s joy change your faith?

5. How can your life model joy in a way that becomes an invitation rather than an obstacle to faith for others? What practical steps could you take to “enjoy your life” as a form of discipleship?

Advent: Week 2 - Peace

Christmas is supposed to be a season of peace… but for most of us, it feels more like stress, noise, and pressure. So why did the angels announce “peace on earth” at the birth of Jesus? And is real peace even possible in 2025? In this message, we look at Jesus as the Prince of Peace—the One who gives us peace with God and the peace of God. Discover why peace isn’t found in control, circumstances, or perfection, but in surrender to the One who holds it all. This week, learn how to stop striving, start trusting, and experience the peace your soul has been searching for.

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Discussion Questions:

1. Where do you most often look for peace—somewhere else, someone else, or something else—and why do you think that place never ultimately delivers?

2. In Isaiah 9:6 Jesus is called the Prince of Peace (Sar Shalom). Which aspect of that meaning challenges you the most—Jesus as the One in charge, the source of rest, or the giver of full satisfaction?

3. The sermon described the difference between peace with God and the peace of God. Which one do you feel you currently experience more, and what might be standing in the way of the other?

4. What is one area of your life where you are clearly “leaning on your own understanding”? What would surrender look like in that specific situation?

5. Have you ever had a moment where you felt a surprising peace in a situation that didn’t make sense—or a moment where Jesus intentionally removed peace to convict or clarify? What did you learn?

Advent: Week 1 - Hope

This sermon explores the true meaning of Advent as a season of waiting, reminding us that our hope is found not in circumstances but in the person of Jesus. By looking at “hope deferred,” God’s perfect timing, and the promise that Christ is coming again, we learn how to anchor our hearts in a hope that never fails.

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Discussion Questions:

1) Advent is a season of waiting and preparing for Jesus’ coming. How has waiting—whether in life or in your spiritual journey—shaped your relationship with God? Do you find waiting easy, difficult, or spiritually valuable?

2. Read Proverbs 13:12. When have you personally experienced “hope deferred”? How did that season impact your heart, faith, and expectations of God?

3. Our hope is not in a what, but a who—Jesus. In what ways do we sometimes unintentionally place our hope in outcomes rather than in Christ Himself? What helps you re-center your hope on Jesus?

4. Galatians 4:4 says Jesus came “when the set time had fully come.” Share a time when you realized (maybe only in hindsight) that God’s timing was better than yours. How does that shape the way you approach unanswered prayers or delayed hopes today?

5) Advent also points us toward Jesus’ return and the restoration of all things. What is one practical step you can take this week to live with renewed hope—whether in prayer, gratitude, Scripture, or shifting your perspective?