Sanctuary Video Podcast

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  • Duración: 347:42:53
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Sinopsis

Join us each week for traditional worship and an inspiring message from Senior Minister Rev. Paul Rasmussen and Dr. John Fiedler.

Episodios

  • As You Go: Glorious Power

    20/04/2026 Duración: 28min

    Rev. Matt Tuggle

  • As You Go

    12/04/2026 Duración: 30min

    Rev. Matt Tuggle | Click/tap here to view the Sermon Reflection Guide. What next? Fortunately, we are not the first generation to ask that question. In fact, the first generation wanted to know the same thing. What now? How do we live a life of faith and love after the Resurrection? In this sermon, we will be looking at how we can live out our real faith in our real lives in very real ways. When we contemplate “what next,” we think about what is to come of our lives, who or what we will influence, what legacy we are going to leave behind, or what is downstream of us.  What we often forget to factor in is what we are putting into our lives that will, in turn, influence what comes after us, or what is upstream of us. Similar to eating habits, what we put in directly correlates with what we put out. If we are constantly filling our lives with things that are not hopeful, we will not leave behind a legacy of hope. On the other hand, if we fill our lives with faith, hope, and love, we will leave behind a legacy of

  • Good Friday 2026

    04/04/2026 Duración: 51min
  • Interrupted

    04/04/2026 Duración: 25min
  • One Wish

    29/03/2026 Duración: 25min
  • Are You Envious Because I Am Generous?

    22/03/2026 Duración: 30min

    Click/tap here to view the Sermon Reflection Guide. Generosity. This is something that can be controversial to think about. Generosity can easily give rise to jealousy and envy in the human heart instead of grace and gratitude. Something in our hearts leans more toward jealousy when we see or hear about other people's generosity, even if it is a generosity that we are a beneficiary of. We serve a God who is gracious and generous beyond comprehension. This generosity is on display in Jesus’ parable in Matthew 20:1-16.  This parable reminds us that Jesus is all about bringing people into the work of God. There is always work to be done, and whether someone comes in at the first hour or the eleventh hour, God wants them there and will be generous with them in turn. And we’re called, like God, to be generous with others in return, people who receive the blessings of God with an open hand and share the blessings of God with an open hand. We are called to be generous in the big moments of our lives and the smallest

  • There Is No One Else There

    15/03/2026 Duración: 30min

    Click/tap here to view the Sermon Reflection Guide. “What does ‘humble’ mean?” That’s the question before us in this sermon. It is a question that many of us have asked throughout our lifetime. Humility is something that we hear about all throughout the Bible and is a common theme in Jesus’ life. Though the disciples saw pure humility in their lives of following Jesus, in Matthew 18 we see them challenge it with human pride, competition, and comparison. Despite everything they had seen, they were still measuring greatness the way the world measures it. And don’t we do the same? We compare. We compete. We seek recognition. We want to be seen, valued, and elevated. The disciples’ struggle with humility isn’t distant from us—it mirrors our own hearts. Their question reveals something deeply human: the pull toward pride and self-importance. Jesus responds in a way that completely redefines greatness. He calls a child to himself and says that unless we become like little children—lowly, dependent, and unassuming—w

  • The Single-Minded Soul

    08/03/2026 Duración: 30min

    Click/tap here to view the Sermon Reflection Guide. What is the last thing you purchased for the purpose of improving your life? Every day, we encounter hundreds of proposals about how we should spend our money, time, and attention. Advertisements, products, and opportunities promise to make our lives better—healthier, happier, more successful, or more fulfilled. Each of these proposals asks us to run a kind of cost–benefit analysis: Is this worth it? Will this truly improve my life? Jesus offers a different kind of proposal. In Matthew 13:44, Jesus says the kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field. When a man discovers the treasure, he joyfully sells everything he owns in order to obtain it. Jesus is telling us that there is one thing worth everything. It is as valuable as buried treasure. It is like a precious pearl. The “it” Jesus is pointing to is life in the kingdom of God through discipleship to him. It is a life spent knowing Jesus, learning his ways, and becoming like him. The invitation o

  • The Land

    08/03/2026 Duración: 28min
  • Transformation

    02/03/2026 Duración: 23min
  • Imperceptible to Undeniable

    01/03/2026 Duración: 22min

    Click/tap here to view the Sermon Reflection Guide. Jesus’ parable of the mustard seed in Matthew 13:31–33 reveals that the kingdom of God often begins in ways that seem small, hidden, and insignificant but ultimately become transformative and far-reaching. Just as a seed absorbs water, soil, and light to become something new, Jesus’ ministry began in the obscure village of Nazareth within the vast Roman Empire. What started small grew into a movement that outlasted empires and changed the world.  Jesus understood that his Father’s kingdom is ever-expanding, and he continues this seed-like work in human hearts today—absorbing pain, shame, addiction, and sorrow and transforming them into hope, forgiveness, healing, and love. The central message is that the world changes one human heart at a time. Though individual lives may feel small and insignificant in the face of seemingly overwhelming global problems, God works through quiet, faithful transformation, turning surrendered hearts into catalysts for change in

  • For Forty Days

    22/02/2026 Duración: 29min

    Click/tap here to view the Sermon Reflection Guide. Resolutions often fail because they demand an undefined, lifelong commitment; “forever” feels overwhelming. Lent, however, offers a grace-filled, 40-day invitation to intentional change. Rather than relying on sheer willpower, we lean on God’s strength. It is a season of formation—a time to prepare for Easter by saying “yes” to what deepens our life with God and “no” to what distracts or diminishes it. At the heart of this week’s message is Jesus’ parable of the wheat and the weeds. A weed called darnel, also known as wheat’s evil twin, looked like wheat at first but proved poisonous with its roots entangling and choking the crop. It mirrors our lives: the “weeds” we tolerate often seem harmless, even good, at first, but eventually entangle our hearts and harm others. Still, the field belongs to the Son of Man. Though good and evil grow side by side, Jesus continues planting “children of the kingdom,” marked by forgiveness, patience, grace, and truth. The pa

  • God Is the Point

    18/02/2026 Duración: 21min
  • Thy Kingdom Come

    15/02/2026 Duración: 34min

    Click/tap here to view the Sermon Reflection Guide. Jesus offers abundant life. If you’ve been a Christian for a while, this should be a familiar concept. The only way to have an abundant life is through a relationship with Jesus and reorienting our lives around our faith. When we try to work our faith into the corners of our lives, the forces that try to work against human thriving are given more room to take hold of our hearts and minds. These forces subtly distort truth, inflame disordered desires, and tempt us to build our lives around lesser kingdoms, like success, comfort, control, and approval.  When faith is confined to a compartment of life—Sunday mornings, occasional prayers, moral checklists—those opposing forces are given space to shape the rest of our hearts and habits. Abundant life requires full integration. It calls for building our entire lives around Christ rather than attempting to fit him into the margins. When Jesus becomes the center—informing our decisions, relationships, work, ambition

  • In the Boat

    08/02/2026 Duración: 31min

    Click/tap here to view the Sermon Reflection Guide. Luke 5 opens with Peter, a skilled fisherman, exhausted after a night of empty nets. It is in the midst of this frustration that Jesus steps into Peter’s boat, meeting him in his ordinary work. When Jesus tells him to go into deep water and lower his nets, Peter chooses trust over relying on his own expertise (Luke 5:5). His obedience results in an overwhelming catch that nearly sinks two boats. Rather than celebrating, Peter falls to his knees in awe and confesses his unworthiness. Jesus responds with a new calling: “Do not be afraid; from now on you will be catching people” (Luke 5:10). Peter leaves everything to follow him, showing that true life is found in following Jesus, not clinging to the blessings he has provided. This week’s message invites us beyond shallow safety into deeper trust with God and reminds us that our everyday places (work, school, and home) are where Jesus calls us to join his mission. He steps into our boats first, meeting us where

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