Downtown Community Church

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 382:24:45
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Sinopsis

Love God. Make Disciples. Be Great Neighbors. Tallahassee, FL. We meet on Sundays at 8:30am, 10:00am, 11:30am at 231 E Palmer Ave. Learn more at downtowncommunitychurch.com

Episodios

  • DCC Daily PRACTICE: Sabbath, Against the Grain of the World

    05/03/2021 Duración: 06min

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  • DCC Daily STORY: Saturday Soccer Meets Hope City

    03/03/2021 Duración: 05min

    Hear from our families director, Delaney Stoney, on how the simple action of attending a kids soccer game impacted a relationship.Music by @SofiaCamille.Send us a textSupport the show

  • Above & Beyond Sunday

    01/03/2021 Duración: 34min

    Learn more about our "For The Future" building expansion and why we're excited to have you partner with us during this next season! Learn more at https://downtowncommunitychurch.com/forthefuture Send us a textSupport the show

  • Hidden Assumption: Emotions

    23/02/2021 Duración: 37min

    It is very unlikely that many of us identify the idol of emotions as one of our main struggles. However, we can find this idol in ourselves when we ask questions like “Is my obedience towards God dependent on my feelings?” or “Do I follow Jesus less in a season when I feel disconnected?” In fact, for most of us, our obedience is bound to our emotions. Evidence of this fact is the self-medication of online shopping when we feel frustrated, or settling for a wrong relationship when we feel lonely. Emotions are good indicators of our need, but they turn sour when we medicate ourselves with the idol of emotions.The correction of this is not turning around and completely ignoring our emotions. We can take immense cues from the Psalmist of Psalm 42 of how to hold our emotions in tension with relationship to God. The Psalmist admits that there is a cognitive dissonance between the way he feels and what he believes about God. In the situation of despair that the Psalmist was in, most of us either hide from God and me

  • Hidden Assumptions: Relationships

    16/02/2021 Duración: 38min

    Besides just the cheesiness of doing a relationship sermon on Valentine’s Day, this sermon was originally scheduled on another day so as not to rain on the parade of everyone. Yet, here it is. Because all humans are made in the image of God, it makes sense that it is easy for us to idolize another human. To start with the bottom line, relationships were never meant to be used for the fulfillment of our needs, they were always meant to compliment us.  However, when we look to the compliment to become our fulfillment it will always leave us in disappointment.  The reality is that when I need someone, I’m not really loving them for them. I am objectifying them in order to fulfill my own needs. We tend to make two mistakes on this front: either we feel incomplete and look to someone else to complete us, or we believe that we actually are complete and fulfilled in and of ourselves. The message of the gospel, however, tells us something entirely different. All of this is illustrated by the story of Jacob in Genesis

  • For The Future

    07/02/2021 Duración: 44min

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  • Hidden Assumptions: Approval

    01/02/2021 Duración: 33min

    Many of us care deeply about what others think about us. Almost all (if not all) of us seek approval from at least one person. We live in an approval-seeking culture, we just call it by the inverse: “cancel culture”. Whether it be in seeking out attention and likes on social media or in simply hating to feel like we’ve let someone down, the idol of approval has the ability to crush us. As is true with almost every idol, the idol of approval is indicative of a real need. When Jesus was baptized at the beginning of his public ministry, the Spirit of God rested on him like a dove and a voice from heaven declared, “This is my son, with whom I am well pleased”, showing the reality of the Son’s approval in the eyes of the Father.  At the basement of the idol of approval is the need to be valuable and acceptable.  However, many of us live with a core fear and insecurity that we aren’t that acceptable.  Consequently, the idol of approval trusts in people to deem us acceptable instead of God.The prophet Jeremiah draws

  • Hidden Assumptions: Finances

    25/01/2021 Duración: 36min

    Whether it be assuming that our car breaks will work when we apply them, assuming that a chair will hold us when we sit down, or assuming that our friend will be on time (or late, depending on their personality), we all walk through life with a set of assumptions. More consequentially, we assume that the things at the very center of our lives will fulfill our needs. Anything that isn’t Jesus that takes our ultimate focus and attention in life is an idol. And when it comes to removing an idol from our lives, we can so often go about it without ever asking what need we were seeking to satisfy and how we can replace that idol with something that would legitimately satisfy that need. When it comes to idols, money is likely the #1 idol of our culture, and the most sensitive to speak about. We all misuse money in different ways. Some of us are ultra-spenders, and some are ultra-savers. Some of us love paying for others in order to be noticed for it. At the heart of loving money is a longing for self-sufficiency. In

  • Hidden Assumptions: Success

    20/01/2021 Duración: 35min

    We all have something that stands at the center of our life. Whether it be family, career, success, or comfort, there is inevitably something in our lives that is of ultimate importance to us. And we have placed it at the center of our lives for a reason. Whether we think about it or not, we believe that whatever we center our lives around can meet the main need we have. However, we never revisit the thing that our lives revolve around and ask, “Can this fulfill me?”The thing at the center of our life dictates our identity. For many of us, the idol of success and achievement has taken this center role in our lives. The desire for accomplishment is driven by the need to prove worth. However, as it’s been illustrated by many successful people throughout time, success always leaves you wanting more. There are needs we have that our accomplishments can’t meet. In 2 Kings 5, the story of Naaman shows us a man who has unsurmountable levels of military success, yet is helplessly reduced to be a leper. Seeing Naaman

  • Hidden Assumptions Week 1

    11/01/2021 Duración: 35min

    We carry assumptions into every aspect of our life. We assume that what makes us feel good is what makes others feel good, we assume that rational people will accept our rational statements, and we even assume that acquiring more money or losing more weight would fulfill us. We carry such assumptions with us into every aspect of life, even into the sphere of our most core needs. Yet, we find ourselves still longing with our needs not met we double down on that assumption instead of changing. We seek for more relationships, more money, more acceptance from others, etc. When this happens it becomes the primary driver of our life and as such is idolatry. We, as a culture, have hidden our idols beneath the guise of intellectuality and nuance, making it harder to recognize idolatry when it exists. An idol is something we put ahead of God that we bow down to and sacrifice for. Idolatry at other times in other contexts was very obvious (i.e. a golden calf), but now it looks more like sacrificing family to the idol o

  • Discipleship in 2021

    04/01/2021 Duración: 41min

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  • Home For The Holidays Week 3

    23/12/2020 Duración: 38min

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  • Home For The Holidays Week 2

    16/12/2020 Duración: 36min

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  • Home For The Holidays Week 1

    07/12/2020 Duración: 31min

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  • B-Boy Stance (Guest Speaker: Derrick Hayes)

    30/11/2020 Duración: 46min

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  • Quit Limping

    23/11/2020 Duración: 37min

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  • Our Lust For Egypt

    16/11/2020 Duración: 29min

    The story of the Exodus from Egypt is one of God raising up a leader, Moses,  to lead his people out of slavery. However, as things get difficult throughout the trek between Egypt and the Promised Land, the people of Israel cry out in complaint to Moses: “You should have left us in Egypt! It was better for us in Egypt!” The reality is that there were very few things that were good about the 430 year subjugation of Israel under Egypt. So, why did Israel look back so favorably on their time in Egypt as they wandered through the wilderness?The reality is that we all have a tendency to prefer the certainty of slavery over the uncertainty of faithfully trusting in God. It’s easy to look back with a positive slant on how things used to be, even when the past is as extreme as slavery to a nation. This may play out in our lives through waiting on a right romantic relationship or living with generosity. Each of these circumstances require faith that God will provide for our needs. The temptation in either situation is

  • The Elephant & Donkey In The Room Pt. 3

    09/11/2020 Duración: 35min

    In the same way that getting berated over leaving a bowl in the sink is a disproportionate reaction to the offense, political opinions are also prone to elicit disproportionate responses. In fact, politics are more divisive than religion. The majority of us would respectfully agree that we each have a freedom to practice religion, yet have no problem lobbing insults at the opposing political camp. Politics are so charged and provoke such strong emotional responses because they play on these two emotions: fear and hope. Note that fear and hope are emotions, and not necessarily information. Fear can be described as the backdoor to hope, and hope is the backdoor to fear. They are intimately connected because they are both future oriented.  This connection is incredibly important because at the end of the day, what we fear has the ability to control us. Jesus came to take control of our entire lives. Matthew 10 shows us how we can be rooted in this reality and trust God with it. Jesus says he is sending his disci

  • The Elephant & Donkey In The Room Pt. 2

    02/11/2020 Duración: 35min

    When Jesus walked on planet earth, his kingdom was open to everyone. With a diverse population of believers come diverse sets of beliefs and opinions. This is the tension we feel as Christians. The truth is that every political position claims a part of Jesus. Yet, we should be united as a body of believers, and, as Jesus prayed, our oneness will be our witness. Yet, where does our unity end and disagreement begin? In a diverse and polarizing world how do we actually live this out?In the early church, the differences between Jews and Gentiles went far deeper into history and were far more all-encompassing than any division we face here in America. Romans 14 is highly instructional for how to pursue unity within a diverse church that’s filled with potential for division. We are to aggressively embrace with personal interest those in the church who think differently than us.  We should do so without trying to debate or judge the person with whom we disagree. Yet, we should each be fully convinced in what we bel

  • The Elephant & Donkey in the Room, pt. 1

    26/10/2020 Duración: 31min

    Voting season is the most polarizing time of the year in our country. While common sentiment would lead you to think that religion and politics are the two things that  you should never bring up in conversation, the reality is that either the world will teach us how to think about politics or the Word of God will teach us. Politics are so divisive because we all have skin in the game. For many of us, there is a real fear of the impact that will be made based on who wins an election. When we fear loss our pride often kicks in to try and prevent that loss. To make it more complex, both the liberal and conservative sides can pick certain Bible verses and constructs to prop up their agenda. This is why an oft used statement by both sides is, “I don’t see how you can be a Christian and vote for _______.”  This begs the question, how do we act as the Church in such a politically divisive climate? In John 17, Jesus prays over all those who will come to faith with a singular purpose: that they may be one even as the

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