Turning Point Church Podcast

Welcome to the Turning Point Church Podcast! True transformation begins by aligning our thoughts with God’s truth. Our minds constantly shape our reality, so spiritual growth requires intentional mental renewal. Like gardeners, we must plant Scripture, meditate on it, and guard against negative thoughts. Barriers like pride and fear can hinder this process, but by focusing on what is pure and godly, we create space for lasting change. Daily practices such as Scripture meditation and rejecting harmful thoughts help us cultivate a renewed, Christ-centered mindset that bears fruit in everyday life.

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Episodes

Tuesday Jan 13, 2026

This powerful message confronts the difference between experiencing God's presence and truly walking in freedom. Drawing from Acts 12, where Peter is miraculously freed from prison, we're challenged to recognize that chains can fall off during a Sunday service, yet we can still remain imprisoned by our patterns and predictability. The angel didn't just visit Peter—he commanded him to follow. This distinction is crucial: visitation is wonderful, but transformation requires obedience. Many of us love the church version of ourselves, where worship lifts our spirits and the atmosphere makes righteousness feel easy. But God is calling us beyond Sunday Christianity into an everyday faith. The message of generational wealth isn't primarily about money—it's about passing down a legacy of faith that overflows into every area of life. When we learn to follow the Holy Spirit daily rather than following formulas or traditions, we break free from the enemy's ability to predict and trap us. The question shifts from asking God to do what we want, to asking what He wants. This year is about making God the God of every day, not just Sundays or somedays or bad days. True freedom means following Him out of the prison, not just feeling lighter while still locked inside.

Thursday Jan 08, 2026

This powerful message confronts a truth many of us need to hear: we're not just dealing with difficult circumstances or bad situations—we're dealing with a thief. The enemy has been stealing our joy, our health, our hope, and our resources, often while we've unknowingly given him access through unforgiveness, unrepented sin, and the darkness we've allowed to linger. Drawing from Jesus' encounters with those who desperately reached for Him—like the woman with the issue of blood who touched His garment—we're reminded that even when it seems Jesus is on His way somewhere else, we can still reach out and receive our miracle. The sermon challenges us to identify the lies we've been believing, to kick out the thief who has taken up residence in our thoughts and lives, and to instead give access to God. Through stories like Naaman dipping seven times in the Jordan and the paralyzed man lowered through the roof, we see that God sometimes works in ways that challenge our expectations and pride, but the miracle is always worth the obedience. This isn't about waiting for something great to happen to us—it's about recognizing that something greater is already here, already within us through the Holy Spirit, ready to be released as we align ourselves with God's ways.

Thursday Jan 08, 2026

Tuesday Dec 16, 2025

At the heart of this message lies a profound yet simple truth: believing God is easier than we think. Drawing from Mark chapter 9, we encounter the dramatic account of a demon-possessed boy whose father desperately seeks healing. When the disciples fail to cast out the demon, Jesus responds with striking words: 'Oh, unbelieving generation, how long must I remain with you?' This isn't harsh judgment but rather a loving challenge to recognize that faith is the hinge upon which all of God's promises swing open. The father's honest cry, 'I do believe, help my unbelief,' resonates with our own spiritual struggles. We discover that faith isn't some complicated formula requiring advanced spiritual degrees. Jesus himself said that faith the size of a mustard seed can move mountains. The obstacle isn't that God's power is insufficient or that His promises are unclear. Rather, we often become too smart for our own good, allowing our intellect and pride to block the simple, childlike faith that accesses the supernatural. When Jesus says we must become like little children to enter the kingdom of heaven, He's reminding us that children believe quickly and completely. They don't analyze promises to death or construct theological barriers. This Christmas season, as we remember that Jesus was always Plan A, the Lamb slain before the foundation of the world, we're invited to return to that pure, innocent faith that simply takes God at His word.

Tuesday Dec 09, 2025

What if God's new thing isn't something He's going to give us, but something He's already doing within us right now? This powerful exploration of Isaiah 43:19 challenges us to shift our perspective from waiting for external change to recognizing the internal transformation God is actively working in our present circumstances. The message draws a fascinating parallel between God's restorative work and the concept of 'restomods'—classic cars restored not just to original condition, but to something better than new. Just as a skilled restorer sees potential in what others consider scrap, God sees us not as we are, but as what we can become through His transformative power. The sermon reminds us that Moses' greatest qualification for leadership wasn't his eloquence or confidence, but his understanding that God's presence matters more than any promise or place. We're invited to stop chasing locations, positions, or material blessings, and instead recognize that revival is mobile—it moves with us because we carry His presence. The wilderness and desert of our current struggles aren't obstacles to God's new work; they're precisely where He makes streams flow and ways appear. This isn't about waiting until we 'get our act together' to be used by God. It's about understanding that resurrection power means being restored to better than our original condition, just as Christ rose in a glorified state that surpassed His pre-crucifixion body.

Monday Dec 08, 2025

This powerful message invites us into a profound truth: our Christian faith is meant to be lived through personal encounter with Jesus, not merely through association with church culture or inherited beliefs. Drawing from the story of Zacchaeus in Luke 19, we discover that true transformation happens when we move from simply wanting to see Jesus to realizing that He sees us. Zacchaeus was a man rejected by his own people and used by Rome—wealthy but empty, significant in status but insignificant in belonging. Yet his desperate determination to encounter Jesus changed everything. He didn't let the crowd dictate his pace or position; he ran ahead and climbed a tree, demonstrating that when we're truly hungry for God, no obstacle will stop us. The most beautiful moment came when Jesus looked up and called him by name—a name meaning 'pure' and 'clean,' prophesying who he would become. This encounter didn't just give Zacchaeus a glimpse of Jesus; it gave him the life-altering revelation that he was seen, known, and chosen by God. The result was immediate repentance, radical generosity, and complete transformation. We're challenged to examine whether we're living as Christians by association or by direct relationship, and to pursue the kind of desperate, personal encounter with Jesus that produces authentic fruit in our lives.

Monday Nov 24, 2025

This powerful message challenges us to move beyond being spectators in our faith and step into the fullness of what God has designed us for. Drawing from Luke 10:1-2, where Jesus sends out 72 disciples ahead of him, we're confronted with a profound truth: the harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few. Our true potential isn't found in what we can accomplish for ourselves, but in what we're capable of doing for the kingdom of God. The sermon uses the striking imagery of a baseball bat to illustrate that it's our turn at the plate—we can't remain in the stands watching others play the game. Just as Peter was the only disciple who experienced walking on water because he actually stepped out of the boat, we too must seize the opportunities God presents, even when they come cloaked in inconvenience. The message emphasizes that our potential remains dormant until activated by the Holy Spirit, and that activation requires our willingness to act. We're reminded that God doesn't need our good ideas; He needs our obedience. The call is clear: stop leaving God at the altar on Sunday and bring Him home—into our marriages, families, workplaces, and neighborhoods. True biblical community isn't just about gathering together; it's about being empowered by the Holy Spirit to transform the lives around us.

Wednesday Nov 12, 2025

This powerful message challenges us to move beyond the comfortable confines of church buildings and into the very homes where we live. Drawing from Acts 2, we're reminded that the early church didn't just gather in temples—they met daily from house to house, breaking bread together and watching God add to their number those being saved. The vision of 'house fires' isn't about creating another program; it's about igniting the same presence, worship, and mighty word of God under our own roofs. We see that Jesus himself modeled this, spending as much time ministering in homes as in synagogues, meeting people where they actually live. The model is beautifully simple: devoted teaching, temple worship, and house-to-house fellowship. But here's the crucial insight—the model follows the move. Without the outpouring of the Holy Spirit that began Acts 2, the structure described at the end of Acts 2 would be meaningless. We can have all the right forms and programs, but without the breath of God—that same Ruach that gave life to Adam—we're just going through religious motions. This is our call to open our lives, our homes, and our hearts to what God wants to do, not what we think should be done. It's about obedience and watching God work through us in the most intimate spaces of our lives.

Tuesday Nov 04, 2025

This powerful message confronts us with a fundamental truth: the church isn't something we attend—it's who we are. Drawing from the Greek word 'ekklesia,' we're reminded that church speaks to people, not buildings or programs. We are the body of Christ, intricately connected like the parts of our physical bodies, each member essential to the whole. The message challenges us to move beyond seeing church as a part-time religious obligation and embrace it as our full-time identity. Through the lens of Acts 2:42-47, we see the early church's devotion to teaching, fellowship, breaking bread, and prayer—resulting in daily salvations and miraculous provision. The vision cast here is revolutionary: what if our homes became outposts of God's presence? What if house fires—gatherings in neighborhoods, apartments, and workplaces—became places where the Holy Spirit moves powerfully? This isn't about creating hobby groups with Jesus sprinkled in; it's about igniting genuine discipleship, training, and community transformation. The call is clear: we're on a rescue operation for both sinners who are lost and sons who are sleeping, and the time is short. When we carry God's presence and step forward in faith, He promises to part the waters before us.

Monday Oct 27, 2025

In this episode of the Turning Point podcast, the host discusses Mark Chapter 10, focusing on the story of the rich young ruler who approaches Jesus seeking eternal life. The host emphasizes the importance of a personal relationship with Jesus, stating that true potential is unlocked through partnership with God. The rich young ruler, despite his adherence to commandments and wealth, lacks the essential relationship with Jesus, which leads to his sorrowful departure when asked to sell his possessions.
The host encourages listeners to reflect on their own lives, questioning whether they are truly dependent on God or relying on their own abilities. They highlight the significance of desire over discipline in the pursuit of faith, asserting that genuine love for God should drive actions rather than mere obligation. The discussion also touches on the idea of potential, choice, and the difference between "can't" and "won't," urging listeners to confront their excuses and embrace their God-given potential.

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