This series includes full-length audio messages from Dr. Jeremiah—more than what airs on radio. You can access these messages—and thousands of others—ANYTIME, on any device, with a subscription to TurningPoint+.
What is the most exciting journey you’ve taken?
Did it last for more than four years? Did you battle a storm, get shipwrecked, snake-bit and become stranded for three months on a tiny island in the middle of a great sea? If not, then you’ve never experienced half of the trials that you’ll discover in The Church in Action, Volume 5.
The salvation testimony of the apostle Paul is referenced five times in the New Testament – once by Luke and four times by Paul himself. It always includes the three components of a testimony: Who I was before meeting Christ, how I met Christ, and how Christ has changed my life. Covers Acts 22:1-30.
Everyone’s life is filled with “this is it” moments – moments when we believe things couldn’t get any worse. The secret to making it through those times in recognizing God’s presence and leaning on His promise. It is His purposes, not life’s circumstances, that determine the outcome. Covers Acts 23:1 – 11.
It’s easy to go through our daily lives without stopping to give God credit for the safety and welfare we enjoy. But as the apostle Paul discovered, even the smallest details that result in our safety and protection can be attributed to God’s faithfulness, frequently overlooked attribute. Covers Acts 23:12 – 35.
One never knows what a day will bring – especially the day of a ruler. Felix, the Roman governor of Judea, met Paul, the leader of the Christian movement called “the Way,” and over the next two years got to know him well. But he failed to take advantage of Paul’s presence. Covers Acts 24:1 – 27.
When we suffer unjust or unfair treatment at the hands of peers or authorities, we react as if is shouldn’t have happened. In fact, we live in an unjust and unfair world, and being wrongly treated is to be expected. The question becomes, How should we respond when it happens? Covers Acts 25:1 – 12.
A central tenet of the biblical Gospel is that God used foolish things to confound the wise. When a first-century meeting in Caesarea, full of religious pomp and worldly ceremony, was invaded by a small, unassuming, but courageous Jew, the sophisticated and wise were duly confounded. Covers Acts 25:13 – 26:32.
Some Christians say that those rightly related to God will never suffer in the storms of life, The apostle Paul never got the message. He was in God’s perfect will and found himself in a great storm. Instead of removing Paul from the storm, God saved him through the storm. Covers Acts 27:1 – 44.
Every Christian’s life is a complex variety of trips and destinations. Most seem ordinary – things that have to be done – with little or no spiritual purpose. But the apostle Paul viewed every trip and every destination as part of the call of God. He witnessed for Christ at every opportunity. Covers Acts 28:1 – 31.