
Unstoppable Church 09 | When Pressure Meets Purpose | Acts 4:1-22
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Pastor Bart Blair begins his sermon with the story of golfer Tommy Fleetwood, who built a fan base not through winning but through his gracious responses to defeat before finally winning the Tour Championship. This illustrates the sermon's central theme: pressure doesn't create character—it reveals it. While our culture often teaches us to avoid pressure at all costs, champions understand that pressure is where greatness is forged.
Pastor Blair uses the analogy of squeezing an orange to explain that pressure simply reveals what's already inside us. For Christians, when we get "squeezed" by life's pressures, what should come out is the character of Jesus—the fruit of the Spirit as described in Galatians 5:22-23: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. Unfortunately, what often emerges instead is doubt, anger, fear, or compromise. The true measure of spiritual maturity isn't how we appear on Sunday mornings but what flows out of us when we're under pressure.
The sermon then examines Acts 4:1-22, where Peter and John face intense pressure from the religious authorities—the same people who crucified Jesus just seven weeks earlier. Despite the threat of death and imprisonment, Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit, boldly proclaims that healing came "by the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom you crucified and whom God raised from the dead" (Acts 4:10). He further declares that "there is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to people by which we must be saved" (Acts 4:12).
Pastor Blair highlights three responses from Peter and John that believers should emulate. First, they "stayed in the game," leaning into the Holy Spirit rather than folding under pressure. Second, they "played their game," remaining clear and direct rather than compromising their message. Third, they "rose to the occasion," transforming from uneducated fishermen to bold proclaimers of truth who amazed the religious establishment.
The sermon concludes with three practical applications. First, pressure provides a platform—difficult situations often become our greatest opportunities to declare truth about Jesus. Second, pressure releases power—it activates the supernatural power of the Holy Spirit available to believers. Third, pressure produces proof—what flows out when we're squeezed reveals what's truly inside us. Pastor Blair encourages believers to examine what comes out when they're under pressure and to prepare through daily spiritual disciplines.
Just as Tommy Fleetwood didn't become a champion overnight but through years of developing his game and mental toughness, having championship faith requires daily discipline—time in God's Word, prayer, and fellowship with believers. When pressure meets purpose, ordinary people become champions, and the overlooked become unstoppable, just like Peter and John, whose boldness under pressure changed the world forever.
Learn more about Bear Creek Community Church in Lavon, TX: https://www.bc3.church/