Episodios

  • Choose Your Own Adventure | The Habit Maze (Why Change Is So Hard)
    Apr 13 2026

    Most of us want to change something. We want more peace, more discipline, more presence, more consistency. But no matter how strong the intention, we often find ourselves drifting back into the same reactions, habits, and patterns. Why? Because real change is harder than behavior management. Much of our lives are being shaped beneath the surface by distraction, autopilot, and thought patterns we barely notice. But before Jesus changes what we do, he often wakes us up to what is already forming us. Because the first step toward a different life is learning to see what’s been leading you all along.

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    46 m
  • Easter
    Apr 6 2026

    Ever wish you could rewind? Before the mistake. Before that big loss. Before life got complicated.

    Easter says you can’t go back. But you can start again. Jesus’ resurrection isn’t about restoring your old life. It’s about offering you a new one.

    If you’re ready for something better than a do-over, join us for Easter at Verve City Church.

    Real people. Real hope. A fresh start.

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    41 m
  • Famous Last Words | The God Who Forgives and Welcomes
    Mar 30 2026

    Luke’s Jesus forgives those who are killing him. He promises paradise to a criminal. He entrusts his spirit to the Father.

    Where Mark gives us anguish and Matthew gives us apocalypse, Luke gives us mercy.

    This week, we’ll see that the cross is about both what was done to Jesus and what Jesus does for others. Luke reveals a God whose final word over enemies is mercy, whose final word over outsiders is belonging, and whose final breath is trust.

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    45 m
  • Famous Last Words | The God Who Shook the World
    Mar 23 2026

    Matthew records the same cry as Mark but shapes its meaning differently.

    The earth shakes. Rocks split. The temple veil tears. Tombs open.

    Matthew wants us to see what Mark made us feel. The cross is not merely personal agony; it's cosmic upheaval. It's a turning point in the story of the world.

    This week, we’ll ask: What if the cross was the moment everything changed? What if what looked like defeat was actually the hinge of history?

    Matthew shows us a God who transforms suffering. The cry that sounded like abandonment becomes the earthquake that begins new creation.

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    37 m
  • Famous Last Words | The God Who Feels Absent
    Mar 16 2026

    “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”

    If you were inventing a religion, this is not the line you would end with.

    Mark gives us a Jesus who does not float above suffering. He does not deliver a polished speech. He does not offer explanation. He screams a Psalm into the darkness.

    This week, we’ll explore the rawest of the Gospels. Mark shows us that faith is not pretending everything is fine. It's clinging to God when you cannot feel God. The cross becomes the place where lament is not weakness, but worship.

    For those who have felt abandoned, disappointed, or disillusioned, Mark insists: your cry does not disqualify you.

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    36 m
  • Apocalypse Not Now
    Mar 9 2026

    Have you ever noticed that some Christians seem to be pretty obsessed with the end of the world?

    Last week, the United States launched an attack on Iran. Throughout the past week, many American pastors stepped into pulpits explaining what this war might mean for “the end times.” Words like rapture, millennium, and apocalypse started flying around.

    And here’s what’s fascinating: the system of Bible interpretation behind all of that talk is less than 200 years old. For nearly 1,800 years of Christian history, nobody read the Bible this way.

    So this week at Verve City Church, we’re doing a special message called “Apocalypse Not Now.” We talk about what “rapture theology” is, where it came from, the problems it creates, and why the misunderstanding of Scripture behind it can actually distract us from loving like Jesus.

    Whether you grew up hearing about the rapture or you’ve always wondered why some Christians talk so much about the end of the world, this conversation might change the way you read the Bible.

    Because what you believe about the end of the world shapes how you live in the world today.

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    44 m
  • Blood, Guts, and Fire | Scheduled Maintenance
    Mar 2 2026

    In 2024, Cal Newport of Georgetown University proposed that we have entered into a period of American life he dubs "The Great Exhaustion." Many of us feel incredibly tired, and not just physically. Mentally. Emotionally. Existentially. In Leviticus, God builds rest and reset into reality itself. Not as a rule, but as resistance. Not as religion, but as rebellion against a world that never stops demanding. This week: Sabbath, exile, new beginnings. And why “enough” might be the most radical word in your vocabulary.

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    Aún no se conoce
  • Blood, Guts, and Fire | A Glitch in The System
    Feb 23 2026

    Once you get behind, it's really hard to catch up. Debt doesn't magically clear. Power doesn't usually volunteer to shrink. Systems drift in the direction of protecting whoever is already winning. We all know this. So here's the surprising part: buried in one of the strangest sections of the Bible is a vision for interrupting that drift. Like a reset button built into the fabric of a society. It's bold. It's practical. And... it didn't actually work. So what went wrong? And why did Jesus later say he was bringing that vision back in a completely different way? If you're open to the possibility that following Jesus might offer more than private inspiration, this week is worth your attention.

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    42 m