What’s the real purpose of the church? Too often, our preferences get in the way of the mission Jesus gave us. This week, we’ll look at how the early church wrestled with putting Jesus’ purpose above their own preferences and what that means for us today. Discover how the church can truly be a search party for the lost and the kind of movement our world desperately needs.
Most people associate power with privilege, attention, or control. But on the night before his death, Jesus flipped the script. Instead of claiming a throne, he picked up a towel. Instead of demanding loyalty, he washed feet — including the feet of the very people who would betray and abandon him.
This message explores what it means for the church — and for you — to take on that kind of posture. One that serves instead of shines. That lifts others up instead of climbing higher. Because when we serve like Jesus on the outside, we actually become more like him on the inside.
And what if that kind of humility — the kind that moves you from sitting to serving — could change not just your faith, but the world around you?
Most people think God gets mad when they wander — but Jesus said the opposite. In Luke 15, He tells the story of two sons: one who ran away and made a mess of his life, and another who stayed but grew cold, bitter, and distant. Both were lost. Both were loved. And the Father ran toward them both.
What if the church looked like that kind of love? At Connexus, we believe the church shouldn’t just be a place for people who get it all right. It should be a place for people who are real — real about their doubts, their struggles, their pride, and their pain. Because the church isn’t a club for the found. It’s a search party for the lost.
In this message, Jeff Brodie unpacks how Jesus’ personality drew in the very people religion pushed out — and how we can become A Church That’s Real. Not Just Right.