
Hosted by Ashe Alliance Church · EN

To accomplish the mission God gave us, we must understand the purpose of the church and our place in it—making and multiplying disciples in the power and presence of Christ.

In Mark 9, Jesus calls us to pursue unity with His people while taking radical, uncompromising action against sin.

In Mark 9 Jesus prepares His disciples for His coming death, they argue about who is the greatest. Their silence and pride reveal how easily the human heart drifts toward status over surrender. Jesus responds by turning their understanding upside down: true greatness is not found in being first, but in becoming last, serving others, and welcoming the least. In doing so, we reflect Christ Himself, who humbled Himself to the point of death on a cross.

Power isn’t found in the strength of your faith but in the object of your faith. A weak faith placed in a strong Savior is enough, because the power belongs to Him.

What do you do when the mountaintop moment fades? In Mark 9, Jesus reveals His glory to prepare His disciples for suffering. This sermon explores how seeing Christ clearly changes how we walk through confusion, hardship, and everyday life. Because the goal isn’t to stay on the mountain—it’s to trust Him in the valley.

Many want a victorious Savior without suffering, but Jesus makes it clear: His mission includes the cross, and so does ours.

What do you actually see when you look at Jesus? In Mark 8, a blind man’s gradual healing mirrors our own journey from confusion to clarity. This sermon walks through how God opens our eyes, draws out faith, and leads us to a defining question: Who do you say Jesus is?

Good Friday Service

Good Friday ended in silence—but Easter morning did not. In Mark 16:1–7, we see how God meets grieving hearts, solves what we cannot, and declares the victory of a risen Christ. This message calls us out of spiritual resignation and into resurrection living, where even our failures are met with restoring grace.

Jordan Newman takes a deep dive into Mark 8:1-21 with Jesus miraculously feeding the 4,000 and the unbelief on the Pharisees.