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Springcreek desires to be a gospel people, proclaiming and living a gospel message in a gospel famished world. We do that in community, following Jesus. Growing is our passion. Connecting is our purpose. Serving is our privilege.

Send us Fan MailBLESSED ASSURANCEPastor Jerrid Fletcher May 17, 2026"Blessed Assurance" turns the mirror of forgiveness inward, reminding us that while we've spent weeks learning to forgive others and set healthy boundaries, the one name we cannot leave off the forgiveness list is our own. Drawing from Fanny Crosby's 1873 hymn and the bedrock truth of Romans 8:1 — "There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus" — this message confronts the lie that grace must be earned through suffering. Many of us have built a prison from the inside and lost the key on purpose, holding ourselves to a standard we'd never apply to anyone else, mistaking guilt for godliness and chains for conviction.But the gospel declares a different verdict. God's mercy doesn't wait for us to finish punishing ourselves — it meets us, like David in Psalm 51, broken and empty-handed at the mercy seat. Whether the weight you carry is one you placed on yourself (unmet expectations, regret, comparison) or one others placed on you (wounding words, betrayal, abuse, spiritual harm), Jesus has already absorbed the sentence. The "now" of Romans 8:1 is not tomorrow, not when you feel worthy — it's now. Blessed Assurance isn't a hope-so salvation; it's a know-so salvation. And God isn't done writing your story yet.DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. The message reminded us, "We hold ourselves to a standard we would never apply to another human being." Where in your life do you find yourself extending grace to others but withholding it from yourself? What do you think is underneath that?2. Romans 8:1 says there is now no condemnation. Why do you think the word "now" is so hard for many of us to actually receive? What would change in your daily life if you truly believed the verdict has already been declared in your favor?3. The sermon described two categories of weight — the weight we put on ourselves and the weight others have put on us. Which one do you carry more of, and can you name a specific voice, memory, or moment that still echoes in your head today?4. The story of being called "a mere drummer" showed how one word can shape years of decisions and self-perception. What words have been spoken over you that you've allowed to become your identity? What would it look like to give those words back?5. "Enough is enough comes when you stop negotiating with what's killing you." What is the one thing — a regret, a shame, a chain — that you sense God is inviting you to lay down today? What's keeping you from walking through the door He's already opened?

Send us Fan MailGOT BAGGAGE? When People Keep Hurting You | Part 3 Senior Pastor Keith StewartMay 10, 2026Few things are more difficult than forgiving someone for the same hurt twice. You thought the matter was settled. You prayed through it. You chose grace. You started putting the pieces of your heart back together. Then it happened again. Repeated wounds don’t just cause pain—they weaken trust, exhaust the soul and make us question whether reconciliation is even possible. So what does God say when forgiveness becomes a cycle instead of a single moment? This Sunday, we’ll talk honestly about repeated hurt, difficult relationships and the kind of forgiveness that seems almost impossible.1. What is the difference between forgiveness and reconciliation? Why is that distinction so important? 2. The message distinguished between a “mistake” and a “pattern.” Why is recognizing patterns important in relationships? 3. Have you ever experienced any part of the “cycle of abuse” described in the message (tension, explosion, honeymoon, repetition)? What made it difficult to recognize or address?4. Why do you think Christians sometimes struggle with setting healthy boundaries?5. Which unhealthy responses do people most often use with difficult people?• Reasoning with the unreasonable• Excusing destructive behavior• Cajoling and threatening • Reacting and retaliatingWhich one do you tend toward personally?6. Why can boundaries actually be an expression of love rather than rejection? 7. Pastor Keith shared how Brenda’s boundary became a turning point toward healing and growth. What does that teach us about truth, consequences, and change? 8. What does it practically look like to: forgive someone, release bitterness, and still wisely protect your heart?9. Is there a relationship in your life where God may be asking you to establish healthier boundaries?Close by praying for:wisdom,courage,healing from past wounds,and the grace to forgive without enabling destructive behavior.

Send us Fan MailGOT BAGGAGE? The Lies That Keep You Stuck | Part 2 Senior Pastor Keith StewartMay 3, 2026What if the very thing keeping you stuck isn’t your past—but what you believe about it? This Sunday, we’re tackling the lies that make forgiveness feel impossible: that it excuses wrong, erases consequences, or forces you back into unhealthy relationships. The truth is far more freeing—and far more powerful. If you’ve ever struggled to let go, move forward, or make sense of the hurt you carry, this message is for you. Join us in person or online for Got Baggage? – Part 2: The Lies That Keep You Stuck.Discussion QuestionsOBSERVATION (Understanding the Text/Message) Opening (Engagement) When you hear the word “forgiveness,” what is your immediate reaction—and why? Which of the myths discussed in the message do you think is most commonly believed in today’s culture? Scripture & UnderstandingIn Genesis 50:20, Joseph clearly names the wrong done to him. Why is it important that forgiveness does not deny the seriousness of sin? How does Galatians 6:7 help clarify the difference between forgiveness and consequences? In the parable from Luke 15, what was the older brother afraid of—and how does that reflect our own hesitation to forgive? Reflection (Personal Application) Which myth about forgiveness have you personally struggled with most? Have you ever confused forgiveness with one of the following: minimizing, excusing, reconciling, or forgetting? What happened as a result? Is there a situation in your life where you’ve withheld forgiveness because you feared it would let someone “off the hook”? Reconciliation & Boundaries The message states: “Forgiveness depends on me; reconciliation depends on us.”Where have you seen that distinction play out in real life? Why is repentance, restitution, and rehabilitation necessary for reconciliation—but not for forgiveness? Have you ever felt pressure (internal or external) to reconcile when it wasn’t wise or safe? How did you respond? Deeper Work The message described three levels of confession:“I’m sorry I was caught”“I’m sorry I was wrong”“I’m sorry for what I caused”Why is the third level so critical for rebuilding trust? What does it practically look like to “not weaponize the past” in a relationship? Closing (Action Step) Is there someone you need to forgive right now? What is one concrete step you can take this week toward releasing that burden? If you’re not ready to forgive, what would it look like to begin praying, “Lord, make me willing to be willing”?

Send us Fan MailGOT BAGGAGE? The Weight of The Past | Part 1 Senior Pastor Keith StewartApril 26, 2026We all carry baggage—but some of it is heavier than we realize. In “The Weight of the Past,” we’ll confront how unresolved hurt quietly shapes our lives—physically, emotionally, relationally, and spiritually. Left unaddressed, it doesn’t stay behind us—it takes control of us. But there is a way forward. Join us this Sunday as we begin the journey of identifying what we’re carrying and taking the first step toward the freedom God intends for us.Discussion QuestionsOBSERVATION (Understanding the Text/Message) 1. What stood out to you most from this message? Why do you think it resonated? 2. How does the message describe the impact of unresolved hurt across the five areas: physical, emotional, relational, spiritual, and psychological? 3. According to Jesus’ teaching in Matthew 18, why is forgiveness not about setting limits but removing them altogether? INTERPRETATION (Digging Deeper) 4. The message suggests that “bitterness always remembers details.” Why do you think painful memories tend to replay more than positive ones? 5. What does it mean that resentment can “bind you” to the person who hurt you? Have you seen that dynamic play out in real life? 6. The distinction between “this happened to me” vs. “this moved through me” is significant. How does each perspective shape a person’s identity and future? REFLECTION (Personal Application)7. Is there a situation or person that came to mind during the message that you may need to forgive? What makes that difficult? 8. In what ways might holding onto a hurt be affecting your life right now (stress, relationships, outlook, spiritual life)? 9. Do you tend to define yourself more by your wounds or by what God has done for you? Why? APPLICATION (Next Steps) 10. What is one practical step you can take this week toward releasing a past hurt (prayer, conversation, reframing your thinking, seeking counsel)? 11. The prayer “Lord, make me willing to be willing” was suggested—how might that become a starting point for you? 12. How can this group support one another in moving toward forgiveness and freedom in the weeks ahead?

Send us Fan MailWHEN GOD SEEMS SILENTDr. Jessica FernandezSunday, April 19, 2026Navigating seasons when prayers feel unanswered can test even the strongest faith. What do you do when heaven feels quiet and nothing seems to change? In the book of Habakkuk, a prophet wrestles honestly with God over injustice, confusion, and delay. Yet in the middle of his questions comes a defining truth: “The righteous will live by faith.” This message explores how God’s silence is not indifference, but an invitation to deeper trust—forming a faith that can worship even when circumstances remain uncertain.1. Seasons of silence can feel disorienting and deeply personal, often surfacing emotions we don’t always express. When have you experienced a season where God felt silent? What emotions did you wrestle with during that time?2. Habakkuk models honest faith—he brings his real questions to God instead of hiding them. Why do you think it’s sometimes hard for believers to be honest with God about their doubts or frustrations?3. God answered Habakkuk, but His answer was unexpected and even uncomfortable. Can you think of a time when God’s answer looked different than what you prayed for? How did you respond?4. Living by faith often means trusting God’s character when we don’t have clarity about our circumstances. What does it look like in a practical, everyday way to live by faith when you don’t have answers?5. Habakkuk’s journey ends not with changed circumstances, but with a changed perspective—choosing joy in God regardless. What would it look like for you to practice “yet” faith in your current situation this week?

Send us Fan MailTHE VALUE OF LETTING GOPastor Jerrid FletcherApril 12, 2026In “The Value in Letting Go,” Pastor Jerrid walks us through one of the most honest questions we rarely stop to ask ourselves: Can I let it go? Using the story of the Rich Young Ruler in Luke 18, this message unpacks not just what we hold on to — our outcomes, our identities, our hurt, and even the versions of ourselves that existed before loss reshaped us — but more importantly, why we hold on: because it’s familiar, because we don’t fully trust God with the outcome, because letting go feels like losing, and because many of us were simply never taught how. The message introduces the theology of an open hand — the idea that a closed fist, no matter how tightly gripped, exhausts us, blocks us from receiving anything new, and ultimately reveals a trust issue dressed up as a survival instinct. Through the Identity Test — “God is not good because of what He does; God is good because of who He is” — and the concept of the broken wanter, we are challenged to examine the hidden accounts we’ve been making deposits into for years: unforgiveness, control, idolatry, and pain. Like the rich young ruler who came running with the right question and walked away sad because he couldn’t open his hand, we are each standing at a crossroads. The invitation of this message is simple and costly at the same time: open your hands, release what you were never meant to carry, and trust that what God places in open hands will always be worth what you released.Discussion Questions • What is the thing you walked in carrying today — the burden that was there before you evenpulled into the parking lot? Have you named it yet?• Is your grip on it rooted in Spirit-led perseverance or fear-driven holding on? What’s thedifference in your own life, and how do you tell which one is which?• What does your “broken wanter” look like? What account have you been making deposits into —unforgiveness, control, pain, or something else?• The rich young ruler called Jesus “good” but couldn’t act on it when it cost him something. Whereis the gap between what you confess on Sunday and what you actually trust God with onMonday?• If God is good not because of what He does but because of who He is — does that change?

Send us Fan MailSEVEN DAYS THAT CHANGED THE WORLDFROM DISAPPOINTMENT TO DISCOVERY | PART 7Senior Pastor Keith StewartApril 5, 2026Easter doesn’t begin with celebration—it begins with disappointment. Two followers of Jesus walked away from His grave convinced the story was over, their hopes shattered and their future uncertain. But what they didn’t realize was that Jesus was walking with them the entire time. In the same way, God meets us in our confusion, speaks into our pain, and reveals Himself when we least expect it. Because Easter reminds us that God does His greatest work on the day we think it’s over.Discussion Questions A. Observation (What does the text say?) In Luke 24, what emotions and assumptions are driving the two disciples as they walk to Emmaus? What are the specific ways Jesus engages with them before revealing His identity? According to the passage, when do the disciples finally recognize Jesus—and why might that moment matter? What changes immediately in the disciples after they recognize Him? B. Interpretation (What does it mean?) Why do you think the disciples were unable to recognize Jesus at first? What does this story teach us about the relationship between Scripture and understanding Jesus? How does the idea of the “third day” pattern help us interpret the resurrection? What is the difference between hoping for something and putting hope in someone?C. Reflection (Where does this meet your life?) Can you identify a time when life didn’t turn out the way you planned? How did it affect your faith? Where in your life right now do you feel like “it’s over”? Have you ever sensed that God was present with you only after the fact—not in the moment? What keeps you from recognizing God’s presence in difficult seasons? D. Application (What needs to change?) What would it look like for you to “invite Jesus to stay” in a practical, daily sense? Is there something you need to open up about (to God or others) in order to move forward? How can you shift your hope from circumstances to the character of God? Who is someone in your life that needs to hear the hope of Easter—and how can you share it?

Send us Fan MailSEVEN DAYS THAT CHANGED THE WORLDTHE DAY THE TEMPLE SHOOK | PART 6Senior Pastor Keith StewartMarch 29, 2026 This weekend at Springcreek Church, we’re looking at one of the most powerful moments in history—when the earth shook and the temple curtain tore in two. What if the cross you’ve always heard about is more than a symbol… What if it’s an invitation? An invitation not to try harder, but to stop striving. Not to earn your way to God, but to discover that the way has already been opened. If you’ve ever wondered whether you’re enough—or if you’ve been carrying a weight you were never meant to carry—this message is for you. Join us in person or online for “The Day the Temple Shook.”Opening / Icebreaker When you hear the phrase “It is finished,” what does that mean to you personally? Have you ever felt like you had to “earn” someone’s approval or acceptance? What was that like? Observation (What does the text say?) In 1 Corinthians 1:23, why does Paul say the cross is a “stumbling block” and “foolishness”? What specifically made it offensive in Jesus’ day?Looking at the people surrounding the cross (Barabbas, Simon of Cyrene, the Centurion, the women, Joseph of Arimathea), what stands out to you about who is included in the story? According to Matthew 27:51, what happened at the moment Jesus died, and why is the order (veil torn before the earthquake) significant? Interpretation (What does it mean?) Why is the true suffering of the cross deeper than just the physical suffering Jesus endured? What does “tetelestai” (“It is finished” / “Paid in full”) reveal about how salvation works? What messages are communicated by the tearing of the temple veil? (Think: what ended and what began.) Which person at the cross do you most identify with right now—and why? Application (What does it mean for me?) In what ways do people today still try to “earn this” with God? Where do you see that in your own life? The message described living with a sense of “not enough.” Where does that show up in your thinking or behavior?What would it look like for you to start “living like the truth is true”—that Christ’s work is enough? Is there an area of your life where you still feel like there’s a barrier between you and God? What is it? Response (What will I do about it?) The torn veil represents open access to God. What is one practical way you can step into that access this week? What burden do you need to lay down because of the cross? How would your daily life change if you truly believed you are fully loved, forgiven, and accepted in Christ? Closing Prayer Prompt Thank God for what Christ has finished on your behalf. Confess any ways you’ve been trying to “earn” what has already been given. Ask God to help you live in the freedom and access He has opened through the cross.

Send us Fan MailSEVEN DAYS THAT CHANGED THE WORLDTHE TABLE IS SET FOR YOU | PART 5Senior Pastor Keith StewartMarch 22, 2026 On the night He was betrayed, Jesus took an ordinary Passover meal and transformed it into a sacred invitation to remember Him, receive His grace, and be renewed by His presence. In this message, we will explore the meaning of the Lord’s Supper, how it fulfills the deeper purpose of Passover, and why communion is not reserved for the perfect but offered to the broken, needy, and undeserving. Together, we’ll see that this table is where Christ meets His people with mercy, restores their identity, and calls them into a life that is taken, blessed, broken, and given for others.1. What part of this message most changed or deepened your understanding of the Lord’s Supper? 2. The sermon says communion is “not a magical rite” and “not merely a nostalgic ceremony.” What do you think those two errors look like in real life, and how should we think about communion instead? 3. In what sense did Passover form Israel’s identity as a delivered people? How does communion form the church’s identity as a redeemed people? 4. The message emphasizes that remembering in Scripture is more than mental recollection. How should communion actively shape the way we live, think, and respond to life?5. Why is it significant that the first Lord’s Supper was surrounded by betrayal? What does that teach us about who this meal is for? 6. Have you ever felt unworthy to come to the table? How does the statement, “Communion is for the undeserving,” challenge or comfort you? 7. Which part of the pattern taken, blessed, broken, given most describes your present season of life? Why? 8. What would it look like this week for your life to become “bread for the world” — something God uses to nourish, strengthen, or bless others?

Send us Fan MailSeven Days That Changed The World The Anatomy of Betrayal | Part 4Senior Pastor Keith StewartMarch 15, 2026Judas is one of the most infamous figures in history, but what if his story is closer to ours than we’d like to admit? This Sunday, Pastor Keith Stewart looks at the betrayal of Jesus, the crushing power of shame, and the difference between despair and redemption. Whether you attend in person or listen online, this message will challenge you to face your own heart honestly and find hope in the grace of Christ.Discussion Questions 1. What part of Judas’ story in this message challenged your assumptions about him the most? Why do you think people are so quick to turn Judas into a caricature instead of seeing him as a warning about the human heart? 2. Pastor Keith says, “There is a Judas root in every human heart.” What does that mean to you personally? 3. Why is it important to recognize that the other disciples trusted Judas and did not suspect him? In what ways can broken trust affect marriages, friendships, churches, or families? 4. The sermon says shame is about a perceived loss of place in a relationship. How have you seen shame make people hide from God or from others? 5. Which distortion of shame stood out to you most: “There is never a way back,” “My sin is too great,” or “I have to atone for my sins”? Why? 6. What do you think is the biggest difference between Peter and Judas, since both failed Jesus so seriously?7. How does the contrast between the “tree of despair” and the “tree of hope” help you understand the gospel more deeply? 8. What is one area of failure, regret, or shame where you need to stop punishing yourself and receive the grace of Christ? 9. Pastor Keith shares that God has used some of his deepest failures as part of his ministry to others. How can God redeem our failures rather than waste them? 10. What would it look like this week to bring something out of the dark and into the light before God?