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A Disciple AI letter
SELAHFive minutes in what the Church is preaching, and a moment with the Lord. Sunday, 28 June · Issue No. 1 |
From listening across 4,000+ sermons and Christian podcasts.
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▲ Peace over anxiety. Philippians 4:6–7 was the most-preached passage this week. Pulpits keep naming the weight people are quietly carrying. |
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▲ Identity before performance. A clear swell of messages on being a child of God before being useful to God. |
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▲ The long way home. The prodigal son surfaced again and again, paired with grace for anyone walking back. |
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“You will not be anxious into peace. You will be carried into it.” Heard on a Sunday in Nashville, on Philippians 4 |
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“The father ran. Grace never waits at the door with its arms folded.” From a midweek podcast on the prodigal |
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A Moment with the Lord
On being carriedI noticed this week how often I try to think my way to peace, as if I could argue my heart into rest. But Paul does not say understand and you will be at peace. He says pray, and the peace of God will guard you. Guard. Like something stands watch over you while you sleep. Maybe the work this week is not to be stronger. Maybe it is to let yourself be carried, and to trust the One carrying you. Grace and peace, Daniel |
Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.
Notice the order. Thanksgiving comes before the peace arrives, not after. Gratitude is not the reward for calm. It is the doorway to it.
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When Peace Feels Out of Reach A 22-minute sermon that sits gently with the anxious. Worth it for the last five minutes alone. |
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The Father Who Ran A podcast conversation on the prodigal that you will think about long after it ends. |
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For Shepherds
What is preaching well, and one angle for SundayMessages that named a real burden before offering the hope are landing hardest right now. People can feel the difference between comfort that skips the wound and comfort that has seen it. An illustration you can use: a guard does not remove the threat outside the wall. He stands between you and it so you can rest. That is the picture of the peace that guards in Philippians 4. |
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