Sunday, May 31, 2026

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Scriptures: Acts 10:1-2, 10:5-6, 10:11-17, 10:23a, 10:27-28, 10:34-36, 10:44-45.

  • In this final message of Acts Part One, Scott explores the unexpected border-crossings of Acts 10 through four key themes:
    Slippery Slopes: Our deepest personal and spiritual growth rarely happens overnight; it unfolds gradually over time and out of sight.
    Growth Curves: The real risk of faith is found in entering new relationships that stretch us, rather than just holding onto new ideas.
    Who's Converting: In a surprising twist, it is Peter’s own heart that is converted as he realizes that a Jesus-centred faith refuses to draw lines around those God welcomes.
    A Transgressing God: Ultimately, we are challenged to trust a God whose Spirit intentionally lands on "outsiders," disrupting our neatly manicured systems of certainty.

  • Community is shaped by the conversations we share. These questions and reflections are a tool to help you meaningfully engage with the themes of this week's teaching.

    Connect: Connect around one of the most helpful practices in the life of any follower of Christ - taking a look at what has changed in your theology.  Scott had this question for us during the coffee break:

    • In what way has your theology changed the most over the past year? The past few years?

    Share: Scott noted in the sermon that Peter's massive shift with Cornelius didn't happen in a vacuum; he was already practicing flexibility by staying at a socially marginalized tanner's house.

    And Scott also mentioned this quote by a wonderful theologian Willie James Jennings, “Peter shows us that the real risk of faith is found not in believing in new revelations but in new relationships.”

    • Can you think of and share about a boundary you’ve crossed or a relationship you've built that quietly prepared you to be more open-minded later on?

    • How do your current, everyday spaces stretch your willingness to welcome others?

    Reflect: Reflect on the reaction of Peter and his Jewish co-workers, how they were "astonished" when the Holy Spirit fell on the Gentiles, completely bypassing their expected religious order.

    • Why do we find it so easy to identify the Spirit's work exclusively within our own political tribes, social circles, or cultural mindsets?

    • What happens to Christian communities when the Spirit intentionally works outside of our parameters?

    Engage: Engage the idea of transformation as normative for faith. In the sermon, Scott challenges our tendency to trap God inside our own intellectual understanding:

    "We do this by adopting a faith of the mind where God is limited to what we've learned. We have a tendency to hold on to theological systems and practices marked by clear boundaries - where we can maintain a sense of what's right and wrong for our own security."

    • How does treating faith as an ongoing "series of events in which transformation is normative" change the way you read scripture and treat people who disagree with you?

    Take away: What is one thing that you're taking with you into your week, either from the sermon or our conversation?

    Benediction based on the sermon:
    As you go into your week,
    may you have the courage to trust a transgressing God:

    A God who bridged cosmos and reality to enter your human story;
    A God who jumps social boundaries to include those you might otherwise exclude;
    And a God who speaks directly to your heart—
    through ancient words and modern poets,
    through your favourite novel, through the vulnerability of a stranger,
    and in every undeserved kindness.
    Amen.

  • CALL TO WORSHIP Psalm 118

    MUSIC Curated by Curt Muller
    Bethel Music - We Praise You
    Bryan and Katie Torwalt Arrangement - Holy Spirit
    Hillsong Worship - O Praise The Name
    Maverick City Music - Fear is Not My Future

    EUCHARIST INVITATION
    Written by Bobbi S.


    SERIES BUMPER
    The Way Forward: Within Reach Series

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Finding Courage in a World of Fear