Épisodes

  • Unconditional Election
    Jan 25 2026
    Welcome to our Sunday Afternoon Worship Service Live Stream! Our speaker is Brother Dean Stuart. We're grateful you've joined us today and pray this service is a blessing to you.
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    1 h
  • Christians & Vengeance (Romans 12:17–21)
    Jan 25 2026
    We've been walking verse by verse through the Book of Romans since July, and we've now almost finished Romans chapter 12—a powerful chapter filled with clear, practical instruction for living out our Christian witness in everyday life. In Romans 12:17–21, the Apostle Paul addresses how Christians are to respond when they are wronged. Rather than seeking revenge, believers are instructed to leave vengeance in the hands of the Lord, to live peaceably with all men, and to overcome evil with good. This message considers how the grace of the gospel shapes the Christian's conduct in a world marked by hostility, calling God's people to trust His justice and reflect the spirit of Christ. Elder Jonathan Moseley is the pastor of Fair Haven Primitive Baptist Church, located just outside Tifton, Georgia—about one mile east of town on Highway 82 toward Brookfield, on the right-hand side of the road.
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    33 min
  • Ch 17 - Deuteronomy - Idolatry/Judicial Appeals/Kings
    Jan 21 2026
    God's standards for addressing idolatry, just judicial process, and righteous kingship, requiring Israel's leaders and judges to rule according to the Lord's law rather than personal power or desire.
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    22 min
  • United in Purpose and Attitude & King Hezekiah
    Jan 18 2026
    The sermon centers on the biblical call to unity within the church, emphasizing both a shared purpose grounded in Scripture and a humble attitude toward one another. Drawing from Romans 12, 1 Corinthians, Philippians, and other New Testament passages, it underscores that true unity is not uniformity of opinion but a common commitment to the gospel, maintained through disciplined adherence to God's Word and mutual forbearance. The example of King Hezekiah's reform in 2 Chronicles 30 illustrates how a people united in purpose—cleansing the temple, restoring worship, and inviting even former enemies—can experience divine blessing and renewal. The message calls believers to actively contend for the faith, live in peace through humility and love, and embody Christ's unity not through emotional ease but through intentional, Spirit-led effort, reflecting the gospel in both word and deed.
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    59 min
  • Why do we Baptize and What Does it Mean?
    Jan 11 2026
    Baptism is a powerful symbol of union with Christ's death, burial, and resurrection, marking a believer's public declaration of faith and new life in Him, not a means of salvation or spiritual regeneration. Rooted in Scripture, it reflects a transformative turning from sin and a commitment to follow Christ as Lord, illustrated through the ministries of John the Baptist, Jesus' own baptism, and the apostolic command in Matthew 28 to teach and baptize. Far from a ritualistic cleansing or a guarantee of sinless perfection, baptism signifies a changed identity—where the old self is crucified and the believer now lives in obedience, empowered by grace and the Holy Spirit. It is a visible testimony of a heart already transformed by God's grace, pointing to Christ's finished work on the cross and the hope of resurrection, while calling believers to daily walk in newness of life, guided by Scripture and sustained by faith. This act of obedience, grounded in the Trinity and the gospel, establishes a clear conscience before God and marks the beginning of a lifelong journey of discipleship.
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    35 min
  • Episode 22 - Bless and Curse Not | Romans 12:14-15
    Jan 4 2026
    The sermon centers on the transformative call to live as a redeemed people, rooted in the grace of Christ revealed in Romans 1–11 and now expressed in practical, Christ-shaped obedience in Romans 12. It emphasizes that the church is a living, unified body—called out, interdependent, and designed for mutual care—where believers are to present themselves as living sacrifices, rejecting worldly conformity and embracing spiritual renewal through love, humility, and service. The core of this life is the radical command to bless those who persecute, love enemies, rejoice with the joyful, and weep with the sorrowful, reflecting God's impartial mercy and calling believers to embody Christ's character even in the face of injustice or personal pain. This self-sacrificial love, modeled by Jesus and grounded in the reality of eternal hope, fosters deep communion within the church, where every member—whether honored or suffering—shares in one another's joy and grief, reflecting the unity and purpose of the ransomed body of Christ.
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    51 min
  • A Birth, in the Midst of Death and Taxes - Historical Context of Jesus's Birth
    Dec 28 2025
    The sermon centers on the historical and theological significance of Jesus' birth in Bethlehem, emphasizing how divine sovereignty unfolds within the political realities of the Roman Empire and Herodian rule. By situating the nativity within the context of Caesar Augustus's census and the client kingdom of Judea under Herod, the preacher highlights God's sovereign orchestration of history, where even imperial decrees and human tyranny serve divine purposes. The narrative reveals Jesus as the long-awaited Messiah, announced first to humble shepherds and later recognized by foreign magi, yet met with violent opposition from Herod, who sought to eliminate the infant king. Through the fulfillment of Old Testament prophecies—such as Jesus being called out of Egypt and the weeping of Rachel for her slaughtered children—the sermon underscores that Jesus' birth, life, and suffering are part of a redemptive plan that transcends human power and fulfills God's eternal purposes. The story culminates in Jesus' return to Nazareth, fulfilling the prophecy of the 'branch' from Jesse, affirming His identity as the promised Savior for all his people, not just Israel.
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    57 min
  • What Exactly Did Mary Know?
    Dec 21 2025
    The sermon traces the fulfillment of Old Testament prophecy in the birth of Jesus Christ, emphasizing God's faithfulness across centuries. Beginning with Isaiah's prophecy of a virgin conceiving and bearing a son named Immanuel—God with us—the message underscores the miraculous, divinely orchestrated nature of Christ's incarnation, which defied human logic and was foretold over 700 years in advance. The narrative then unfolds through the lives of Zechariah and Elizabeth, whose son John the Baptist would prepare the way for the Messiah, and Mary, who humbly submitted to God's plan despite her confusion, becoming the vessel through whom the Son of God entered history. The sermon highlights how every detail—from the virgin birth and divine conception by the Holy Spirit to the fulfillment of covenant promises in David's line—demonstrates God's sovereign grace and the impossibility of human achievement, culminating in the declaration that Jesus, the Savior, would redeem His people from their sins. This historical and theological foundation is not merely a past event but the living reality of God's ongoing work, pointing forward to Christ's resurrection, ascension, and promised return, where His victory over sin and death continues to transform lives.
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    59 min