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West Suburban Community Church in Elmhurst, IL

West Suburban Community Church in Elmhurst, IL

Auteur(s): West Suburban Community Church in Elmhurst IL
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Changing Lives... One Heart At A Time© 2025 West Suburban Community Church in Elmhurst, IL Christianisme Pastorale et évangélisme Spiritualité
Épisodes
  • Looking for Jesus (Part 2)
    Dec 7 2025

    What if the oldest promises in Scripture were always pointing to a single person—and not just in vague metaphors, but with names, titles, and a story arc that lands on a cross and an empty tomb? We follow that thread through two major voices: Samuel, who preserves Hannah’s fierce song of reversal and introduces the Bible’s first use of “Messiah,” and Isaiah, who sketches the breathtaking portrait of a virgin-born King, a gentle Servant, and a suffering substitute who yet lives to justify many.

    We start with Hannah’s song, where God humbles the proud and lifts the lowly, then arrive at a startling promise: Yahweh will judge the ends of the earth and exalt his anointed. From there, the promises tighten. A faithful priest will do all God’s will. A descendant of David will reign forever. Peter later stands in Jerusalem and says that the risen Jesus is that descendant, the one death could not hold. It’s a cumulative case built on covenant, priesthood, kingship, and resurrection.

    Isaiah intensifies the case with details hard to ignore. A child is called Mighty God and Prince of Peace. A branch rises from Jesse, the Spirit rests on him, and he brings justice to the nations without crushing the weak. Most arresting of all, the servant bears our griefs, is pierced for our sins, and then “will see” and “will justify many,” language that signals a life beyond death. Jesus reads Isaiah 61 in the synagogue and says, “Today this scripture has been fulfilled,” claiming the anointing to bring good news to the poor and freedom to the captive.


    Video available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tQnE1d30uao

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    35 min
  • Looking For Jesus (Part 1)
    Nov 30 2025

    A single thread runs from Eden to Bethlehem to an empty tomb, and we follow it step by step. We open with Jesus’ own claim that the Law of Moses, the Prophets, and the Psalms were written about Him, then trace how that claim reshapes the way we read Genesis through Deuteronomy. From the seed promised in Genesis 3 to Abraham’s offspring who blesses the nations, from Judah’s scepter to Balaam’s star, the Torah forms a cohesive portrait of a Spirit-anointed King who would suffer, rise, and bring forgiveness to all peoples.

    We explore why “Messiah” means more than a royal title. Isaiah 11 describes an anointing not with oil but with the Holy Spirit, and John the Baptist recognizes Jesus by the Spirit descending and remaining on Him. That sign unlocks a chain of connections: the Prophet like Moses who speaks God’s very words, the child called out of Egypt, the obedient Son who fulfills the law. Rather than reducing the Old Testament to isolated prophecies, we show the narrative logic that leads to Christ: promise, pattern, fulfillment. Along the way, we highlight types and foreshadows that prepare the heart for faith—Melchizedek’s priest-king, Isaac’s near sacrifice, Joseph’s path from rejection to glory, the Passover lamb, the wilderness rock, and the sacrificial system that anticipates a greater atonement.

    The good news comes to a head in Paul’s words: what the law could not do, God did by sending His Son. Jesus perfectly obeys, bears our sin, and gives His righteousness to those who are in Him, so there is now no condemnation. That’s not a vague comfort; it’s a new reality empowered by the Spirit. If you’ve ever wondered how the Torah points to Jesus, this conversation maps the route with clarity and reverence, showing how ancient promises become living hope.


    Video available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3v9_l3C9aqI

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    31 min
  • Adnvancing The Gospel (Part 3)
    Nov 16 2025

    A crowd calls them gods, a mob stones Paul, and the next day the mission moves forward. That whiplash moment in Acts 14 isn’t just drama; it’s a masterclass in building disciples who can withstand pressure without losing heart. We walk step by step with Paul and Barnabas through Lystra, Iconium, and Antioch to uncover why the early church didn’t just grow wide, it grew deep.

    We focus on two simple, demanding practices: strengthen the soul and encourage believers to continue in the faith. Strengthening isn’t hype; it’s the steady work of reshaping self-talk with the living and active Word of God. From the psalmist’s “Hope in God” to Jesus’ warning about the rich fool, we show how inner narratives either fortify or hollow out spiritual stamina. God’s promises become an anchor within the veil, calming panic, clarifying purpose, and stabilizing identity. Continuing in the faith means abiding in Christ, standing by what is true, and growing in knowledge, love, and obedience. It’s less about religious veneer and more about becoming like Jesus in thought, character, and action.

    Tribulation isn’t treated as an outlier but as the ordinary road into the kingdom of God. That realism brings a surprising comfort: hardship becomes a context where Scripture proves its strength. We highlight how Paul and Barnabas return to new churches, appoint local leaders, and equip everyday believers to advance the gospel in their own culture. The takeaway is practical and hopeful—feed on Scripture, align your inner talk with God’s truth, and keep walking with Christ. Your soul grows sturdy, your witness grows credible, and your community grows resilient.


    Video available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5y2PP1FhM6c

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    31 min
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