Category: Men’s Group
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They Wanted a King. God Gave the Lamb.

Palm Sunday looked like the arrival of the king people wanted, but Passion Week reveals that God was giving something deeper. This article traces how Jesus entered Jerusalem not only as king, but as the Lamb his people actually needed.
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The Kingdom Comes Where God’s Will Is Done

What if the kingdom of God is closer, quieter, and more active than most of us think? This article traces how Christ’s reign is already at work wherever His will is embraced in Spirit-empowered obedience, while we still wait for its full and final unveiling.
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Seek First: Anxiety, Work, and the Father’s Provision

In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus speaks directly to anxiety in the middle of work, provision, and daily responsibility. Bonhoeffer helps clarify Matthew 6 by showing that anxiety grows when we confuse faithful labor with the burden of securing life itself.
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God is relational, and prayer is the language of communion where He gives what satisfies most: Himself.

Most of us know prayer matters, but we still struggle to want it and assume the problem is us. Luke 11 and Matthew 6 show something steadier: prayer draws us near to the Father, and His deepest answer is Himself by His Spirit, where real satisfaction begins.
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When Faith Feels Awkward

Praying out loud in public can feel awkward, especially when you’re not sure how others will respond. But sometimes, that quiet act of faith becomes the loudest witness in the room.
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Men’s Group: Spiritual Discipline-Daily Bread

Spiritual discipline isn’t about checking a box—it’s about returning daily to the source of life, because we’re designed to need God every single day. Just like manna in the wilderness, Jesus—our Bread of Life—calls us to show up, trust, and receive Him fresh each morning.
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Preparation for Men’s Group – June 6th

Spiritual discipline is like training in the gym—some days you’re fired up, some days you just show up and lift anyway.
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📖 Lift the Word Anyway – Building Daily Accountability in Scripture and Prayer

Spiritual growth doesn’t happen by accident — it takes daily reps in the Word and intentional accountability. This post challenges men to build simple, practical habits that train their faith like a muscle: consistently, visibly, and together.
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Cultivation Over Modification: Letting God Grow What We Can’t

True spiritual growth isn’t achieved through behavior modification but through daily, faithful cultivation of the heart—like gardening or working out, it’s slow, unseen, but deeply transformative. Real men show up, not for perfection, but to be present where God can shape them.
