Our Sufficient Help
Join us for a series that considers how the word of God is sufficient for helping real people with real problems.
Join us for a series that considers how the word of God is sufficient for helping real people with real problems.
Our expository Sermon Series in 1 and 2 Thessalonians. Paul helps us to know how to be ordinary Christians who live in an extraordinary Savior who has given us absolute hope from an extraodinary gospel.
In this series we will discover what it means to become more intimate in our communion with our Triune God. 1. Communion with God. 2. Communion with The Father. 3. Communion with The Son. 4. Communion with The Spirit. 5. Communion through the word and prayer.
Christians are both sinners and sufferers in this world and knowing God’s attributes helps us to understand our situation in his light.
Our first Sunday celebrating God’s goodness in our new location at Norwood. Praise God.
As we finish preaching through the book of Matthew, our last series takes a close look at the cross. As we go through this passage verse by verse we find that humans fail in every way, but Jesus is in complete authority as he comes to save us through his death, burial and resurrection. It’s the message the whole world needs to know. Come join us.
A historical overview and review of the book, “Reformers and Their Stepchildren.” This book is a very important consideration of why a sacral society is not what Jesus had in mind for the church. It looks at the problems of sacralism/Constantianism through church history even including the reformation. The biblical doctrines that lead to religious liberty and separation of church and state are very important and the church must hold strong in these areas for the sake of the purity of the elect people of Christ.
In this series we consider how God’s glorious, irresistible, grace gives us confidence to live in this groaning creation as we await for his glory yet to be revealed. We can live with confidence because God’s grace is absolute and without any hint of doubt.
In 2022, Hyde Park Baptist Church will be relocating (locally) and this Christmas will be our last Christmas Eve service in our current building on The Square. This is an opportunity to enjoy candlelight carols, hear the message of Christ from the gospel of Luke, and celebrate our God who became man to die for our sins. Come and celebrate Christ with a church family who loves him.
As we study through the Gospel of Matthew, we come to Matthew 24 and 25 and are faced with wonderful, encouraging truths about the return of our King in glory, victory and judgment.
As our church looks at relocation, we first need to center our unity in Christ. This is a sermon that was a part of the start of our relocation planning in our church. A reminder of our true unity.
As Jesus is confronted by opposition on his way to the cross, we are confronted by the authority of the King who has come to save.
Is beauty really in the eye of the beholder? God is BEAUTIFUL. If so, there is an absolute standard of beauty that dictates what we find beautiful in the world God created. When we see beauty how we ought, it results in worship of our beautiful God. The problem is, humans distort and redefine beauty according to our own relative standards. It’s time to reclaim true beauty.
Week One: Our Barrier to Beauty.
Week Two: Simplicity of Beauty.
Week Three: The Beauty of Christ
Week Four: Partakers in Beauty
How do we live in the community of the Kingdom of Heaven as children of the King? Matthew 18-20 has great answers for the church.
How does the church stand strong in the face of the world’s opposition? It stands in light of warnings, hope, promises, obedience and relentless worship of God. A study in living in exile through Jeremiah, Daniel and Ezekiel.
In Matthew 14 through 17 we have various examples of what it means to confess Christ. From John the Baptist losing his head for Jesus, to Peter confessing the truth of Jesus and Moses and Elijah standing with Jesus in the transfiguration. All in all, to confess Christ is to acknowledge his supreme Lordship as the Messianic King.