Life Is Better Connected
If you want to grow spiritually, commitment isn’t enough. You must be connected. That’s what groups are all about.
If you want to grow spiritually, commitment isn’t enough. You must be connected. That’s what groups are all about.
Games and competition are great. They’re a source of entertainment and fun. But there’s one area in which games are toxic: our relationships. If you try to win in a relationship, you and the other person will both lose.
Family, friends, education, personal experience—plenty of things influence how you see the world. But how does the way you see the world affect you? What if you’re missing a bigger picture?
What trips you up? What is that thing you wish was different about you? You try to change your response, circumstances, or behavior, but it doesn’t work. You just can’t make progress. You just can’t break through. What if there was a way? And what if it was simpler than you thought?
For far too long the church has been known for what it is against. We want to be known for what we are FOR. We are for children and families. We are for students and singles. We are for our military friends and their families. We are for people all along the Emerald Coast! In
On Easter, we don’t celebrate a collection of teachings. We don’t celebrate an idea. We celebrate an event . . . an event in history that changed history.
If you want to grow spiritually, commitment isn’t enough. You must be connected. That’s what groups are all about.
Games and competition are great. They’re a source of entertainment and fun. But there’s one area in which games are toxic: our relationships. If you try to win in a
Family, friends, education, personal experience—plenty of things influence how you see the world. But how does the way you see the world affect you? What if you’re missing a bigger picture?
For far too long the church has been known for what it is against. We want to be known for what we are FOR. We are for children and families.
On Easter, we don’t celebrate a collection of teachings. We don’t celebrate an idea. We celebrate an event . . . an event in history that changed history.