2026.01.11 | Sitting Through a Hard Passage, and Finding Hope Anyway
This blog is based on the sermon from January 11, 2026.
Some sermons comfort you right away. Others sit heavy, and this week’s message was one of those. As Matthew 19 was read aloud, it was clear this passage touches the most personal parts of our lives: marriage, divorce, singleness, faithfulness, and forgiveness.
You could feel the weight of it in the room. Not because God’s Word isn’t good, but because it’s honest.
When Jesus is asked about divorce, He doesn't start by debating loopholes or legal permissions. Instead, He points us back to the beginning, back to God’s design and the heart behind marriage. He reminds us that while marriage was never meant to be disposable, neither were people.
You could feel the weight of it in the room. Not because God’s Word isn’t good, but because it’s honest.
When Jesus is asked about divorce, He doesn't start by debating loopholes or legal permissions. Instead, He points us back to the beginning, back to God’s design and the heart behind marriage. He reminds us that while marriage was never meant to be disposable, neither were people.
The Marriage Mirror
One of the most relatable moments on Sunday was when Pastor Jeff spoke about his own marriage. He described his twenty years with Ashley as 240 months that haven't always been ideal. He was honest about the cold shoulders, the miscommunications, and the hard work it takes for two sinners to stay joined together.
It was a helpful reminder that hardship in a marriage doesn’t automatically mean failure. Difficulty doesn't mean God has abandoned His design. Often, it’s in the struggle, through patience, forgiveness, and humility, that the Gospel becomes most visible. When we love a spouse imperfectly, it simply points us back to the God who loves us perfectly.
One of the most relatable moments on Sunday was when Pastor Jeff spoke about his own marriage. He described his twenty years with Ashley as 240 months that haven't always been ideal. He was honest about the cold shoulders, the miscommunications, and the hard work it takes for two sinners to stay joined together.
It was a helpful reminder that hardship in a marriage doesn’t automatically mean failure. Difficulty doesn't mean God has abandoned His design. Often, it’s in the struggle, through patience, forgiveness, and humility, that the Gospel becomes most visible. When we love a spouse imperfectly, it simply points us back to the God who loves us perfectly.
A Place for Every Story
What I appreciated most was how the message made space for everyone listening.
For those who are single, Jesus’ words brought a different kind of encouragement. Singleness wasn’t presented as a problem to fix or a season to rush through. Instead, it was honored as a meaningful calling that allows for a unique, undivided devotion to God. In a culture that often treats singleness as "incomplete," it was affirming to hear that there are no outliers or second-class seats in this church family.
And for those carrying the weight of a past divorce or a broken relationship, the sermon didn't shy away from that brokenness. Divorce was named honestly, but it was followed by the hope of the Gospel. While divorce may be a biblical allowance in certain situations, redemption is always God’s greater story.
What I appreciated most was how the message made space for everyone listening.
For those who are single, Jesus’ words brought a different kind of encouragement. Singleness wasn’t presented as a problem to fix or a season to rush through. Instead, it was honored as a meaningful calling that allows for a unique, undivided devotion to God. In a culture that often treats singleness as "incomplete," it was affirming to hear that there are no outliers or second-class seats in this church family.
And for those carrying the weight of a past divorce or a broken relationship, the sermon didn't shy away from that brokenness. Divorce was named honestly, but it was followed by the hope of the Gospel. While divorce may be a biblical allowance in certain situations, redemption is always God’s greater story.
Defining Our Identity
We all walked into the room carrying real stories, some joyful, some painful, and many that feel unfinished. But the truth remains the same for all of us: you are not defined by your past or your relationship status. You are defined by who you are in Christ.
God’s Word doesn’t always say what is easiest to hear, but it always points us toward what is good.
We all walked into the room carrying real stories, some joyful, some painful, and many that feel unfinished. But the truth remains the same for all of us: you are not defined by your past or your relationship status. You are defined by who you are in Christ.
God’s Word doesn’t always say what is easiest to hear, but it always points us toward what is good.
If you missed Sunday’s message, I’d encourage you to sit with it. It is a heavy passage, but a deeply hopeful one. It reminds us that Jesus doesn’t just speak into our relationships, He redeems us within them.
Posted in Sunday Sermon
Posted in Book of Matthew, Jeff Potts, Matthew 19, Relationships, Sermon reflections, Church family
Posted in Book of Matthew, Jeff Potts, Matthew 19, Relationships, Sermon reflections, Church family
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2025.01.26 | The Sower, the Seed, and the Soil2025.03.02 | Finding My Worth in Christ2025.04.06 | When the Storm Feels Bigger Than Your Savior2025.03.30 | When What You Have Feels Like Not Enough2025.03.23 | What If Following Jesus Cost You Everything?2025.03.16 | Are We Missing What’s Right in Front of Us?2025.03.09 | Are You Living with Eternity in Mind?2025.02.23 | Finding the Ultimate Treasure2025.02.16 | A Call to Faith and Hope2025.02.09 | When Small Things Become Something Big2025.02.02 | Growing in God’s Kingdom
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2025.04.13 | When the Wind Hit My Face2025.05.18 | Faith That Won’t Let Go: At Home and Around the World2025.05.11 | When Jesus Shows You Your Heart2025.05.04 | When Jesus Wants More Than Just Our Sundays2025.04.27 | When Following Rules Isn't Enough2025.04.20 | Alive. Free. Loved. With Jesus.2025.05.25 | Loaves, Fish, and a Full Calendar: Why I’m Still Saying Yes to Jesus2025.07.20 | You Were Made for This2025.09.21 | Who Do You Say Jesus Is?2025.09.14 | When the Headlines Overwhelm, Remember God’s Track Record2025.08.24 | Childlike Faith, Public Love: Ryder and Brady’s Baptism at Hope2025.09.07 | The Sign That’s Already Enough2025.08.31 | Grace That Gathers Us2025.08.24 | Hope in Hard Seasons2025.08.10 | Finding Freedom in the Midnight Hour: A Journey Through Fear and Faith2025.07.27 | When God Redirects You, Trust Him2025.08.17 | What Must I Do to Be Saved?2025.07.13 | I Thought I Wasn’t Ready… Until I Realized Jesus Already Called Me2025.07.06 | Not Flashy, But Faithful: A Tribute to the Barnabases at Hope2025.06.29 | Learning to Just Point to Jesus2025.06.22 | The Church Is Full of People Who Don’t Belong — And That’s the Point2025.06.01 | When Bold Faith Feels Costly2025.08.03 | Faithfulness When It Hurts2025.06.08 | When Obedience Makes Things Awkward... Not Easier2025.06.15 | Living Faith That Puts Others First
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2025.11.09 | The Sons Are Free — Yet Jesus Paid It All2025.11.16 | Kingdom Greatness: Learning Humility and Dependence from a Child2025.11.02 | He Died for Me2025.11.30 | Found & Forever Loved: Why God's Pursuit Changes Everything2025.12.07 | The Hard Gift of Correction: Why Humility Is the Key to Freedom2025.11.23 | Freedom Found in Facing the Truth2025.12.14 | The Heirlooms of Hurt2025.12.21 | I’m No Angel, But I Have a Message2025.12.28 | The Table of Enough: Learning to Trust the Daily Allowance

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