This week’s upcoming sermon, “My (Un)happy Place,” is rooted in God’s clear and compassionate invitation in Deuteronomy 30:15–20, where God sets before the people a choice between life and death, blessing and curse, and urges them to choose life. Together, we will reflect on the places in our lives that quietly drain joy, peace, and spiritual vitality. Some of these places exist because life is genuinely hard, but others persist because of thoughtlessness, unhealthy patterns, or fear of change. The sermon explores how God does not deny hardship, yet also does not ask us to normalize unnecessary suffering. Instead, God consistently points toward life, flourishing, and hope, even when that means having the courage to step away from what is harming us.
We will also consider what creates unhappy places in the first place, how our words and actions can unintentionally wound others, and why staying in soul-crushing environments can diminish our ability to serve Christ with compassion and grace. Choosing life is not about avoidance or weakness; it is about faithfulness, discernment, and trusting that God desires wholeness for God’s people. As we close this January sermon series and look toward a new year, this message invites us to listen carefully for where God may be calling us toward renewal, healing, and life-giving change.
Questions to consider this week:
- Where in your life do you feel consistently drained rather than restored, and how might God be speaking through that?
- What would it look like for you to truly “choose life” in one specific area right now?
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