• The Center of All Human Life
    May 25 2026

    There's a question most of us rarely stop long enough to ask: What is most important? What is life actually for?

    In this week's sermon from Mark 12:28–34, we meet a scribe who does something quietly remarkable — he walks through a crowd of religious leaders asking trap questions and political questions, and he asks the one that actually matters: "Which commandment is the most important of all?"

    Jesus answers with the Shema, the ancient confession of faith from Deuteronomy 6, and with it, He reveals the true center around which all of human life was designed to orbit: wholehearted love for God that overflows into embodied love for neighbor.

    But this sermon isn't just about identifying the right answer. It's about something much deeper — the honest confession that most of us have spent enormous energy building our lives around things that are real but not ultimate. We've taken secondary things and made them central. And in doing so, we've quietly lost our way.

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    39 mins
  • Too Close for Comfort
    May 17 2026

    "He is not God of the dead but of the living." — Mark 12:27

    There's a question running beneath the surface of this Sunday's passage that's worth sitting with: Why did Jesus disrupt the religious establishment so completely and why does he so rarely disrupt us?

    In Mark 12:13–27, the Pharisees, Herodians, and Sadducees come at Jesus one after another — each group more sophisticated than the last, each convinced they can trap him with a clever question. About taxes. About marriage. About resurrection. And Jesus moves through every one of them with an ease that leaves them marveling and speechless.

    But Pastor Rob turns the camera on us. Because the uncomfortable truth isn't that those religious leaders opposed Jesus, rather, how casual they were about it. How comfortable. And if we're honest, we're not so different. We've learned to give Jesus just enough space to comfort us without letting him close enough to disrupt us. We've built carefully curated spiritual lives where he stays in his lane, present but managed, near but safely contained.

    This sermon names that pattern plainly and pastorally. And it calls us toward something more honest — a faith that makes room for a Jesus who won't stay in a box.

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    34 mins
  • The Ruin of What Was Given
    May 10 2026

    There’s a difference between knowing who God is and truly knowing Him.

    In Mark 12, Jesus tells the parable of the vineyard to reveal something difficult but deeply important: we often take the gifts, opportunities, relationships, and lives God has entrusted to us and begin treating them as if they belong entirely to us.

    At the center of this passage is a question of ownership, surrender, and trust. Who is truly at the center of our lives? Ourselves, or God?

    This sermon reminds us that the human story has always wrestled with control. We want comfort, security, and self-direction, yet Jesus lovingly confronts the reality that life was never designed to revolve around us.

    And still, in the middle of humanity’s rebellion, God sends His Son.

    Not because we earned Him, but because of grace.

    This week’s message invites us to reflect honestly on where our hearts resist surrender, where we try to carry control, and where God may be calling us back into deeper trust and stewardship.

    As you move through this week, consider:

    • What has God entrusted to me?
    • Where am I struggling to trust Him fully?
    • What would it look like to surrender control instead of protecting it?

    Listen to the full sermon from Mark 12 on your favorite podcast platform or through Point Hope Presbyterian Church channels. If this message encouraged or challenged you, share it with someone who may need the reminder today.

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    39 mins
  • What Jesus Looks For
    Apr 26 2026

    Our lives can look very full. All this activity, all this green foliage. And yet the thing that matters most is simply not there. In this week's message from Mark 11, Pastor Rob Hamby gets honest about the ways we organize our lives around ourselves, and what Jesus does when he walks up close and sees it.

    This message is part of our ongoing Gospel of Mark series at Point Hope Presbyterian.

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    34 mins
  • Receiving Jesus on Our Terms
    Apr 20 2026

    In this week’s sermon from Mark 11:1–11, we looked at the moment Jesus enters Jerusalem and is welcomed as king, yet not in the way people expected. The crowd celebrates, but beneath it is a deeper tension as they project their own hopes onto him. It was a reminder of how often I do the same. Jesus does not conform to what we want. He reveals who he truly is, and there is both honesty and hope in that.

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    33 mins
  • What Do You Want from Jesus?
    Apr 13 2026

    This week, we see two responses to the same question from Jesus. One asks from a place of control. The other asks from a place of need.

    There’s a moment in the passage where the ones closest to Him believe they understand what they need most. At the same time, a man on the roadside, with nothing to offer, simply asks for mercy. The difference is not proximity. It is awareness.

    In Gospel of Mark 10, Jesus meets both, but mercy meets the one who knows he cannot fix himself.

    There is space here to be honest about what we carry. If you are searching, you are welcome.

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    36 mins
  • Love That Does the Impossible
    Apr 5 2026

    In this week’s sermon, we read from Mark 10:17–34. A man approaches Jesus with a question, but underneath it is something deeper. He knows something is missing, even though everything on the surface looks complete. ⁠

    We see that same tension every week. ⁠

    People walk in carrying more than anyone else can see. What looks like a simple step inside often holds an ache, a question, a longing hope that something could be made right.⁠

    We feel that too.⁠

    Jesus meets us there, not with pressure, but with care. He sees us, understands us, and takes us seriously.⁠

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    36 mins
  • Lord Jesus, Soften Our Hearts
    Mar 29 2026

    In this week’s sermon, we looked at how Jesus shifts from invitation to clarity, pressing who He is and what His kingdom requires.⁠

    It reveals something deeper. We often believe we’re open to Him, while still holding onto control.⁠

    There is a real tension in that. It can feel easier to stay in charge than to fully trust.⁠

    Still, He moves toward us with care, inviting us to come honestly and receive what we cannot earn.⁠

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    35 mins