• "What Are You Doing Here?" (June 28, 2026 Sermon)
    Jun 28 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Text: 1 Kings 19:1-18

    Preaching: Rev. Dr. Stephen M. Fearing

    Faith fatigue can sneak up on you right after you’ve done something brave. You fight for what is right, you try to love your neighbor, you try to follow Jesus with your whole life, and then the world still feels cruel and out of control. That emotional crash is where Elijah lands in 1 Kings 19 and it’s where many of us recognize ourselves.

    We reflect on Elijah’s fear, his flight into the wilderness, and the raw honesty of his prayer under the broom tree. Then we slow down to notice how God responds. Before God gives Elijah a new task, God gives him care: rest, water, bread, and the space to recover. If you’re dealing with spiritual burnout, compassion fatigue, or the exhaustion that comes from justice work, this is a reminder that your body and spirit belong in the conversation too.

    From there we follow Elijah to Mount Horeb, where wind, earthquake, and fire pass by, but God shows up in a sound of sheer silence, the still small voice. We talk about what it means to listen, to reflect without shame, and to hear God’s question as an invitation: “What are you doing here?” And we end with hope that is practical, not fluffy, because God makes it clear the life of faith is not a solo marathon, it’s a relay race. We’re meant to share the mantle, raise up others, and keep moving one faithful step at a time.

    If this message meets you where you are, subscribe, share it with a friend who’s tired, and leave a review so more people can find it. What helps you hear the still small voice when life gets loud?

    Follow us on Instagram @guilfordparkpresbyterianchurch
    Follow us on Facebook @guilfordparkpc
    Follow us on TikTok @guilfordparkpreschurch
    Website: www.guilfordpark.org

    Show More Show Less
    15 mins
  • "The God Who Shows Up" (June 21, 2026 Sermon)
    Jun 23 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Text: 1 Kings 18:20-40

    Preaching: Rev. Dr. Stephen M. Fearing

    A drought that will not break. A nation hedging its bets. A prophet who refuses to let the crowd hide behind silence. We sit with 1 Kings 18 and the unforgettable showdown on Mount Carmel, where Elijah puts the real question on the table: who do you actually serve when the stakes are high and the sky stays empty?

    We walk through the story’s tension and its sharp edges, from Ahab and Jezebel’s embrace of Baal worship to the prophets’ frantic religious performance and Elijah’s bold repair of a ruined altar. We talk about why Elijah drenches the sacrifice with water, why the fire matters, and why the phrase “no voice, no answer, no response” still haunts anyone who has ever trusted a god that cannot hold the weight we put on it. Along the way, we offer a pastoral note on the “limping” metaphor, making clear it is not aimed at disability but at a chosen, divided posture of the heart.

    Then we bring the text into modern life, where allegiance gets split in quieter ways: faith that blesses peace while normalizing violence, prayers about debt inside an economy built to trap people, creation as “gift” treated like a commodity, and Jesus as Lord rivaled by nationalism or political identity. The good news we cling to is simple: we limp, but God does not. God stays faithful to the poor, the stranger, and the vulnerable, and droughts can end when we stop playing the fence and choose a life that serves both God and neighbor. If this resonated, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find us.

    Follow us on Instagram @guilfordparkpresbyterianchurch
    Follow us on Facebook @guilfordparkpc
    Follow us on TikTok @guilfordparkpreschurch
    Website: www.guilfordpark.org

    Show More Show Less
    22 mins
  • "The Voices We Heed" (June 14, 2026 Sermon)
    Jun 14 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Preaching: Rev. Dr. Stephen M. Fearing

    Text: 1 Kings 12:1-17

    A single bad listening decision can split a community, a workplace, even a nation. We open with 1 Kings 12 and the moment Rehoboam steps into power, hears a desperate plea to lighten the burden Solomon left behind, and chooses the advice that flatters him most. The result is as dramatic as it is familiar: harsh words, wounded trust, and a kingdom that breaks in two.

    We zoom out to Solomon’s “high water mark” at the temple dedication and the slow drift from wisdom toward the god of gold. Forced labor, heavy taxes, and vanity projects prop up a shining public image while neighborliness fades. It’s an ancient story, but it reads like a modern case study in political leadership, economic inequality, and what happens when “success” is measured without asking whether the hungry are fed or the vulnerable are protected.

    Then we bring it home with Lev Shomeah, the listening heart. A listening heart is powerful, but it is not automatically good; it becomes wise when we choose voices that stretch us, correct us, and tell the truth. We contrast Rehoboam’s yes-men with Abraham Lincoln’s team of rivals, and we name the hard work of discernment: not all voices are of God, and listening widely does not mean heeding blindly. As our nation approaches a major anniversary, we also ask what faithful Christian patriotism looks like when we examine who has been heard and who has been dismissed. If this stirred something in you, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us: which voices do you need to hear more clearly right now?

    Follow us on Instagram @guilfordparkpresbyterianchurch
    Follow us on Facebook @guilfordparkpc
    Follow us on TikTok @guilfordparkpreschurch
    Website: www.guilfordpark.org

    Show More Show Less
    22 mins
  • Charles "Skip" Bailey Funeral Service (June 7, 2026)
    Jun 7 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Follow us on Instagram @guilfordparkpresbyterianchurch
    Follow us on Facebook @guilfordparkpc
    Follow us on TikTok @guilfordparkpreschurch
    Website: www.guilfordpark.org

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 1 min
  • "Can God Really Dwell on Earth?" (June 7, 2026 Sermon)
    Jun 7 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Text: 1 Kings 8:22-30

    Preaching: Rev. Dr. Stephen M. Fearing

    God might meet us in a breathtaking sanctuary, but that does not mean God lives there. We open with 1 Kings 8:22–30, Solomon’s Prayer of Dedication, and sit with the surprising honesty at its center: “Even heaven and the highest heaven cannot contain you, much less this house that I have built.” That single line reframes how we think about temple, church, and sacred space.

    We talk about why beautiful worship spaces matter, not as trophies but as places where real people gather to sing, pray, celebrate baptisms and weddings, and grieve at funerals. We also name the subtle temptation many of us carry: turning a sanctuary into a way to manage the holy, as if God is safer when we can point to an address and a schedule. Solomon’s wisdom pushes back, and it invites a bigger, freer faith.

    From the pulpit to the week ahead, the message turns practical. God dwells in hospital rooms and waiting areas, in veterinary offices, at kitchen tables when money is tight, in graduation auditoriums full of hope and fear, and in every place where love and loss collide. Communion becomes the sending practice that ties it together: we come to the table to meet God here, and we leave ready to notice that God is already out there, too. If this encourages you, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the podcast.

    Follow us on Instagram @guilfordparkpresbyterianchurch
    Follow us on Facebook @guilfordparkpc
    Follow us on TikTok @guilfordparkpreschurch
    Website: www.guilfordpark.org

    Show More Show Less
    12 mins
  • "A Listening Heart" (May 31, 2026 Sermon)
    May 31 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Text: 1 Kings 3:3-15

    Preaching: Rev. Dr. Stephen M. Fearing

    God gives Solomon a blank check, and the most surprising part is how little Solomon asks for. We start with the raw backstory behind 1 Kings: David’s decline, a household already marked by violence, and a throne gained through ruthless moves that feel closer to a crime saga than a children’s Bible story. Then Solomon finally sleeps and God meets him in a dream with one simple prompt: “Ask.”

    We imagine our own answers and name the forces that often drive them: fear that wants safety, scarcity that wants money, and pain that wants payback. Solomon chooses something else entirely, asking for an “understanding mind” to govern well. Digging into the Hebrew, we find Lev Shomeah, a listening heart, not a one-time burst of insight but a lifelong posture of attention and humility. That detail flips our definition of power: leadership that listens before it speaks and discerns before it acts.

    We also hold the tension that wisdom is fragile. Even right after Solomon receives this gift, his instinct can still reach for the sword, a warning for every generation that confuses cleverness with virtue. We connect that to our moment, where information is endless and tools like artificial intelligence can amplify both good and harm. If you want a biblical framework for Christian leadership, discernment, and conflict resolution that feels painfully current, press play, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review. What would you ask God for if you could ask for one thing?

    Follow us on Instagram @guilfordparkpresbyterianchurch
    Follow us on Facebook @guilfordparkpc
    Follow us on TikTok @guilfordparkpreschurch
    Website: www.guilfordpark.org

    Show More Show Less
    20 mins
  • "We Didn't Start the Fire" (May 24, 2026 Sermon)
    May 26 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Fire spreads, rules tighten, and Moses refuses to panic.

    We’re preaching Pentecost through a story many people skip: Numbers 11 and the unexpected prophets Eldad and Medad. Moses is exhausted from carrying the weight of leadership in the wilderness, so God shares the Spirit with seventy elders to help guide the people. It’s orderly, practical, and honestly pretty reasonable. Then the Spirit does what the Spirit does and lands on two men who aren’t even inside the tent of meeting.

    That’s where the tension hits. Joshua sees Spirit-led leadership happening “out of bounds” and blurts out the line that still echoes through church history: “My lord Moses, stop them.” We sit with how familiar that reflex is, from who gets to preach to who gets heard, who gets trusted, and who gets told to slow down. We also name the difference between life-giving process and gatekeeping that turns a tent into a wall, because walls are terrible conductors of the Holy Spirit.

    Moses answers with both clarity and hope: “Are you jealous for my sake?” and “Would that all the Lord’s people were prophets.” That becomes our Pentecost takeaway: we didn’t start the fire of the Spirit, and we were never meant to contain it. If you’re hungry for a sermon about spiritual gifts, church leadership, inclusion, and the wild freedom of the Holy Spirit, press play, then subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it.

    Follow us on Instagram @guilfordparkpresbyterianchurch
    Follow us on Facebook @guilfordparkpc
    Follow us on TikTok @guilfordparkpreschurch
    Website: www.guilfordpark.org

    Show More Show Less
    22 mins
  • Hear Better, Live Better
    May 17 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    If you’ve ever said “I can hear you, I just can’t understand you,” you’re not alone and you’re not imagining it. We talk with Dr. Eneida Agolli, senior audiologist with AudioNova, about why hearing loss is often gradual, why families notice it first, and why waiting 6 to 7 years to get help can quietly raise the stakes for your health.

    We get specific about the science and the lived reality: the connection between hearing loss and diabetes, cardiovascular disease, kidney disease, hospitalizations, and fall risk through the inner ear balance system. Then we dig into the topic many people are hearing about lately, the link between hearing loss and dementia risk. Dr. Rowley breaks down the “cognitive load” problem, how the brain works overtime to fill in missing sound, and why that constant effort can drain short-term memory and concentration over time.

    We also cover what actually helps. Modern hearing aids are rechargeable, Bluetooth-ready mini computers that can stream calls, music, and podcasts, and they can be tuned to your exact hearing prescription. We discuss realistic expectations in background noise, tinnitus relief for many patients, and simple steps like checking for ear wax buildup and protecting your ears from loud noise exposure. If you’ve been putting off a hearing test, this conversation lays out a clear reason to start around age 50 and keep a yearly baseline.

    Subscribe for more practical health conversations, share this with someone who keeps turning the TV up, and leave a review if it helped. When was your last hearing test?

    Follow us on Instagram @guilfordparkpresbyterianchurch
    Follow us on Facebook @guilfordparkpc
    Follow us on TikTok @guilfordparkpreschurch
    Website: www.guilfordpark.org

    Show More Show Less
    46 mins