Cornerstone Cast

Cornerstone Cast

by Cornerstone Church
Season 18
What Suffering Teaches- Psalm 34:15-18
Psalm 34:15-18 invites us into a transformative understanding of suffering through the lens of God's intimate presence. We discover that suffering is not evidence of God's absence or displeasure, but rather an opportunity to experience three essential truths about our Creator: His tender love, His closeness, and His provision. The passage beautifully contrasts God's relationship with the righteous versus the wicked, using vivid imagery of God's eyes, ears, and face to help us grasp His personal involvement in our lives. What makes this particularly powerful is the reminder that our righteousness isn't based on our perfection, but on Christ's imputed righteousness—His perfection placed upon us. This means when God sees the righteous and hears their cries, He's seeing and hearing us. The message challenges our modern tendency to view suffering as something to avoid at all costs, instead reframing it as an expected part of following Jesus that actually deepens our relationship with Him. Through historical examples like the Hittites and Philistines, we see God's justice, while through David's own experience hiding in a cave, we witness how suffering can produce worship and trust rather than bitterness and despair. Do you have any thoughts or questions about this episode? We'd love to hear them! Send us an email at: office@cornerstonesavoy.org. The Cornerstone Cast is a discipleship ministry of Cornerstone Church in Savoy, Illinois. The Cornerstone Cast is a discipleship ministry of Cornerstone Church and is not designed to replace your involvement in a local church; it is intended as an extra tool for growing closer to God.
Living It Out- Psalm 34:11-14
Psalm 34:11-14 challenges us to understand how deeply our fear of God should transform our daily obedience. We're invited into David's teaching moment with his mighty men—not children, but younger warriors who looked to him for spiritual guidance even while being hunted and living in caves. The sermon confronts an uncomfortable reality: we live in a generation where one-fifth of young people would rather be dead than alive, revealing a mental health crisis that demands our compassionate, Christ-centered response. David's question cuts through our modern complacency: who desires life and longs to enjoy what is good? But here's the twist—what we consider 'good' and what God considers good are often worlds apart. Suffering, difficulty, and trials aren't obstacles to the good life; they're the very crucible where our faith matures and we lack nothing. We're given three practical instructions for living out our fear of God: watch our words with intentionality, recognizing that blessing and cursing flow from the same mouth; flee from evil while actively replacing it with good, not just stopping sin but filling that space with righteousness; and pursue peace relentlessly, giving up our right to be offended and our need for retribution. This isn't legalism—it's the natural outflow of truly grasping who God is and what Jesus accomplished on the cross for us. Do you have any thoughts or questions about this episode? We'd love to hear them! Send us an email at: office@cornerstonesavoy.org. The Cornerstone Cast is a discipleship ministry of Cornerstone Church in Savoy, Illinois. The Cornerstone Cast is a discipleship ministry of Cornerstone Church and is not designed to replace your involvement in a local church; it is intended as an extra tool for growing closer to God.
The Wilderness- Psalm 34:8-10
Psalm 34:8-10 invites us into a profound meditation on God's provision during our wilderness seasons. Drawing from David's experience hiding in a cave while fleeing from King Saul, we're challenged to recognize that God remains intimately close even when hope seems lost. The message beautifully connects the Israelites' daily experience of manna in the desert with our own need to 'taste and see' God's goodness—not just intellectually acknowledge it, but experientially know it through our senses and circumstances. We're reminded that wilderness isn't just a physical place but a spiritual reality where we feel we lack something essential. Yet it's precisely in these moments of deficiency that we discover God's sufficiency. The sermon confronts our modern tendency to avoid reliance on God by building elaborate safety nets, suggesting that true spiritual maturity comes when we're stripped of self-sufficiency and forced to depend entirely on divine provision. Through examples like George Mueller's orphanage receiving bread and milk at the exact moment of need, we see that God's provision isn't just theoretical—it's tangible, timely, and perfectly suited to our needs. This isn't about passive waiting but active trust, learning to find happiness and contentment even in caves of uncertainty because we know the character of our Provider. Do you have any thoughts or questions about this episode? We'd love to hear them! Send us an email at: office@cornerstonesavoy.org. The Cornerstone Cast is a discipleship ministry of Cornerstone Church in Savoy, Illinois. The Cornerstone Cast is a discipleship ministry of Cornerstone Church and is not designed to replace your involvement in a local church; it is intended as an extra tool for growing closer to God.
The Rescuer- Psalm 34:4-7
In Psalm 34:4-7, we encounter David at one of his most vulnerable moments - hiding in a cave, surrounded by enemies who want him dead. Yet instead of despair, David pens a psalm about finding deliverance in God. The central message challenges us to examine where we turn when faced with fear and anxiety. Do we seek God first, or do we exhaust our own strategies before finally crying out to Him? David's example shows us that followers of God find their deliverance in God alone. The contrast is striking: those who look to God are described as radiant with joy, free from shame, while those who rely on themselves chase fleeting happiness and carry the weight of potential failure. This isn't just ancient wisdom - it speaks directly to our modern pandemic of anxiety. When we know God, we are transformed at our core. We become new creations, as Paul writes in 2 Corinthians 5:17. The old life of striving for perfection and avoiding shame gives way to a life defined by God's view of us. This freedom changes everything about how we live today, not just where we spend eternity. The invitation is clear: stop turning to your own playbook of coping mechanisms and instead seek the Lord who rescues us from all our fears. Do you have any thoughts or questions about this episode? We'd love to hear them! Send us an email at: office@cornerstonesavoy.org. The Cornerstone Cast is a discipleship ministry of Cornerstone Church in Savoy, Illinois. The Cornerstone Cast is a discipleship ministry of Cornerstone Church and is not designed to replace your involvement in a local church; it is intended as an extra tool for growing closer to God.
I Will Bless The Lord- Psalm 34:1-3
Psalm 34:1-3 challenges us to reconsider our default responses to life's circumstances. Written from a cave while David was literally hiding for his life, this psalm teaches us that our first response to any situation should be praise. Not just when things go well, but especially when we're surrounded by difficulty. David had just escaped death by pretending to be insane among the Philistines, yet his immediate reaction wasn't complaint or fear, but worship. The message unpacks three declarations about praise: that it should be constant and active in our lives, that our boasting should be in God alone rather than our own abilities, and that we must proclaim God's greatness together as a community. What's particularly striking is the evangelistic and discipleship dimension woven throughout. When we proclaim God's greatness together, we're not just encouraging fellow believers, we're declaring to a broken world that our God is bigger than any idol or false hope they might trust in. The call to action is beautifully simple yet profound: share your story in three steps, tell who you were before Jesus, how you met Him, and how He's changed your life. This isn't about perfection or having all the answers, it's about taking one next step forward in faith, just like the missionary who crossed mountains one step at a time to share the gospel. Do you have any thoughts or questions about this episode? We'd love to hear them! Send us an email at: office@cornerstonesavoy.org. The Cornerstone Cast is a discipleship ministry of Cornerstone Church in Savoy, Illinois. The Cornerstone Cast is a discipleship ministry of Cornerstone Church and is not designed to replace your involvement in a local church; it is intended as an extra tool for growing closer to God.
Season 17
Content In Anything- Philippians 4:10-23
Philippians 4:10-23 challenges us to rethink what contentment truly means in our lives. We often equate contentment with having everything we want—the perfect marriage, the ideal job, the right house. But biblical contentment operates on an entirely different plane. Paul writes these words from a Roman prison cell, yet declares he has learned the secret of being content in all circumstances. The secret? Jesus himself. When we read 'I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me,' we're not talking about athletic achievements or career success—we're talking about the supernatural ability to be content whether we're experiencing abundance or need, comfort or hardship. This contentment doesn't mean we never take action or stop praying for change, but it does mean we trust God completely with our circumstances. The Philippians embodied this truth through their sacrificial giving, sending support to Paul not from their leftovers but from their first fruits. Their gifts were described as a 'fragrant offering,' an 'acceptable sacrifice,' and 'pleasing to God'—the same language used for worship in the Old Testament. When we truly grasp that everything we have comes from God, we're freed to give sacrificially of our time, energy, and resources. Most remarkably, Paul ends by revealing that even in Caesar's household—the very center of Christian persecution—believers are emerging. Nothing, absolutely nothing, will ever stop the gospel of Jesus Christ from advancing. Do you have any thoughts or questions about this episode? We'd love to hear them! Send us an email at: office@cornerstonesavoy.org. The Cornerstone Cast is a discipleship ministry of Cornerstone Church in Savoy, Illinois. The Cornerstone Cast is a discipleship ministry of Cornerstone Church and is not designed to replace your involvement in a local church; it is intended as an extra tool for growing closer to God.
Our New Mindset- Philippians 4:8-9
Philippians 4:8-9 challenges us to completely transform the way we think and live as followers of Christ. The message confronts us with eight specific characteristics that should define our thought life: whatever is true, honorable, just, pure, lovely, commendable, morally excellent, and praiseworthy. These aren't just nice suggestions—they're a roadmap for developing a radically different mindset than the world around us. What makes this passage so convicting is how it exposes the gap between knowing what we should focus on and actually doing it. We're reminded that focusing on God's Word as our foundation, living lives worthy of respect, pursuing righteousness and sexual purity, and keeping our minds fixed on who God is aren't optional extras for the spiritually elite—they're essentials for every believer. The cultural statistics shared are sobering, revealing how even self-identified Christians have adopted worldly standards around sexuality and purity. But rather than leaving us in despair, we're given practical steps: evaluate where we're actually spending our mental energy, identify one area that needs change, and take one step today. The challenge isn't to overhaul everything overnight, but to begin somewhere, to stop procrastinating our spiritual growth, and to let our renewed minds transform our actions so that our lives become living testimonies that point others to Christ.
In Everything- Philippians 4:1-7
Philippians 4:1-7 reveals how humility serves as the foundation for navigating life's greatest challenges—conflict, difficult seasons, and anxiety. We're reminded through the inspiring example of Susanna Spurgeon, who ministered from her bed and supported her husband through crushing depression and controversy, that faithfulness matters more than meeting others' expectations. The passage confronts us with an uncomfortable truth: we ourselves are often the greatest threat to unity in our churches. When Paul addresses two women caught in conflict, he's addressing all of us who allow pride to elevate our perspectives above the gospel. The call to 'rejoice in the Lord always' isn't about positive thinking—it's about anchoring our joy in God's unchanging character rather than our circumstances. Similarly, the command to be anxious about nothing isn't dismissing real struggles, but pointing us to a peace that transcends human understanding. What ties these challenges together is a single solution: keeping our focus fully on God. Whether facing disagreement, depression, or anxiety, we're called to humble ourselves, bring our requests to Him with thanksgiving, and trust that His peace will guard our hearts. This isn't about self-improvement programs or professional credentials—it's about the Holy Spirit working through ordinary believers who love God, love Jesus, and love one another enough to help each other through conflict and pain.
Reaching Forward- Philippians 3:12-21
Philippians 3:12-21 challenges us to reconsider what it truly means to be citizens of heaven. At the heart of this passage is a radical call to daily transformation—not settling for spiritual mediocrity, but pressing forward toward knowing Christ more deeply every single day. We're reminded that our goal isn't comfort, achievement, or worldly success, but rather knowing Jesus and the power of His resurrection. The passage confronts our tendency to plateau in our faith journey, to think we've arrived spiritually when in reality we're called to run a race that never ends on this side of eternity. What makes this race sustainable isn't our own strength but the incredible truth that Christ has taken hold of us first. His love for us becomes our 'why'—the fuel that keeps us running even when we're tired, discouraged, or distracted. This isn't about perfection; it's about direction. Are we moving toward Jesus or away from Him? The stark reality presented here is that there's no neutral ground—we're either citizens of heaven actively running the race, or we've become enemies of the cross by our apathy and earthly focus. This message calls us to examine whether our lives actually reflect the gospel we claim to believe, challenging us to make our faith visible in how we treat our neighbors, use our time, and pursue what matters most.
I Count It All As A Loss- Philippians 3:1-11
At the heart of Philippians 3:1-11 lies a revolutionary truth that challenges everything we hold dear: everything is a loss compared to Christ. This passage confronts us with the uncomfortable reality that our achievements, our status, our carefully constructed identities—all the things we work so hard to build—are utterly worthless when placed alongside the surpassing value of knowing Jesus. The apostle Paul doesn't mince words here. He uses the stark imagery of considering all earthly accomplishments as dung, something we flush away without a second thought. This isn't about self-hatred or rejecting legitimate blessings; it's about proper perspective. When we truly grasp who Jesus is and what He has done for us, everything else fades into the background. The challenge before us is intensely personal: What are we clutching with white-knuckled fists that we're unwilling to surrender to God? Our reputation? Our comfort? Our carefully planned future? The call to hold our lives with open hands means being willing to say, 'God, whatever You want from me, it's Yours.' This passage reminds us that we are saved by grace through faith alone—not by our works, our religious activities, or our moral achievements. Yet this same grace compels us to live radically different lives, lives that count everything as loss for the sake of knowing Christ more deeply.
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