This week in We Have A Part To Play, we turn to our souls, those deepest places within us that shape everything we are and everything we do. When’s the last time you really noticed your soul? Or even questioned and spoke to it?
Sacred, Not Disposable.
his week in We Have A Part To Play, we’re talking about defining the relationship we wrestle with when it comes to our bodies. Paul presses the question in 1 Corinthians 6—one the Corinthians needed then, and one our culture needs just as much today:
A People Remembered.
In a world that feels darker by the day, we paused this past Sunday to celebrate God’s faithfulness in Mosaic Church Fort Worth, turning two. But even as we celebrate, we can’t ignore the pain around us. Our nation feels more divided than ever, and the violence of recent weeks presses us to ask a sobering question:
How do we have a part to play…
This week, we began a brand-new series called We Have A Part To Play. So what’s it all about? At its heart, this series is an invitation to discipleship with a community-facing posture.
The Shuffle of Every Generation.
Ever wish life had a rewind, fast-forward, or pause button? We all have. But God offers us something better: the power of the shuffle button. In the movie Click, a universal remote gave that kind of control, but at a cost. Skipping the hard parts meant missing the very moments that made life worth living. The truth is, God didn’t design our …
Holding On When Headlines Break Us.
Some days, if not most, the flood of headlines feels unbearable. Today was one of those days.
Power Over What We Carry.
If only we truly had the power to change once and for all, and it actually stick this time.
The Good Life.
I thought I had life figured out. It was 2019. I was living what I thought was “the good life”—marriage, family, a house, a career, and serving at church. I worked hard for it all, so I convinced myself.
Give. Save. Live.
One moment, it’s offering a listening ear to a neighbor who needs it. The next, it’s the quiet tug to bring food to someone in need. Then it’s covering a bill or babysitting for a single parent, holding it all together. Other times, it’s praying late into the night for a struggling friend, extending forgiveness that was never asked for, …

