Newberg Church of the Nazarene

Newberg Church of the Nazarene Worship Service 10:30am


Life Groups meet throughout the week. Inquire for details!

12/27/2025

What did the first Christians confess about God? 🤔 Out of all the truths they could focus on, LOVE became the defining theme. God isn't just loving - God IS love itself. This is the foundation of our faith! ✨

12/25/2025

The anticipation of Advent builds to this beautiful moment: 'At last the King has arrived!' 🎄 There's something so powerful about waiting, expecting, and then celebrating Emmanuel - God with us. He enters our chaos not as a distant observer, but as our loving Father who adopts us into His family. What does it mean to you that God chose to be WITH you?

12/24/2025

✨ What does it really mean to love someone? It means giving of yourself to them. And God showed us the ultimate example - He didn't just feel affection for humanity, He GAVE HIMSELF to us. Jesus emptied Himself of divine power to live among us. That's love that costs everything.

12/20/2025

The tension of faith: 'Are you the one, or should we wait for someone else?' 🤔💭 Even John the Baptist wrestled with doubt when Jesus didn't fit his expectations of a powerful warrior Messiah. Instead of storming palaces, Jesus was touching lepers. Instead of raising armies, He was raising the sick. What does this teach us about God's surprising ways?

12/18/2025

Jesus' response to doubt is powerful: 'Look at what's happening!' 👀 Instead of defending His title, He points to the transformation—sight restored, lives healed, hope renewed. God's kingdom isn't always what we expect, but it's exactly what we need.

12/16/2025

The Greek word 'skandalon' gives us our word 'scandal' - and Jesus uses it as a warning! 📖 Blessed are those who aren't scandalized by how God works. Don't let your old blueprints blind you to God's new work in your life. His ways aren't always our ways!

12/13/2025

God doesn't have grandchildren! You can't inherit or borrow peace with God - it requires interaction with God and community. John the Baptist reminds us that our theology means nothing if our lives don't reflect love, mercy, and justice. Are you living what you believe?

12/11/2025

Wait, what?! 🤯 Judgment as GOOD NEWS? Yes! For those who trust in Jesus, God's judgment isn't about destroying US—it's about destroying our SIN. Picture this: God separates you from everything corrupting His good world, then burns away the sin with fire that can't be put out. You're saved, sin is gone forever! ✨

12/09/2025

What if God's judgment isn't about punishment but purification? 🌾 Jesus the winnower knows exactly how to separate the chaff (fear, pretense, ego) from the wheat (your true identity in Him). He's not trying to destroy you—He's destroying what's killing you.

12/06/2025

What kind of king reigns from a cross? This Christ the King Sunday, we're confronted with the beautiful paradox at the heart of our faith: Jesus is crowned not with gold, but with thorns. His throne is not a palace, but a place of ex*****on. His power is revealed not through force, but through vulnerability and self-giving love.

Luke's crucifixion account is saturated with royal imagery—the throne (the cross), the inscription (This is the King of the Jews), the drink offered to the king, the royal decrees of forgiveness. But everything is upside down. This is a king who serves his servants, who forgives his ex*****oners, who welcomes a thief into paradise with a simple request: "Remember me."

As we stand at the hinge between the Christian year ending and Advent beginning, we celebrate that Jesus already reigns. His kingdom is both "already and not yet"—present among us now, yet awaiting its fullness. And here's the revolutionary part: the way we wait tells people what kind of king we worship.

Will we practice forgiveness or seek revenge? Stand with the vulnerable or align with the powerful? Choose mercy over mockery? Love without calculating the cost?

This is Christ, our King. The one crowned with thorns. The one who keeps company with the condemned. The one whose glory is revealed in weakness. Do you know Him?

12/04/2025

What kind of king reigns from a cross? This Christ the King Sunday, we're confronted with the beautiful paradox at the heart of our faith: Jesus is crowned not with gold, but with thorns. His throne is not a palace, but a place of ex*****on. His power is revealed not through force, but through vulnerability and self-giving love.

Luke's crucifixion account is saturated with royal imagery—the throne (the cross), the inscription (This is the King of the Jews), the drink offered to the king, the royal decrees of forgiveness. But everything is upside down. This is a king who serves his servants, who forgives his ex*****oners, who welcomes a thief into paradise with a simple request: "Remember me."

As we stand at the hinge between the Christian year ending and Advent beginning, we celebrate that Jesus already reigns. His kingdom is both "already and not yet"—present among us now, yet awaiting its fullness. And here's the revolutionary part: the way we wait tells people what kind of king we worship.

Will we practice forgiveness or seek revenge? Stand with the vulnerable or align with the powerful? Choose mercy over mockery? Love without calculating the cost?

This is Christ, our King. The one crowned with thorns. The one who keeps company with the condemned. The one whose glory is revealed in weakness. Do you know Him?

12/02/2025

What kind of king reigns from a cross? This Christ the King Sunday, we're confronted with the beautiful paradox at the heart of our faith: Jesus is crowned not with gold, but with thorns. His throne is not a palace, but a place of ex*****on. His power is revealed not through force, but through vulnerability and self-giving love.

Luke's crucifixion account is saturated with royal imagery—the throne (the cross), the inscription (This is the King of the Jews), the drink offered to the king, the royal decrees of forgiveness. But everything is upside down. This is a king who serves his servants, who forgives his ex*****oners, who welcomes a thief into paradise with a simple request: "Remember me."

As we stand at the hinge between the Christian year ending and Advent beginning, we celebrate that Jesus already reigns. His kingdom is both "already and not yet"—present among us now, yet awaiting its fullness. And here's the revolutionary part: the way we wait tells people what kind of king we worship.

Will we practice forgiveness or seek revenge? Stand with the vulnerable or align with the powerful? Choose mercy over mockery? Love without calculating the cost?

This is Christ, our King. The one crowned with thorns. The one who keeps company with the condemned. The one whose glory is revealed in weakness. Do you know Him?

Address

23177 Old Yamhill Road
Newberg, OR
97132

Opening Hours

Tuesday 9am - 2pm
Wednesday 9am - 2pm
Thursday 9am - 2pm
Sunday 9am - 12:30pm

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