Rock Island Presbyterian Church

Rock Island Presbyterian Church Rock Island Presbyterian Church is a small church located in Rock Island, Tennessee. We meet every Sunday for worship at 10 AM.

02/01/2026
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01/27/2026

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A historic Presbyterian church in Rock Island, Tennessee, serving as a Presbyterian church Rock Island TN, offering Bible-based teaching, traditional worship, prayer, and fellowship within a welcoming Christian community committed to faith, service, and spiritual growth.

A Living Hope – Reflections on Sunday’s MessageSunday’s service at Rock Island Cumberland Presbyterian Church was gently...
01/20/2026

A Living Hope – Reflections on Sunday’s Message

Sunday’s service at Rock Island Cumberland Presbyterian Church was gently and powerfully anchored in the theme of a living hope, drawn from 1 Peter 1:1–9. Even without hearing every word spoken, the spiritual thread was unmistakable: Christ’s resurrection, our tested faith, and the quiet invitation to follow Him again and again, even when life feels messy, uncertain, or unfinished.

The Scripture reminds us that we are protected by the power of God through faith for a salvation ready to be revealed in the last time. It does not promise a life untouched by grief or distress. Instead, it tells us something far more honest and far more hopeful: that for “a little while” we may suffer, and yet still rejoice, because our faith—more precious than gold—is being refined, tested, and strengthened.

This idea was beautifully echoed through the hymns chosen for the service.

The opening hymn, “When We All Get to Heaven,” set the tone of anticipation and promise. It lifted our eyes beyond present struggles toward the joy of finally seeing Christ face to face. It reminded us that this life is not the end of the story, and that our hope is not rooted in circumstances but in a Savior who has already gone before us.

The middle hymn, “Since Jesus Came into My Heart,” brought the message inward. Its simple, joyful testimony—there’s a light in the valley of death now for me—spoke directly to the inner transformation that faith produces. Not the absence of hardship, but the presence of light. Not perfection, but peace. Not a life without sorrow, but a soul anchored in Christ.

The closing hymn, “I Surrender All,” tied everything together. It was not just a song; it was a prayer. A response to both Scripture and sermon. A reminder that faith is not a one-time declaration but a daily posture of surrender. Loving Jesus is not about never failing. It is about returning to Him again, just as Peter did.

The sermon’s reflections on Peter were especially meaningful. Jesus did not meet Peter after his failure with condemnation. He met him with a question: Do you love Me? And then, again and again, Do you love Me? Each time, Peter was given another chance to say yes. Another chance to declare his faith. Another chance to follow.

This was not a moment of shame. It was a moment of restoration.

Peter, who once impulsively declared loyalty and then denied Jesus, was not rejected. He was recommissioned. Jesus invited him back into relationship, back into purpose, back into love. In that exchange, we see the heart of the gospel: not a God who demands perfection, but a Savior who invites repentance, renewal, and recommitment.

And it is no accident that the same Peter later wrote the words we heard in 1 Peter 1. He understood, from lived experience, what it means to be tested by fire. He knew what it felt like to fail publicly, to feel like a mess, to wonder if grace had limits. And yet he also knew what it meant to be restored, protected by God’s power, and filled with a living hope that could not be destroyed.

The message asked a quiet but piercing question: What are the golden circumstances in our life? Not the easy moments. Not the victories. But the refining ones. The seasons of distress. The places where faith is tested. Because those are often the very places where God is shaping something eternal within us.

We were reminded that Christ is the firstfruits of the resurrection. That death does not have the final word. That our faith is not in vain. That what is perishable will pass, but what God is doing in our hearts will endure.

And in the end, the service did what worship is meant to do.

It did not just inform us.
But formed us.

It invited us to rejoice even in trial, to trust even when life feels incomplete, and to surrender again to the One who calls us, restores us, and walks with us through every fire.

This is what it means to live with a living hope.

Sometimes we have good days where everything seems to go right...and on other days nothing goes the way we want. This Su...
01/08/2026

Sometimes we have good days where everything seems to go right...and on other days nothing goes the way we want. This Sunday we will be learning what God says in His Word what the secret to being content is - a feeling of peace and purpose - that is not dependent on external circumstances. Please join us!

Happy New Year from the members of Rock Island Cumberland Presbyterian Church!
01/02/2026

Happy New Year from the members of Rock Island Cumberland Presbyterian Church!

Please join us! Everyone is invited!
12/22/2025

Please join us! Everyone is invited!

12/17/2025

If you missed last Sunday’s service, here’s a glimpse of what we reflected on together.

With the pink Advent candle lit, we were reminded that joy doesn’t wait for life to feel settled. It meets us right in the middle of the waiting. Not a loud or forced joy, but a quiet, steady one rooted in truth.

That theme carried into the message from Philippians 3, where we talked about something many of us recognize. The way we prepare for a job interview, bringing our résumé and hoping we’ve done enough to be accepted. It’s how we’ve learned to move through the world.

But what happens when we bring that same mindset into faith?

Many of us feel the pressure to perform spiritually, to show progress, to prove we’re doing things “right.” Paul reminds us that righteousness isn’t built by effort. It’s received through faith in Christ.

“…not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which comes through faith in Christ.”
Philippians 3:9

That truth brings real joy. The kind that lifts pressure instead of adding to it. The kind that invites relationship instead of performance.

If you’re looking for a place where Scripture is shared clearly, honestly, and with grace, we’d love to have you join us this Sunday.

If you are traveling through or live near Rock Island, Tennessee, you are warmly invited to join us this Sunday at 10:00...
12/17/2025

If you are traveling through or live near Rock Island, Tennessee, you are warmly invited to join us this Sunday at 10:00 AM at Rock Island Cumberland Presbyterian Church. Ours is a small white church, beautifully decorated for Christmas, filled with natural light pouring through large windows. A piano anchors our worship, and hymns are sung with heart by a close-knit community that truly loves to gather. It is a simple place, but one that feels deeply warm, welcoming, and quietly alive.

Merry Christmas! We have a special event next week that will help you get in the Christmas spirit.  Please join us!
12/12/2024

Merry Christmas! We have a special event next week that will help you get in the Christmas spirit. Please join us!

11/01/2024

Hello to all and happy November! Rock Island church will be having a book review on Wednesday November 20 at 2pm in the Sanctuary. It will feature former McMinnville mayor Jimmy Haley as he discusses the history of Warren County. He will use original publications. All are invited!

Address

89 Great Falls Road , P. O. Box 146
Rock Island, TN
38581

Opening Hours

9am - 11am

Website

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