The John Series

We are currently teaching through the gospel of John, looking at the life of Jesus, his teaching and his purpose as the Word sent to bring life, light and love to this broken world.

Do you really love me? John 21

James Levengood takes us through the final chapter in our John series, looking at the restoration of Peter and the renewed calling on his life to “Follow me”. James takes us through the passage in John 21 and considers the night of defeat, followed by a morning of delights, a day of decisions and a life of service.

Who moved the stone? John 20

Dave looks at the evidence for Jesus resurrection and the impact it has on our lives today. He explores John’s account of the resurrection in the light of the evidence of Old Testament prophecy fulfilled, Jesus claims fulfilled and the foundation of the church. David aims to equip us to be ready to give a reason for the hope we have as Christians.

That you may believe – John 19: 31-42

Michael Harber continues in our series on John and takes us through the events after Jesus crucifixion unpacking the facts that Jesus died on his own accord, the evidence that our faith is not a blind faith and the courage and sacrifice of Joseph and Nicodemus. Michael takes time to apply these truths to our faith today.

Peter denial and recovery John 18:15-27

As we continue our series in John, Hans leads us through dark days for Peter when he denies His Lord. He then looks back at Peter’s journey of faith (called, convicted, comforted, challenged, confessed, confident) to the point where Peter reaches the dark moment where his courage fails. Hans challenges us in our generation: if we want to take a stand for Christ, we too may come under the attack of Satan whose desire is for us to lose faith. But the story ends with Peter graciously being brought back by the Lord and being commissioned and showing faithful commitment to his Lord and the church through the rest of his life.

Abiding in the Vine – John 15

Rory continues the study around Jesus discourse with his disciples in John 15. He looks at our complete dependence on Jesus, as branches , connected to and abiding in the vine. He also explains how “abiding” means obeying his commands and as a consequence, bearing the suffering of being hated by the world while demonstrating the love of God through practical acts of service and kindness.