Matthew 10:26-42 | Kingdom Now: The Cost of Loyalty (with Michael Rondon)
In this message, guest speaker Michael Rondon picks up in Matthew 10, covering the second half of the chapter and unpacking six key themes Jesus presents to his disciples: fear, worth, public allegiance, division, discipleship, and faithfulness. Anchoring the entire message in the concept of loyalty, Michael challenges listeners to examine whether Jesus is truly Lord above all else — above comfort, reputation, safety, and approval. He reminds us that following Jesus is costly, but that cost is worth embracing wholeheartedly.Michael walks through each theme with honesty and practical insight. He addresses how fear drives so many of our decisions and silences our faith, how we wrongly seek our sense of worth from performance, relationships, and achievement rather than from God, and how believers are called to a public, confessed, unapologetic faith — not a silent one. He also tackles the reality that living by a different standard than the world can create division, even within families, and encourages listeners to start by making their home a place where faith is modeled and prioritized.The message closes with a call to discipleship and faithfulness — the understanding that following Jesus means surrendering control daily and trusting that even small acts of obedience matter eternally. Michael reminds the congregation that salvation is free, but following Jesus costs everything, and yet nothing we lose is greater than what we gain. Jesus, he concludes, is worth public, costly, undivided allegiance.Watch all our sermons on our youtube channel "Flipside Christian Church"Join us in person 8:00am, 9:30am & 11:00am every Sunday morning.37193 Ave 12 #3h, Madera, CA 93636For more visit us at flipside.churchFor more podcasts visit flipsidepodcasts.transistor.fm
Matthew 10 | Kingdom Now: Sent, Costly, Unafraid
In Matthew 10, Pastor Karl highlights a pivotal transition in Jesus' ministry, where the disciples move from merely observing and admiring Him to being sent out as active participants in His mission. Jesus calls the Twelve, empowers them with authority to heal, cast out demons, and proclaim the kingdom of heaven, and then commissions them to go first to the lost sheep of Israel. This chapter marks a hinge point in the Gospel: following Jesus is not just about learning His teachings or attending gatherings—it demands responsibility, urgency, and full participation in sharing the good news.Jesus is strikingly honest about the cost. He instructs the disciples to travel light, relying completely on God's provision rather than personal security or contingency plans, emphasizing that dependence on Him is central to discipleship. He warns of inevitable resistance: they will face opposition from culture, religious leaders, and even family members, as allegiance to Him can divide households and bring persecution. Yet, Jesus promises divine help—the Spirit will speak through them in moments of trial—and calls for wise, innocent endurance, urging believers to flee persecution when possible not for self-preservation, but to reach more people with the gospel.Ultimately, Pastor Karl challenges the church: a faith that costs nothing accomplishes nothing. The true disciple pledges exclusive allegiance to Jesus, accepting the responsibility to live as radical image-bearers of Christ in the world, no matter the personal price. This message confronts comfort-seeking Christianity and invites every listener to decide if Jesus is worth the cost of true following.Watch all our sermons on our youtube channel "Flipside Christian Church"Join us in person 8:00am, 9:30am & 11:00am every Sunday morning.37193 Ave 12 #3h, Madera, CA 93636For more visit us at flipside.churchFor more podcasts visit flipsidepodcasts.transistor.fm
Matthew 9:18-38 | Kingdom Now: Reach Out in Faith
In this episode of the podcast from the church, Pastor Karl concludes the study of Matthew chapter 9, highlighting Jesus' revelation of His power through a series of remarkable miracles. He explains Matthew's Jewish perspective, portraying Jesus as the promised Messiah and Anointed One, contrasting this with other Gospel accounts. He recaps the structure of Matthew, noting how chapters 8–9 demonstrate Jesus' authority over disease, death, and demonic forces through ten miracles, while also showing the kinds of people who desperately approach Him.The core message centers on true faith: it arises not merely from believing Jesus can help, but from admitting that nothing else can. Pastor Karl unpacks the encounters in Matthew 9:18–34—the synagogue ruler pleading for his deceased daughter, the woman with a 12-year hemorrhage who touches Jesus' garment in faith (possibly connecting to Malachi's prophecy of healing in His "wings" or "corners"), the two blind men calling Him "Son of David" and trusting in His mercy alone, and the deliverance of a mute, demon-possessed man whose condition defied traditional Jewish exorcism methods. Through these stories, he emphasizes that desperate faith, even if imperfect or "weak," directed toward the right Savior—Jesus—releases God's power. Faith often requires a public "touchpoint" of expression, removing unbelieving voices that sound logical but hinder God's work, and ultimately trusting in God's mercy rather than demanding specific outcomes.Pastor Karl closes by applying the passage to the church's present moment, noting the explosive community growth in their area—with thousands of new residents and students arriving soon—as evidence that "the fields are ripe for harvest." Jesus' compassion on the harassed and helpless crowds compels believers to pray for workers and step into the harvest themselves, making this not just a message about miracles but about the church's responsibility to reach those in need with the gospel of the kingdom.Watch all our sermons on our youtube channel "Flipside Christian Church"Join us in person 8:00am, 9:30am & 11:00am every Sunday morning.37193 Ave 12 #3h, Madera, CA 93636For more visit us at flipside.churchFor more podcasts visit flipsidepodcasts.transistor.fm
Matthew 9 | Kingdom Now: Recreate, Not Repair
Pastor Karl continues the "Kingdom Now" series in Matthew 9:1–17, showing that Jesus doesn't patch torn-up lives—He recreates them entirely, unleashing kingdom power to prove His authority and bring radical newness.He explores the healing of the paralytic, lowered through the roof by four faithful friends who stopped at nothing to bring him to Jesus. Seeing their faith, Jesus first forgives the man's sins—addressing his deepest eternal need—then commands him to rise and walk, proving His divine authority on earth to forgive sins. This highlights bold evangelism through inconvenience, carrying others to Christ even when faith falters, and Jesus speaking hope first while prioritizing spiritual healing over temporary physical relief.Next, Pastor Karl examines Jesus' call to Matthew (Levi), the despised tax collector who instantly leaves everything—paycheck, position, protection, identity, and any fallback—to follow with total, courageous allegiance. Comfortable faith falls short; true discipleship demands unconditional commitment to a new kingdom.At Matthew's house, Jesus reclines with tax collectors and sinners, scandalizing the Pharisees. He declares He came as a physician for the sick—not the self-righteous—calling for mercy over rigid religion. Through parables of new cloth on old garments and new wine in fresh wineskins, He teaches that His kingdom brings expanding Holy Spirit life that inflexible, stubborn hearts cannot contain.Core truth: Jesus came to recreate, not repair. The kingdom confronts our deepest needs, demands total surrender, and requires elastic, flexible hearts to receive the Spirit's fresh, transforming work—choosing new wineskins over rigid old ones.Watch all our sermons on our youtube channel "Flipside Christian Church"Join us in person 8:00am, 9:30am & 11:00am every Sunday morning.37193 Ave 12 #3h, Madera, CA 93636For more visit us at flipside.churchFor more podcasts visit flipsidepodcasts.transistor.fm
Matthew 8:23-34 | Kingdom Now: Chaos & Comfort
Guest speaker David White continues the "Kingdom Now" series in Matthew 8, showing that wherever God’s kingdom arrives, chaos is confronted—but comfort is challenged.He examines two powerful encounters: Jesus calming a violent storm on the Sea of Galilee, where panicked disciples question His care despite His presence, and Jesus casting demons from two violent men into a herd of pigs in Gentile territory. The restored men return to community, but the townspeople—upset by the economic loss—beg Jesus to leave, preferring familiar chaos to costly change.David stresses Jesus’ absolute authority over external storms and internal oppression, yet following Him requires denying self and embracing discomfort rather than seeking ease. He contrasts “Couch Jesus” (comfort-focused) with “Coach Jesus” (growth-focused), urging the dangerous prayer: “Your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven”—inviting God to confront chaos in marriages, families, finances, and mental health, while trusting Him through the inevitable challenges.Core truth: The kingdom is now—actively confronting chaos and challenging comfort—because Jesus loves us too much to leave us unchanged.Watch all our sermons on our youtube channel "Flipside Christian Church"Join us in person 8:00am, 9:30am & 11:00am every Sunday morning.37193 Ave 12 #3h, Madera, CA 93636For more visit us at flipside.churchFor more podcasts visit flipsidepodcasts.transistor.fm