The Bedrock of Prophetic Ministry | Session 3
This session focuses on intimacy with God as the true foundation for prophetic ministry. Rather than pursuing techniques, participants are encouraged to enjoy God, linger in His presence, and cultivate daily awareness of Him. Through examples from Scripture and reflections on the life of Jesus, the session shows how direction flows naturally from relationship. It invites believers to abide, listen, and build a lifelong familiarity with God’s voice.
The 3 Stages: What Did God Say?| Session 6
The first stage of prophetic ministry: receiving revelation.
Participants learn the importance of capturing what God shows without adding interpretation or personal assumptions. Through biblical examples and practical guidance, the teaching highlights how filters such as preconceived ideas, life experience, and emotion can distort what God is saying. The session trains believers to gather the raw information with humility and care.
The 3 Stages: What Does This Mean?| Session 7
The second stage of prophetic ministry: receiving revelation.
Participants discover that understanding the meaning of a dream, picture, or impression requires dependence on the Holy Spirit rather than personal logic. The teaching highlights the need for humility, prayer, biblical grounding, and community as believers learn to discern what God intends. This session encourages patient listening and reminds learners that interpretation belongs to God.
The 3 Stages: What Needs to be Done About This? | Session 8
The second stage of prophetic ministry: application.
Using the story of Joseph as a guide, participants learn how important it is to consider timing, audience, purpose, and motivation before sharing a prophetic word. The teaching shows how good revelation and interpretation can be undermined by poor application. Believers are encouraged to seek God for wisdom so that their response builds up others, honours God, and reflects maturity.
Keeping Our Ego Out of the Equation | Session 9
Through Scripture and personal reflection, participants learn how comparison, self promotion, and fear of failure can distort prophetic ministry. The teaching highlights Moses as an example of prophetic meekness and calls believers to become people who draw attention to Jesus rather than themselves. The session invites learners to embrace a posture that serves others and reflects the heart of God.
How to Recognize Counterfeit Prophetic Activity | Session 10
This session equips participants to discern the difference between authentic prophetic ministry and false or unhealthy expressions. Drawing on both Old and New Testament examples, the teaching explores signs of counterfeit prophecy including speaking from one’s own imagination, telling people only what they want to hear, covering over sin, greed, sensuality, and lives that bear poor spiritual fruit. Participants learn to become fruit inspectors who recognize maturity, integrity, and accountability as marks of true prophetic activity.
How to Receive a Prophetic Word Given to You | Session 11
This final session teaches believers how to receive prophetic words with openness and discernment. Participants explore what Scripture says about valuing prophecy, testing it, recording it, and cooperating with God as He invites them into His future. The teaching explains the difference between reacting to a prophetic word and partnering with it through prayer, obedience, and wise counsel. This session encourages believers to welcome God’s voice and to steward prophetic words in a way that leads to growth and transformation.
Greeting & Background | Colossians | Session 1
Paul’s opening words in Colossians set the tone for the whole letter: identity rooted in Christ, not in role, achievement, or spiritual performance. Even in two short verses, Paul reminds the church that grace and peace come from God—not from striving—and that believers are “saints” because they’ve been set apart by Him, not because they’ve earned a title. The session highlights Paul’s humility in introducing himself simply as “Paul, an apostle,” keeping function and identity distinct, and modelling a way of ministry that resists status and embraces servanthood. It also places the letter in its context—Colossae facing subtle, blended influences that threatened to nudge believers off course by only a degree or two. In a world full of “designer spirituality,” Paul’s introduction quietly calls the church back to the clarity, authority, and sufficiency of Christ from the very first line.
The Preeminence of Christ | Colossians | Session 3
Colossians 1:15–23 draws the group into the heart of Paul’s message by lifting their eyes to the unmatched supremacy of Jesus. Rather than getting lost in philosophies, competing worldviews, or religious add-ons, this session recentres faith on the person of Christ—Creator, Sustainer, Head of the Church, and the One in whom the fullness of God dwells. Paul stacks phrase upon phrase not to overwhelm but to reawaken wonder, reminding believers that everything—visible and invisible—holds together in Him alone. From that foundation, the passage shifts to the miracle of reconciliation: people once alienated and hostile toward God are now made holy and blameless through Christ’s sacrifice. The session calls believers to continue steadfast in this gospel, resisting both the temptation to add to Jesus and the pressure to subtract from Him, holding fast to a faith built on Christ plus nothing and Christ minus nothing.
Alive in Christ | Colossians | Session 5
Paul’s words in Colossians 2:6–15 remind believers that the Christian life is a journey walked the same way it began—by trusting wholly in Christ’s finished work, not slipping back into self-effort. This session highlights four pictures Paul gives for healthy discipleship: being rooted in Christ, built up over time, established through years of steady faithfulness, and overflowing with thanksgiving. From there, the teaching warns the church to stay alert, refusing to be “kidnapped” by philosophies, traditions, or spiritual influences that sound wise but pull believers away from the simplicity of Christ. The heart of the passage, however, is Paul’s sweeping reminder of who believers are in Christ—spiritually circumcised, buried and raised with Him, forgiven completely, and made alive by God Himself. The session ends with Paul’s triumphant vision of Christ’s cross: every accusation canceled, every spiritual enemy disarmed, and the believer invited to live from victory rather than striving toward it.
Put on the New Self | Colossians | Session 7
Paul turns our attention to what life in Christ actually looks like when the gospel begins to reshape us from the inside out. Salvation isn’t only about what we’ve been freed from—it’s also about what we’ve been freed for. In this passage he shows how the Christian life grows as we intentionally set our minds on things above, put to death the patterns that once ruled us, and learn to walk in the character of Jesus. The outward habits matter, but the deeper work happens as the Spirit renews our hearts, forms new desires, and teaches us to see one another through the lens of Christ rather than old divisions. It’s a picture of a community being slowly, steadily shaped into His likeness.
Enduring Faith | Faith Series | Week 1
Text: Daniel 3
God is calling us to trust Him through thick and thin.
Eyes Of Faith | Faith Series | Week 2
Text: Numbers 13:25-33
Understanding God in you changes the way you live.
Face to Facts | Faith Series | Week 3
Text: Nehemiah 2:17
God wants you to live above life’s harsh realities.
How To Walk On Water | Faith Series | Week 4
Text: Matthew 14:22-36
God is calling you out of your comfort zone.
Life Of Faith | Faith Series | Week 5
Text: Genesis 11:27-12:9 and Hebrews 11:8-10
Faith begins with God speaking and ends with you obeying.
You Gotta Believe | Faith Series | Week 6
Text: Hebrews 6:1
Faith is vital for a relationship with the Lord.
Possible | Fruit of the Spirit | Week 1
Text: Galatians 5:22-25
Becoming a godly person begins with recognizing your source.
Earn | Fruit of the Spirit | Week 2
Text: Colossians 3:16
Love offers gracious words of correction.