Latest Worship Services
Sunday, September 19th
As we return to the Book of Acts, we’re back looking at the endurance of the early church. We see their courage and humility. We also see that there’s no hurt that can’t be mended through Jesus. His mercy is healing in our lives. He intends for us to live an abundant life—in his presence.
Sunday, September 12th
Collectively as a society and as a church, a lot has changed in the past 18 months. In the midst of these changes, it’s important to be positioned for the long-term mission of the Church rather than just maintenance of what we know. To live well in this moment, we need to be firm in our commitment to God and to his purposes in our lives. We need to live confident in Jesus’ ability to transform lives.
Sunday, September 5th
Many of us may be looking at the story of our lives and thinking, “I didn’t think it would be like this.” We may be in search of healing and hope. The only way to heal is to work through what is making life unmanageable for you. There are no healthy shortcuts to healing. But God does not want us to do this alone. reGROUP is a place where we can be honest about our personal mess and where we can get the right equipment to assist God in cleaning it up.
Sunday, August 15th - Sunday, August 29th
Throughout history, we can see that we live in a world hungry for community. Ephesians reads like a love letter to the lost and searching. It’s the summary of the radical and revolutionary redemptive nature of Jesus. It’s a summary of his love—a love that sees you for who you are and loves you regardless of why you think that’s impossible. Even with all of the mess and baggage we carry, he sees us as works of art.
Sunday, June 27th-Sunday, July 25th
What happens when wayward thoughts turn to unrestrained actions? What happens when selfish and stubborn ideas mix? What happens when we forget what’s truly important? Distractions are found all around. When we get distracted, our motivations ebb and flow with our attention. So what are we to ponder after learning how Jesus’ life changes everything? We can search for clear cut answers left and right, but what we really need is a true center to guide us. When we allow God's love to reframe our reference, it becomes easier to move with direction. The gospel opens up a new and lovely reality, where we can live free only because of Christ.
Sunday, May 16th-May 30th
People use differences to tear each other apart. We have seen this happen throughout history and see it still today. Pride, judgment, and misunderstanding, fueled by the guise of self-sufficiency, rip at the fabric of our woven lives daily. But just like the magnetic pull of the earth, what makes one person different from another flows through the very core of each’s existence. The same threads that break can be pulled back together.
What brings people together? Is it love? Patience? Kindness? What is the common, invisible string so many strive to hold tight to? In the letter to the Galatians, we find the importance of living rooted in the gospel and in the way of God’s Spirit. The early church could only thrive once they fully accepted all that the gospel had overcome—superiority was rejected, greed was kept in check, and true unity in Christ was pursued.
Sunday, April 11th
As we continue to move through the Book of Acts, we see the expansion of the early church. With this growth, the good news of Jesus and the gospel reaches more and more people, often people different from those who previously had chosen to follow Jesus. We see God break down barriers and make it clear that he invites everyone to have a relationship with him, to be saved by his grace through faith. No one is too far away. No one is outside his reach. No one is outside his grace. By looking at the early church, we can understand the need to see people with Jesus’ eyes. Let us learn from their example of how to live out God’s love with our words and actions.
Sunday, April 4th
Jesus changed the world through his life, death, and resurrection. For he so loved the world, he died that we may live. He unlocked eternity for us should we choose to follow him with our words and actions. This is what we hear every year on Easter. And it is freeingly good. But hearing and understanding the weight of the story are two different things. Maybe we know all the plot points and can recount the way Jesus’ tomb was found empty, but do we fully realize what that means for our world today?
Friday, April 2nd
Good Friday Service is the recognition and remembrance of Jesus' crucifixion and death on the cross.
Thursday, April 1st
Join us as we remember the Last Supper together, worshiping Jesus as the one who was, and is, and is to come.
Sunday, March 21st
"Therefore we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal."
—2 Corinthians 4:16-18
Sunday, January 31st - March 28th
The early church moved to live in the ways Jesus taught while he was here on earth. Led by his Spirit and living for his glory, they were on mission together. Is the present-day Church still progressing forward, toward that mission? Or have we, the collective followers of Jesus, forgotten how to be the Church? Have we lost sight of the spiritual unity God designed for all of us to experience? Being the Church is not a new idea. Though historically followers of Jesus have often tried to agree on the details of a gathering, group, or lifestyle, it is ultimately God alone who unifies us. He sustains and guides us. Being the Church is moving to live and love like Jesus—together.
Sunday, January 10th - January 24th
Prayer is a relational act. The primary way Jesus wants us to view God in prayer is as our Father. When we pray to God the Father, our relationship with him is a commitment to who we are and not what we do. It’s unconditional. The understanding of this relationship will shape our prayer lives more than anything else. This means the primary way Jesus wants us to view ourselves in prayer is as a child—as a son or daughter. He is our perfect Father, loving us even when we hate him. When we pray, Jesus wants us to pray as family. We pray to a God who is our Father as his children, and we pray together as a family.
Sunday, January 3rd
As we enter a new year, let’s reflect on the past months and look ahead to how we can live out being who God has called us to be in the coming years. Disruption is where God works. Last year, we all faced many disruptions. Our sense of wellbeing was shaken. Though we should grieve where disruption has caused pain and loss, we should not assume that the work of God is to do away with our disruption but rather to lead the way through it. Let’s not wait for things to get better before fully engaging with the work of God in our lives and in the lives of those around us.
Sunday, December 27th
There are certain universal principles of virtue—love, grace, justice, generosity—that combine to make the best life for anyone and everyone. We each have a unique set of passions and relationships that no one else has ever had nor will have, and doing God’s will with those will be hard sometimes—but it is truly the best. We were created for adventure, but there is no such thing as an adventure without challenges to overcome. We must humbly recognize that we can sometimes mistake our will for God’s will. And we need one another as we seek salvation, comfort, and redemption.
Thursday, December 24th
Jesus came to earth for us. That is good news—fear-silencing, joy-inflicting good news! And this good news is that God forged a pathway for you, and that’s what we celebrate at Christmas. Jesus’ arrival changed everything! And following Jesus isn’t about us and what we can do for him but about what he has done for us. He lived the life we were designed to live perfectly and died the death we deserve in order to declare the defeat of sin and death through his resurrection. Jesus came to earth for us because we can’t save or fix ourselves in our mess. But that’s OK. Because he loves us and is gracious to us—and that is fear-silencing, joy-inflicting good news.
Sunday, November 29th - December 20th
The Advent season is the anticipation of our Savior, Jesus. He is the center of grace, the center of faith, and the center of this season. We are in desperate need of Jesus now and forever, just as they were in the time of that very first Christmas.
And so we also look to the stories of those God had set in unique places to prepare and welcome his Son. His good news changed the lives of the shepherds, the wise men, Joseph, and Mary. Each of these players is crucial in the story of Jesus. Through their stories, may we find hope, peace, joy, and love—the kinds that can only come from knowing Jesus. As we come to the end of a year full of reasons to forget about hope, peace, joy, and love, let’s stand together in God’s presence, rejoicing in his good news for all people.
Sunday, November 1st - November 22nd
Where is God in all of this? Where is God in the tension, in the discord, in the waiting? Where is God in our lives? And where was God in the life of Esther, a woman who won the favor of everyone who saw her but faced so much risk? God is always at work, even when we don’t see him. He is at work even when we don’t see the way out of our precarious present into his promised future. When Esther was uncertain about her peoples’ future, God gave her a providential perhaps. And this same God is with us in this time. God does not make mistakes. The hidden hero in Esther’s story is at work in our story, in your story, too. Though we may be troubled, sleepless, he is there in the miraculous mundane—in every perhaps.
Sunday, October 18th - October 25th
We are imperfect, flawed, and discontent. While we don’t deserve God’s grace, he loves us just because that’s who he is—God is grace. And he offers himself as enough for us, as the greatest sacrifice, so that we may know him as our coming king. God’s grace is an ever-present need in this bittersweet world. By grace, he forgave the very first on earth and by grace, he continues to love us into our future. Grace has to be unearned and undeserved or the transforming work of Christ could not be completed in us. Grace shifts to help instead of harm, and it is the source by which goodness pours forth. Overwhelmed and incomplete, we can believe our gracious God is more than enough. He does not make mistakes. His goodness, his love, his compassion—the fullness of God, our breath of life—it really is all about grace.
Sunday, October 11th
What does it mean to follow Jesus? When he invites us to follow him, he is choosing us just as much as we are saying "yes" to him. Following Jesus means being in relationship with him. It means being willing to be changed, to be taught, to be flexible, to be obedient—it means we are willing to be transformed. Following Jesus is a step of faith, knowing that no matter what comes our way, we will still say "yes" to him. And he equips us for and commissions us to a lifelong journey with him.
Sunday, September 20th - October 4th
God invites us to fix our eyes on him. When we look away from his promises, we lose sight of the hope he has in store for us. But sometimes it’s difficult to always fix our eyes on him. When this happens, we need to remember that the whole story of the Bible culminates with Jesus saying he is the beginning and the end. We can experience hope, freedom, and peace through him. This is the completeness, the wholeness of God. When we live in this truth, how different would our lives be? The promises of God find their affirmation in Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection. He died for us so we would never have to doubt his love for us. If Jesus is the beginning and the end, it really is all about grace.
Sunday, September 13th
What is a church supposed to do? Throughout our church's history, we have been reminded of answers to this question. In the early days of Summit, we decided that we weren't going to wait for the "right time" to be a church, that we could be the Church in our present time. We also decided that we weren't going to settle for being just about us, that we wanted to always be inviting others to experience God's grace. We decided to be a church that serves our world, in the broad sense and in the spaces God placed us. We recognized that any amount of pain or failure would not limit God's faithfulness to us. And we were constantly amazed by the incredible reality of individual transformations through the grace of God. This year, as we remember where we have come from and look ahead to where we are going, we remember who God is. And we remember who we are in him.
Sunday, August 23rd- September 6th
Oh God, you are a God of peace. You calm storms in our world and in us. You heal and you provide. You extend grace, act in mercy, and make all things new. You are the author of peace. Let us be peacemakers for the sake of your beloved creation. Grant us your peace that surpasses all understanding. May we not smooth over differences but embrace the true understanding that comes when we explore the bends and folds in the paper on which you write. Let us learn from and celebrate what you have made. Our world is not perfect and neither is our work, but your love is enough to help us play our true roles in your kingdom—as far as it depends on us. Oh God, you are a God of peace. Let us show peace in action.
Sunday, August 16th
Secrets and lies are some of the heaviest burdens we will ever carry. To begin to unburden ourselves, to find the blessedness of being undeservingly forgiven, we must confess. Confession is imperative to a relationship with God because all sin is enough to keep us away from God. However, through his abounding grace and mercy and love for all of us—his creation—he can set us free from the burden of our sin. We confess and we repent because he paid the price of our sin for us.
Sunday, June 7th- August 9th
Psalm 1 says that "blessed is the one ... whose delight is in the law of the Lord." Each and everyone one of us was created in the image of God. When we choose not to care about injustices done to those around us, to those created in the very image of God, we are not engaging or delighting in the fullness of the law of the Lord. God's promise to protect the righteous and judge the wicked is certain. His law pulls us out of apathy and ensures us that good does win.
Sunday, May 24th - Sunday, May 31st
We must ask ourselves what is the suffering in our lives that has meaning and hope. What is the suffering that is not wasted pain? What will help us to better know God? We are called to die to ourselves and become alive in Christ. This is the hope that is borne out of suffering—this is how we grow and how we learn to trust that God will redeem the broken parts of our lives.
Sunday, April 12th
Joy is found in Jesus.
Freedom is found in Jesus.
Restoration is found in Jesus.
Forever—no matter what.
Past Worship Services
Sunday, April 19th- Sunday, May 17th
The process of our thoughts is a fickle friend. We start the cyclical cyclone of wonder and disbelief. It’s OK to wonder. But there is freedom from the pains of our pondering, just as there is freedom from the ache of our actions.
Jesus invites us to dwell in his Father’s kingdom, forever—no matter what.
Friday, April 10th
Good Friday Service is the recognition and remembrance of Jesus' crucifixion and death on the cross.
Thursday, April 9th
Join us as we remember the Last Supper together, worshiping Jesus as the one who was, and is, and is to come.
Sunday, April 5th
When we enter difficult times, we see that clinging to anything but the reality of who Jesus is leads to disappointment. Seeing Jesus clearly empowers us to pursue the life of service he demonstrated for us in the upper room when he washed his disciples' feet. The danger for believers in hard times is to act more similarly to the crowd than to Jesus.
Sunday, March 29th
God gives us the words to cry out to him. When we are apprehensive to hope, he wants to hear what we have to say. We can bring our cries honestly to him because his love is unfailing. Through uncertainty, we can be certain in our praise.
Sunday, March 15th - 22nd
God calls us to be diligent and wise and live with a posture of humility—even though that may not be how we always want to stand. But while it seems scary to know that you're not in control, knowing God is in charge can bring peace. Regardless of the outcome, we'll be OK because the Lord's plans are perfect.
Guest speaker Pastor Oscar Muriu joins us this week from Nairobi Chapel, one of our longstanding global partners in Kenya.
God calls us to be diligent and wise and live with a posture of humility—even though that may not be how we always want to stand. But while it seems scary to know that you're not in control, knowing God is in charge can bring peace. Regardless of the outcome, we'll be OK because the Lord's plans are perfect.
Jesus came to the earth to be many things. Light to the world. Truth to be glorified. Savior to us all. But he came to us as a baby, gently wrapped in cloths and treasured in his earthly mother’s heart. Jesus, who would bless the world, came first as a blessing to a few. We can learn a lot about Jesus by how those around him at his birth responded to his presence. They were moved by his might, despite his humble beginnings. Their hope had been and will be fulfilled in his life, death, and life again. Glory to God indeed.
Lament is honestly crying out to God. God leads us to define the brokenness we see in our world and in our hearts, that we might experience liberation in community. Summit Students is wrapping up their teaching on lament and they’re inviting us to lean in with them. Join us in creating this community around the high school students who are seeking to find their identity in Christ first.
You take a deep breath and look across the crowd. The wave of uncertainty floods through you like the ripples in the nearby lake, but then kind eyes meet yours. An inviting smile, a nod. In a moment of recognition, he begins the conversation. And the stories come pouring out. His words blossom and burst into meaning and connection. And the understanding clicks into place behind your eyes. Jesus used story so we can understand with our hearts what we could not grasp with our minds. He gave us these parables to tell us that what we long for is coming true. He meets us where we are to invite us into his coming kingdom.
We can look ahead to the kingdom of God, to the water clear as crystal and the promise of no more night. We can long for what is not yet here, we can reach for a sense of belonging, and we can know that his kingdom is at hand. We grasp at the idea of already, but not yet. So what does that mean for us, now? We are imperfect people in an imperfect world, where only God can one day right every wrong. Still, there are needs—here, now, right where we are—that you and I are uniquely equipped to meet. And as we long for those around us to experience God’s grace, we do what we can to be an extension of his love as we serve our city.
Our vision is to form biblically functioning communities that reach lost people, connect in Christ-centered relationships, teach truth, serve others, and worship God. Vision is about answering the question: “Where are we going and how are we getting there?” This Vision Sunday, we will certainly look ahead to how we build meaningful service, ethnic and generational diversity, and new expressions of the church but that is not at the heart of this year’s Vision Sunday. The heart of this year’s Vision Sunday is the heart. It is a look inside—an opportunity to examine our motives and loyalties in front of a God whose highest call on our lives is to love him above all else.
The first apostles followed instructions left by Jesus: guided by the Holy Spirit, they were to be his architects that would help shape his kingdom on earth. They took this blueprint and built the early church—not a physical building but a movement—and these people began to turn the world upside down. Actions should align with priorities, and our priorities should align with what Jesus taught. So what are we going to build?
The minor prophets of old were familiar, extraordinary people. They were priests, farmers, servants, and royalty—used by God to speak to us and give guidance through timeless, human issues. God, invisible, became audible and apparent through these prophets. Through them, he placed his voice in the brimming expanse of their time. Because he speaks timeless words, his unmistakable voice is in our time, too, illustrating his heart for us.
We are called to live with a mindset, a fervor, and a purpose that are outpourings of our relationship with Christ. We are called to live a life that’s rare, but a life that comes naturally. When Jesus left earth, he didn’t leave us. He gave us the Holy Spirit to guide us through our thoughts, our emotions, and our actions so as we move through this world, we can live the life God created for us.
As we celebrate our risen Lord we remember that the resurrection means the defeat of death and the hope of glory.
Palm Sunday commemorates the triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem. Jesus ensured that every aspect of his entry would be intentional, enabled it to be inspirational, and accepted that, to some, it would be infuriating.
Pastor Oscar Muriu from Nairobi Chapel shares about what true obedience is and encourages us to go deeper in our devotion to and intimacy with God.
We want to be a community that lives what we have learned. From our friends and partners in Africa we have learned about the power of presence, the hope that comes from encouragement, and the relationships that can come from hospitality
Paul—sent by God—writes to break tension. He writes to set the tone for ministry in the early church, affirming the importance of inclusion without ignoring differences. He addresses the boundaries we create and what gets in the way of Jesus’ followers living out his teachings.
God is not done guiding our steps. These steps into the future will honor our previous chapters while turning new pages—and adding new meanings. Each new word on these pages will point toward Jesus’ teachings to seek and reach others.
As you move into a new year, do the work of discovering your truest name. Knowing our truest name will always be a struggle with God. Hearing our truest name will require that we first see who we are in light of who God is.
Light illuminates, reflects, exposes, and ignites—light fights the dark. We immerse ourselves in Jesus’ love because he is the life and light of mankind. We get to discover God’s glory through his son as we make sense of who we are. Jesus’ incarnation as a baby and sacrifice on the cross was always the plan. It was the plan for the sake of everyone. And it was the plan so that you and I could be fully us.
There is freedom in telling the truth. About who you are, what you've done, and what's been done to you. Jesus calls us to come out of our hiding places and into the light.
Our vision is to form biblically functioning communities that reach lost people, connect in Christ-centered relationships, teach truth, serve others, and worship God.
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus addresses prayer, marriage, and the narrow gate. He describes the eternal impact of loving our enemies and giving to the needy. Jesus uses his words to paint a picture and set a standard for what living as we’re called to be ought to look like.
When Jesus told a story it wasn’t to better illustrate a point that everyone already knew and accepted. It was to disrupt thinking, to change the status quo.
In our series, 9 Conversations, we will be looking at nine interactions Jesus had during his time on earth.
You can also visit our Soundcloud for past sermons.