Father’s Day
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The Man Who Pleases God
In this Father’s Day message, Pastor Byron reflects on the legacy of his own father and explores what it means to be a man who pleases God. Through the example of Elijah in 2 Kings 1, he presents four characteristics of godly manhood: being God-directed, God-dependent, God-focused, and God-secure, emphasizing that truth is better caught
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The Grace of a Father
In this Father’s Day message, Pastor Byron explores the parable of the prodigal son, shifting focus from the son to the often-overlooked father as a model of godly fatherhood. Drawing from Luke 15, he presents three characteristics of the father’s heart: an open hand that releases his son to make his own choices, open arms
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Marks of a Great Father
In this Father’s Day message Pastor Byron shifts focus from the prodigal son to the father in Luke 15, highlighting four marks of a great father. Through this parable and personal stories about his own father, Pastor Byron shows how fathers demonstrate love through listening, risking, unconditional love without manipulation, and acceptance with forgiveness—ultimately reflecting
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Daniel, Dreams and Fathers
In this Father’s Day message Pastor Byron uses Daniel chapter 2 to show how fathers should model faith during impossible situations, emphasizing that Daniel faced crisis with poise, prayer, and humility. He explains the “times of the Gentiles” and Nebuchadnezzar’s dream, demonstrating that God works best in humanly impossible situations and that true humility always
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Faith, Family Style
In this Father’s Day message from Hebrews 11:20-29, Pastor Byron explores faith in family relationships through the examples of Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph. He emphasizes that faith is not meant to be a “weekend date” but a permanent resident in our homes, challenging fathers especially to pass on their faith to children and grandchildren through
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Fathers and Unconditional Love
In this Father’s Day message, Pastor Byron uses Ephesians 1 to explore how God demonstrates unconditional love for His children, applying these principles to fatherhood. He explains our position in Christ through five blessings—being blessed, adopted, accepted, forgiven, and valued—showing fathers how to love their children unconditionally by separating behavior from identity and providing focused
