True surrender to Jesus is never meant to remain a private matter. While our relationship with Him is personal, it is designed to be lived out publicly through our actions. When Jesus takes control of our lives, He reshapes how we see the people around us and how we respond to their needs. A surrender that never moves outward has not yet taken deep root in the heart. As we open our hands to God’s will, we naturally begin to move in the direction He guides us—toward a life of service. [37:18]
But it shall not be so among you. But whoever would be great among you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among you must be slave of all. For even the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many. (Mark 10:43-45 ESV)
Reflection: When you look at your daily routine, in what ways is your internal commitment to Jesus becoming visible through the way you treat others?
We do not serve simply to stay busy or to satisfy a need to feel important. Instead, we serve because we follow a King who first served us with unconditional love. When service is rooted in guilt or obligation, it eventually leads to burnout and exhaustion. However, when it flows from our identity as those saved by grace, it becomes an overflow of gratitude. Knowing our purpose helps us move past the need for recognition or a "thank you" from others. [44:44]
Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. (Philippians 2:5-7 ESV)
Reflection: If you knew that no one would ever thank you or notice your service, how would that change your motivation for helping those around you this week?
Jesus modeled the ultimate example of servanthood during His final meal with the disciples. Though He held the titles of Teacher and Lord, He chose to perform the lowliest task of washing feet. Secure people are able to serve freely because they do not rely on titles or status for their worth. By taking up the towel, Jesus showed that no servant is greater than the Master. We are invited to follow this example, stepping into needs even when no one is watching. [49:46]
If I then, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another's feet. For I have given you an example, that you also should do just as I have done to you. (John 13:14-15 ESV)
Reflection: What is a "lowly" task in your home, workplace, or community that you usually avoid, and how might God be inviting you to serve there?
To serve like Jesus, we must embrace the value of unconditional love. This means we stop sizing people up to see if they deserve our help or meet our standards. We are called to look at every person as a child of God, regardless of their journey or their choices. Our job is not to fully understand every situation, but to respond with the heart of Christ. When we love without expecting anything in return, we reflect the heart of the Father. [53:19]
For you were called to freedom, brothers. Only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for the flesh, but through love serve one another. (Galatians 5:13 ESV)
Reflection: Think of someone in your life who is difficult to love; what is one small way you can serve them this week without expecting them to change?
Most of us live carefully scheduled lives with very little room for the unexpected. Yet, the people who need us most rarely show up as a planned appointment on our calendars. Like the Good Samaritan, we are called to be uncommon neighbors who stop for those in our path. When a neighbor, coworker, or stranger disrupts your plans, consider that it might be a divine invitation. These moments are opportunities to practice the immeasurably more work God wants to do through us. [56:51]
But a Samaritan, as he journeyed, came to where he was, and when he saw him, he had compassion. He went to him and bound up his wounds, pouring on oil and wine. Then he set him on his own animal and brought him to an inn and took care of him. (Luke 10:33-34 ESV)
Reflection: When your schedule is interrupted this week, what prayer can you offer to help you see that person as an invitation rather than a nuisance?
A church presses into a season of asking God for “immeasurably more,” centering on surrender, Scripture, and persistent prayer as the soil for spiritual growth. Surrender is framed not as a private sentiment but as a public reorientation that reshapes how people see and respond to neighbors. When surrender is genuine it moves outward: it changes ambition into service, status-seeking into humble action, and religious comfort into missional risk. Serving is presented as the natural fruit of surrender because Christ first served; his incarnation, foot-washing, and cross model a mindset that lays aside rights and embraces costly love.
The call is practical and urgent. Serving is not about filling schedules or earning approval; it flows from a rooted identity in Christ and a clear purpose to help people find and follow Jesus. Unconditional love becomes a governing value—people are not projects to be sized up but image-bearers to be loved without receipts or guarantees. Being an uncommon neighbor means seeing interruptions as divine invitations: the everyday disruptions and requests that most calendars would reject are precisely the opportunities to reflect Christ’s heart. Ordinary acts, offered willingly, can be multiplied by God into extraordinary impact, just as a small lunch fed thousands.
The talk balances theology with actionable steps: step into service even without perfect skill, let serving shape spiritual growth, and use available avenues (a church serving portal) to find a place to give time and gifts. Serving costs time; sacrifice costs comfort. Yet when service is rooted in purpose, identity, and love, it sustains rather than burns out. The closing invitation is pastoral and specific—encourage those who need prayer, invite people to engage with leaders, and press the congregation toward tangible obedience so that the church’s clarity, surrender, commitment to service, and willingness to sacrifice together produce measurable, city-changing fruit.
``Biblical surrender never stays private. We live in a culture that tells us keep your quote unquote religion or your church or your beliefs to yourself. You do your thing, I'll do my thing. But biblical surrender is not a private thing. Our relationship with Jesus while it's all while it is private, it should be lived out publicly. Because when Jesus could take control of our lives, he reshapes how we see people and then how we respond to their needs. And we're walking surrender to Jesus. We start looking at people differently and then we respond differently than the world would. Surrender that never moves outward really never takes root.
[00:36:34]
(44 seconds)
#PublicSurrender
Very ordinary guys who put their hands into an extraordinary God and learn to practice unconditional love. See, what feels small in your hands becomes significant in God's hands. You remember the boy with a couple fish and five loaves of bread? Probably remember the story. You remember the account, disciples, Jesus says get that lunch and Jesus multiplies that lunch and it feeds thousands of people. The thing I always love is at the end, they say, what happened? They collected up 12 basketfuls extra of food because God can take the very ordinary that's in our hands and multiply it to do extraordinary work.
[00:57:29]
(37 seconds)
#OrdinaryMadeExtraordinary
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