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What if the biggest barrier to experiencing God’s fullness isn’t our circumstances—but our unwillingness to reconcile what feels impossible? In Ephesians 2:11-22, Paul writes to a divided church in Ephesus—a bustling, diverse city not unlike Seattle—and reminds them that Jesus has already torn down every wall of hostility.
This message invites us to take an honest look at the walls we’ve rebuilt between “us” and “them”—over race, politics, theology, or past wounds—and consider what it means to live as one new humanity in Christ. Reconciliation isn’t just being nice; it’s choosing to make peace. It’s stepping into the hard, beautiful work of building a spiritual home where strangers become family and difference becomes strength.
The question is simple: what walls might Jesus be inviting you to cross today?
By Tyler Gorsline5
88 ratings
What if the biggest barrier to experiencing God’s fullness isn’t our circumstances—but our unwillingness to reconcile what feels impossible? In Ephesians 2:11-22, Paul writes to a divided church in Ephesus—a bustling, diverse city not unlike Seattle—and reminds them that Jesus has already torn down every wall of hostility.
This message invites us to take an honest look at the walls we’ve rebuilt between “us” and “them”—over race, politics, theology, or past wounds—and consider what it means to live as one new humanity in Christ. Reconciliation isn’t just being nice; it’s choosing to make peace. It’s stepping into the hard, beautiful work of building a spiritual home where strangers become family and difference becomes strength.
The question is simple: what walls might Jesus be inviting you to cross today?

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