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Opening welcome and worship songs (Victory Church podcast intro, congregational worship lyrics about salvation, freedom, and baptism imagery like “I left it in the river” and “death was arrested.”)
Testimonies from Teen Challenge residents describing addiction, loss, encounters with God, and transformation through Christ and the Teen Challenge program.
Teaching moments woven into testimonies, including Scripture quotations (for example 2 Timothy 1:7–9, Isaiah 42:16, John 1:5) and brief reflections on fear, calling, darkness, and light.
Tommy (age 29 from Beverly, MA): shares about a good upbringing, losing both parents, a long struggle with alcoholism, a serious car crash, hospitalization, and being led to Adult & Teen Challenge; emphasizes submitting to Jesus as Lord and cites 2 Timothy 1:7–9 as a life verse.
Second speaker (young man tied to Connecticut and Pawtucket): raised in church with pastor parents, runs from God, experiences deep drug addiction and trauma (including an abortion story), hears God calling his name, and comes to repentance through family prayer; uses this to introduce and emphasize the power of prayer cards.
Third major testimony (Philip): raised in church and missions, drifts into heavy drinking, crime, and selling drugs and guns; ends up incarcerated with serious firearm charges; repeatedly hears about Teen Challenge, finally surrenders to God in jail, enters the program, and sees multiple charges dropped while experiencing deep brotherhood, conviction, and restored purpose.
Explanation of prayer cards placed on chairs and an invitation for the congregation to fill them out with prayer requests, including examples of answered prayers linked to these cards (like a cousin in jail receiving confirmation not to leave the program.)
Emphasis that “much prayer, much power” and that the cards help new residents learn to pray for others as well as themselves.
A Teen Challenge leader explains his own long-term addiction, multiple rehabs, and eventual surrender to Christ and Teen Challenge, contrasting high state-funded treatment costs with Teen Challenge receiving no state addiction funding.paste.txt
Presents “resident sponsorship” as a way to help: one dollar a day ($30/month) to offset the cost for men in the program, using coffee purchases as a practical comparison.
Mentions the carpentry shop and cutting boards/butcher blocks made and prayed over by residents, and gifting special boards to the pastors as a blessing over their home.
Pastor affirms the service as a powerful display of life change rather than a typical sermon and briefly states the core of Christmas: Jesus came to save sinners and destroy the works of the devil, citing 1 Timothy 1:15 and 1 John 3:8.
Invitation for people with addicted family members, broken relationships, or needs for healing to come forward; corporate prayer and worship close the service, stressing that God still does miracles and that Christmas is about Christ’s saving and delivering work.
By Victory Church Providence, RI4.7
1212 ratings
Opening welcome and worship songs (Victory Church podcast intro, congregational worship lyrics about salvation, freedom, and baptism imagery like “I left it in the river” and “death was arrested.”)
Testimonies from Teen Challenge residents describing addiction, loss, encounters with God, and transformation through Christ and the Teen Challenge program.
Teaching moments woven into testimonies, including Scripture quotations (for example 2 Timothy 1:7–9, Isaiah 42:16, John 1:5) and brief reflections on fear, calling, darkness, and light.
Tommy (age 29 from Beverly, MA): shares about a good upbringing, losing both parents, a long struggle with alcoholism, a serious car crash, hospitalization, and being led to Adult & Teen Challenge; emphasizes submitting to Jesus as Lord and cites 2 Timothy 1:7–9 as a life verse.
Second speaker (young man tied to Connecticut and Pawtucket): raised in church with pastor parents, runs from God, experiences deep drug addiction and trauma (including an abortion story), hears God calling his name, and comes to repentance through family prayer; uses this to introduce and emphasize the power of prayer cards.
Third major testimony (Philip): raised in church and missions, drifts into heavy drinking, crime, and selling drugs and guns; ends up incarcerated with serious firearm charges; repeatedly hears about Teen Challenge, finally surrenders to God in jail, enters the program, and sees multiple charges dropped while experiencing deep brotherhood, conviction, and restored purpose.
Explanation of prayer cards placed on chairs and an invitation for the congregation to fill them out with prayer requests, including examples of answered prayers linked to these cards (like a cousin in jail receiving confirmation not to leave the program.)
Emphasis that “much prayer, much power” and that the cards help new residents learn to pray for others as well as themselves.
A Teen Challenge leader explains his own long-term addiction, multiple rehabs, and eventual surrender to Christ and Teen Challenge, contrasting high state-funded treatment costs with Teen Challenge receiving no state addiction funding.paste.txt
Presents “resident sponsorship” as a way to help: one dollar a day ($30/month) to offset the cost for men in the program, using coffee purchases as a practical comparison.
Mentions the carpentry shop and cutting boards/butcher blocks made and prayed over by residents, and gifting special boards to the pastors as a blessing over their home.
Pastor affirms the service as a powerful display of life change rather than a typical sermon and briefly states the core of Christmas: Jesus came to save sinners and destroy the works of the devil, citing 1 Timothy 1:15 and 1 John 3:8.
Invitation for people with addicted family members, broken relationships, or needs for healing to come forward; corporate prayer and worship close the service, stressing that God still does miracles and that Christmas is about Christ’s saving and delivering work.