
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this powerful message from Isaiah 41–46, Pastor Dave invites us into the “Trial of the False Gods,” where God Himself calls the idols of the nations to the stand. Through vivid courtroom imagery, we see the Lord expose the futility of man-made gods—things we create, carry, and ultimately worship—contrasted with the majesty of the one true God who alone carries us.
As the sermon unfolds, we’re confronted with our own modern idols: success, relationships, comfort, or control. Yet Isaiah reminds us that only Yahweh—the Creator who formed the heavens, the Redeemer who knows the future, and the Savior who blots out our sins—can bear the full weight of our hope.
This message calls us to honest reflection: Is Jesus truly our everything, or simply one of many things competing for our devotion? With grace and conviction, Pastor Dave reminds us that every knee will one day bow before Christ—the God who carries His people, redeems them by name, and invites them to find their “everything” in Him alone.
By Millington Baptist Church4.7
1010 ratings
In this powerful message from Isaiah 41–46, Pastor Dave invites us into the “Trial of the False Gods,” where God Himself calls the idols of the nations to the stand. Through vivid courtroom imagery, we see the Lord expose the futility of man-made gods—things we create, carry, and ultimately worship—contrasted with the majesty of the one true God who alone carries us.
As the sermon unfolds, we’re confronted with our own modern idols: success, relationships, comfort, or control. Yet Isaiah reminds us that only Yahweh—the Creator who formed the heavens, the Redeemer who knows the future, and the Savior who blots out our sins—can bear the full weight of our hope.
This message calls us to honest reflection: Is Jesus truly our everything, or simply one of many things competing for our devotion? With grace and conviction, Pastor Dave reminds us that every knee will one day bow before Christ—the God who carries His people, redeems them by name, and invites them to find their “everything” in Him alone.