
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Every Day Wonder: You Know Me
Psalm 139:1–10
Last week in Every Day Wonder, we practiced noticing—discovering that God often works through simple, ordinary moments. But this week we turn the lens inward. If God is that present in the world… what does that mean about how God sees us?
In Psalm 139, we encounter a breathtaking truth: we are fully known and fully loved. Not the curated version. Not the polished Sunday-morning version. The real us. The anxious 2 a.m. thoughts. The doubts. The questions. The grief. The hope.
Through a Wesleyan lens, we name this as prevenient grace—the grace that goes before us. Before we seek God, God is already seeking us. Before we move toward love, love has already found us.
This sermon explores what it means to rest in God’s presence, to trust a God who knows us in mercy rather than shame, and to allow that kind of relationship to shape our identity and transform our lives. Because being known by God isn’t the end of the story—it’s the beginning of becoming.
Come as you are.
Be met by grace that has always been there.
Discover the everyday wonder of a God who knows you completely—and still calls you beloved.
By Zach BechtoldEvery Day Wonder: You Know Me
Psalm 139:1–10
Last week in Every Day Wonder, we practiced noticing—discovering that God often works through simple, ordinary moments. But this week we turn the lens inward. If God is that present in the world… what does that mean about how God sees us?
In Psalm 139, we encounter a breathtaking truth: we are fully known and fully loved. Not the curated version. Not the polished Sunday-morning version. The real us. The anxious 2 a.m. thoughts. The doubts. The questions. The grief. The hope.
Through a Wesleyan lens, we name this as prevenient grace—the grace that goes before us. Before we seek God, God is already seeking us. Before we move toward love, love has already found us.
This sermon explores what it means to rest in God’s presence, to trust a God who knows us in mercy rather than shame, and to allow that kind of relationship to shape our identity and transform our lives. Because being known by God isn’t the end of the story—it’s the beginning of becoming.
Come as you are.
Be met by grace that has always been there.
Discover the everyday wonder of a God who knows you completely—and still calls you beloved.