

Trinity Church of Portland - Sermons
Trinity Church of Portland
Trinity Church Exists To Faithfully Exalt The Triune God, Transform All Of Life, And Reach Our City And World With The Goodness, Truth, And Beauty Of The Gospel.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 8, 2026 • 43min
Jesus Prays For You
In this sermon from John 17:20-26, Pastor Andrey brings us into the final movement of Jesus' High Priestly Prayer, where Christ intercedes not just for His immediate disciples, but for believers across the centuries—including us.Drawing on the profound reality that Jesus was praying for future believers before they ever existed, Andrey reveals the staggering truth of our inclusion in Christ's eternal love. As Jesus prepares for the cross, He looks across time itself and prays for those who would believe through the disciples' witness, demonstrating that our salvation was secured not just in the cross, but in the prayer that preceded it.This passage unveils Christ's deepest desires for His people: supernatural unity that serves as compelling witness to a fractured world, and eternal glory that awaits those who are loved with the very love the Father has for the Son. Andrey shows how Christian unity is not optional preference but evangelistic necessity, rooted not in our similarities but in our shared identity in Christ.Ultimately, this message stirs fresh longing for the day when faith gives way to sight and we behold Him face to face, while calling believers to live out the unity that makes the gospel credible to a watching world. In a time when division seems easier than love, this sermon reminds us that we are prayed for, chosen, and destined for glory.

Feb 1, 2026 • 47min
Out of the World, Into the World
In this sermon from John 17:6-19, Pastor Sean takes us into the heart of Jesus' high priestly prayer, where Christ intercedes for his disciples on the eve of his crucifixion.Sean reveals the stark contrast of a Savior who never abandons those he calls his own. As Jesus prepares to return to the Father, he prays not for their removal from a hostile world, but for their protection within it.This passage challenges our fundamental understanding of what it means to belong to Christ. Sean unpacks the profound shift from being "of the world" to being "in the world but not of it", a reality marked by four simple prepositions that define our entire existence: out of, not of, in, and into.Sean warns against the danger of becoming so comfortable in this world that we lose sight of why we're here. The Father has set us apart through his truth—not to escape the world, but to be sent back into it as representatives of his kingdom.Ultimately, this sermon calls us to live as sojourners who know their true citizenship, ambassadors who remember their mission, and children who trust that the unchanging God will keep what he has claimed as his own. In a world where everything seems uncertain, we find our security not in our circumstances, but in our belonging to the One who never changes.

Jan 25, 2026 • 46min
Eucatastrophe
In this sermon from John 17:1–5, Paul Hoffman invites us into the climactic moment of Jesus’ farewell discourse—the prayer that stands on the edge of the cross.Drawing on J.R.R. Tolkien’s idea of eucatastrophe—the sudden, joyful turn in a story—Paul shows how what appears to be tragedy in the eyes of the disciples is, in fact, the triumph of God’s redemptive plan. As Jesus lifts His eyes to heaven and prays for glory, we see that the cross is not a defeat but a victory, not chaos but sovereign purpose.This passage points us backward to the incarnation and forward to the resurrection, revealing the shared glory of the Father and the Son, the supreme authority of Christ over all flesh, and the gift of eternal life found in knowing the one true God through Jesus Christ. Paul unpacks how the work Jesus accomplished becomes the foundation for the church’s mission today—carried forward not in our own strength, but through the power Christ shares with His people by the Spirit.Ultimately, this sermon calls us to see Jesus as the true King, the perfect revelation of God, and the model for what it means to be fully human. In a world longing for transcendence, meaning, and hope, the gospel stands as the true story—one that begins and ends in joy.

Jan 18, 2026 • 53min
When Things Fall Apart
What do you stand on when clarity doesn’t calm your fear, and life begins to unravel?In this message from John 16:25–33, Jesus speaks to His disciples on the eve of the cross—not with sentimental comfort or vague optimism, but with unshakable certainty. As He prepares them for betrayal, suffering, and scattering, Jesus anchors their hearts in three enduring realities: they are loved by the Father, held by the Son, and safe in the end.This sermon explores how Jesus moves His disciples from confusion to confidence, not by minimizing the hardship ahead, but by revealing the finished work, sovereign authority, and eternal security found in Him. We consider what it means to “take heart” in a world marked by tribulation, and why Christian peace is not rooted in circumstances, strength, or clarity—but in the victorious Christ who has overcome the world.Whether you’re walking through fear, loss, uncertainty, or simply wondering where real peace can be found, this message calls us to rest not in ourselves, but in the One who came from the Father, entered our broken world, went to the cross on purpose, and now reigns in power.When things fall apart, the gospel reminds us: you are not.

Jan 11, 2026 • 44min
The Promise of Joy
Dear Church Family,Your generosity this past year has not only been remarkable, but a clear marker of genuine faith. It has been steady, joyful, generous, and deeply faithful. More than numbers on a page, your giving reflects something far more important. It reflects a heart that understands money as a gift from God, entrusted to us for the sake of His gospel.When Scripture says, “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also,” it is clear where your treasure lies. Again and again, you have shown that the treasure of your heart is Christ and His kingdom. To give freely and sacrificially is no small thing. It speaks to a people who are being set free from the enslavement of money and who trust the Lord with one of the most vulnerable areas of our lives, our provision.Through your radical generosity, you have demonstrated that Jesus is kind and that He is sufficient. Not merely in words, but in action. Not reluctantly, but gladly. What a testimony this is, both to one another and to the watching world.I am deeply grateful to serve a church that values the people of God and the coming kingdom more than comfort or possessions. That kind of faith is rare, and it is a gift of God’s grace.May the Spirit of God continue to shape us into a people who are sacrificially generous, for the good of His Church and for the glory of His great name.With deepest humility and gratitude,Thomas, on behalf of the Pastors of Trinity Church

Jan 4, 2026 • 40min
The Helper
In this message from John 16:5–15, Jesus speaks tenderly to sorrow-filled disciples on the eve of His departure—and offers them an unexpected gift. Though His going feels like loss, Jesus insists it is to their advantage, because the Helper is coming. In this sermon, we explore why the coming of the Holy Spirit is not a downgrade from Jesus’ physical presence, but the gracious completion of God’s redemptive plan.Together, we consider the Spirit’s work in convicting the world, comforting the repentant, revealing the truth, and glorifying Christ. Set within Jesus’ final hours before the cross, this message invites us to marvel at the Triune God—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—and to rejoice in the miracle of God dwelling with, and within, His people.

Dec 28, 2025 • 53min
The True Vine
What does real spiritual fruit actually come from?In John 15:1–17, Jesus reminds weary disciples, and weary believers, that lasting fruit, deep joy, and genuine love do not come from striving harder, but from remaining connected to Him, the true Vine. In this sermon, we explore how life flows from union with Christ, how obedience is meant to protect joy rather than diminish it, and how love for one another becomes the visible fruit of a life rooted in grace.This message is an invitation to stop performing, stop hustling for spiritual results, and return to the only place where life and fruit truly grow—abiding in Christ.

Dec 14, 2025 • 28min
The Humble King Has Come
In this Advent message, Pastor Andrey Gorban invites us to look again at the arrival of our King and to see not just thatHe came, but how He came.Drawing from Zechariah 9:9, this sermon contrasts the kings the world expects with the King God promised. While earthly rulers arrive with power, spectacle, and conquest, God’s King comes righteous and bringing salvation—humble, gentle, and riding on a donkey. This is a King who does not intimidate or dominate, but who gives Himself for His people.From the quiet fulfillment of God’s long-standing promises to Jesus’ triumphal entry and march toward the cross, this message calls us to behold the beauty of God’s plan done God’s way. If your faith feels stale, your joy muted, or the Christmas season has become routine, this sermon invites you to fix your eyes once more on Jesus—the humble and lowly King, our Savior, and our Emmanuel, God with us.

Dec 7, 2025 • 48min
No Kings
In this Advent message, Pastor Thomas opens the season by taking us back to God’s covenant with David—one of the most significant promises in the entire storyline of Scripture. In a world exhausted by failed leaders, political polarization, and deep cultural cynicism, this passage meets us with a different kind of hope: the promise of a perfect, eternal King.Tracing the biblical story from Genesis to Revelation, Thomas shows how every earthly king—from Saul to Solomon to David himself—proves unable to carry the weight of our longing. But in 2 Samuel 7, God announces a King who will—a Son He will raise up, a house He will build, and a throne He will establish forever. That promise echoes through the prophets, breaks into history at Bethlehem, and rises in full splendor in the book of Revelation, where the Son of David is revealed as the Lion, the Lamb, and the King of kings.This sermon explores four scenes in the Davidic Covenant:The King God establishes, the House God builds, the Son God gives, and the Kingdom God secures forever. And it brings this ancient promise down into the realities of everyday life—our fear, our longing for stability, our loss of control, and our need for hope that won’t collapse under pressure.Advent reminds us that the King we need is the King God gives. He comes in humility, reigns in righteousness, and returns in glory. His throne isn’t up for grabs. His reign can’t be overturned. And His kingdom—begun in Bethlehem and consummated in Revelation—is the unshakeable hope believers stand on today.If you’re longing for stability in an unstable world, this message will lift your eyes to the only King who cannot fail—and who invites you into His kingdom by grace.

Nov 23, 2025 • 58min
Love Fueled Obedience
This exploration of John 14:15-31 confronts us with a challenging truth: love isn't proven by our words or feelings, but by our actions. When Jesus says 'If you love me, you will keep my commandments,' He's not placing an impossible burden on our shoulders—He's defining love the way God defines it. The beauty of this passage is that Jesus never commands without providing what He commands. We can't obey alone, and we were never meant to. The Helper, the Holy Spirit, comes alongside us as the Spirit of Truth, dwelling within us forever, empowering the very obedience Jesus calls us to. This isn't about white-knuckling our way through the Christian life or collapsing under guilt. It's about understanding that obedience flows from union with Christ. We're not orphans left to figure things out on our own. Christ lives in us, the Father makes His home with us, and the Spirit illuminates Scripture and brings Jesus' words to remembrance exactly when we need them most. The peace Jesus offers isn't the world's temporary distraction from fear—it's His own peace, the peace that carried Him to the cross. When we face anxiety, guilt, or overwhelming circumstances, the Spirit whispers back the very promises we thought we'd forgotten. This is why we saturate ourselves in Scripture: so the Spirit has material to work with when storms come. We obey because He obeyed. We love because He loved. And we stand because He stood in our place.


