• Sunday 21st June 2026 // Evening // 2 Samuel 20 // A Kingdom (Still) Divided
    Jun 22 2026

    Rev. Craig Lynn preaches 2 Samuel 20 at evening worship on Sunday 21st June 2026 in First Ards.

    David is back on the throne, but his kingdom remains deeply fractured. Sheba exploits old resentments, Joab preserves order through ruthless violence and the lingering consequences of David’s sin remain visible. Yet amid political weakness and military force, an unnamed wise woman saves an entire city through courage, truth and peacemaking. The chapter ends with government restored, but not the kingdom healed. David can return to Jerusalem, but he can’t remove rebellion from the human heart or establish lasting peace. This final episode of this series of in the Life of David points us beyond David to Jesus, the true King who bears our wounds, reconciles divided people and will one day make all things new.

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    44 mins
  • Sunday 21st June 2026 // Morning // Luke 11:27-36 // Seeking a Sign
    Jun 22 2026

    Rev. Craig Lynn preaches Luke 11:27-36 at morning worship on Sunday 21st June 2026 in First Ards.

    Jesus challenges us to consider not just whether we’re near him, but how we receive him. Admiration isn’t the same as discipleship and familiarity with Christian truth isn’t the same as faith. True blessing belongs to those who hear God’s Word and obey it. When the crowds demand another sign, Jesus declares that the light has already been given: one greater than Jonah and Solomon is standing among them. The problem isn’t a lack of revelation, but spiritually unhealthy eyes and hearts unwilling to receive it. We can’t cure our own blindness, but the Holy Spirit opens our eyes to Christ, the light of the world who entered our darkness, bore our judgement and rose in victory.

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    37 mins
  • Sunday 14th June 2026 // Evening // 2 Samuel 19:8b-43 // The Return of the King
    Jun 15 2026

    Rev. Craig Lynn preaches 2 Samuel 19:8b-43 at evening worship on Sunday 14th June 2026 in First Ards.

    David begins his return to Jerusalem after Absalom’s rebellion has collapsed. But his homecoming isn’t simple or triumphant. The kingdom is unsettled, former rebels are afraid, loyal servants are wounded and old divisions remain. Through Shimei, Mephibosheth and Barzillai, we see three different responses to the returning king: guilty people seeking mercy; wounded people loving the king more than his gifts; and faithful people serving quietly. But David’s return also exposes the limits of his reign. His mercy is imperfect, his justice incomplete and his kingdom still divided. This passage points us beyond David to Christ, the true returning King, who brings perfect mercy, perfect justice and perfect peace.

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    39 mins
  • Sunday 14th June 2026 // Morning // Luke 11:14-26 // A House Divided
    Jun 15 2026

    Rev. Craig Lynn preaches Luke 11:14-26 at morning worship on Sunday 14th June 2026 in First Ards.

    Jesus reveals that the world isn’t spiritually neutral. When he drives out a demon and restores a man’s speech, some are amazed, while others accuse him of working by Satan’s power. Jesus shows that the kingdom of God has come in him: the stronger man has arrived to overthrow the strong man. This passage warns us not to settle for respectability, religion, or an ordered but empty life. The real question isn’t whether we’re impressed by Jesus, but whether we’re with him. Christ alone conquers evil, forgives sin, fills empty hearts by his Spirit and makes sinners his own.

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    33 mins
  • Sunday 7th June 2026 // Evening // Romans 5:1-8 // We are the Hope on Earth
    Jun 8 2026

    David Logan preaches Romans 5:1-8 at evening worship on Sunday 7th June 2026 in First Ards.

    Christian hope isn’t wishful thinking, it’s a certain hope grounded in what Jesus has already done. Because we’ve been justified by faith, we have peace with God and can rejoice in the hope of His glory. That hope is also a living hope, strengthened even through suffering as God produces perseverance, character and deeper confidence in Him. And it’s an overflowing hope, poured into our hearts by the Holy Spirit so that it spills out in worship, encouragement, service and witness. The church becomes “the hope on earth” as God’s love in Christ becomes visible through His people.

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    18 mins
  • Sunday 31st May 2026 // Evening // 2 Samuel 18:1–19:8a // Absalom’s Death
    Jun 1 2026

    Rev. Craig Lynn preaches 2 Samuel 18:1–19:8a at morning worship on Sunday 31st May 2026 in First Ards.

    Absalom’s rebellion finally comes to an end, but the victory is overshadowed by tragedy. As David’s forces defeat the rebel army, Absalom is killed despite the king’s plea that his son be spared. The chapter highlights the devastating consequences of sin, pride, and rebellion, while also revealing David’s deep grief as both a father and a king. Ultimately, David’s cry, “If only I had died instead of you,” points beyond himself to Jesus Christ, the greater King who did what David couldn’t, giving His life to save rebels and secure an unshakable kingdom for His people.

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    40 mins
  • Sunday 31st May 2026 // Morning // Luke 11:5-13 // Ask, Seek, Knock
    Jun 1 2026

    Rev. Craig Lynn preaches Luke 11:5:13 at morning worship on Sunday 31st May 2026 in First Ards.

    Prayer begins with need. Jesus teaches us to come honestly, not self-sufficiently. The friend-at-midnight story isn’t saying God is reluctant. It’s saying if even a reluctant neighbour helps, how much more will your Father hear you? So Jesus says: ask, seek, knock. Come boldly, not presumptuously, because the Father is good. And the greatest gift the Father gives is not merely changed circumstances, but himself: the Holy Spirit. Come empty-handed through Christ. The Father gives bread, mercy, grace, and above all, his Spirit.

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    32 mins
  • Sunday 24th May 2026 // Evening // 2 Samuel 17 // Absalom Frustrated
    May 25 2026

    Rev. Craig Lynn preaches 2 Samuel 17 at evening worship on Sunday 24th May 2026 in First Ards.

    From ground level, Absalom looks secure and David looks finished. But heaven’s perspective is different. The Lord is quietly overturning the rebellion from within. Ahithophel’s advice is strategically wise, but the Lord frustrates it through Hushai, using Absalom’s pride as the means of his downfall. God’s providence works through ordinary means: messages, servants, hidden wells, timely decisions and daily provision in the wilderness. David is preserved, but the passage points beyond him to Christ, the rejected King whose kingdom cannot fail and whose people are secure forever.

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    37 mins