God at Work
We live in a world marked by instability—personal loss, political conflict, social injustice, and spiritual disillusionment. In these conditions, it’s easy to feel like God is absent or indifferent. But Scripture offers a different picture: a God who is present in suffering, working quietly and powerfully through ordinary people who embody faith, hope, mercy, and compassion. This series invites us to see how God is still at work in an unstable world—and how we are called to join Him.
When Faith Confronts a Broken System
July 13, 2025
Speaker: Rev. Donnell Wyche
Description
In this powerful sermon, Pastor Donnell Wyche reflects on Jesus’ critique of the religious system in Mark 12 and the widow who gives all she has. Pastor Donnell challenges the common interpretation of this passage as merely a lesson in sacrificial giving and instead invites listeners to see the widow as a signpost of deep, radical trust in God. While Jesus condemns the corruption of the temple system, he lifts up the widow’s faith—not as a command to imitate her giving, but as an invitation to trust God with the same abandon and freedom. Her generosity is both a spiritual act and a quiet rebuke of the transactional, empty religion surrounding her. Throughout the sermon, Pastor Donnell weaves together biblical critique and personal reflection, reminding the congregation that God is not an idol to be bargained with but a living presence who desires relationship. He emphasizes that true faith is not rooted in performance but in love—a love that responds to need not because of expected return, but because of alignment with God’s heart. The widow’s act of giving everything she has is only possible because she believes someone (God) will care for her—and that kind of trust is freeing. Finally, Pastor Donnell calls the church to embody this faith through presence, generosity, and justice. Whether speaking up against broken systems or quietly buying groceries for a stranger, he urges each person to align their heart with God’s—ready to respond when the Spirit prompts. The sermon ends with a pastoral reminder: people don’t always need our solutions—they need our presence. And in a world marked by isolation and scarcity, faith like the widow’s shows us how to live with open hands and a heart shaped by God’s justice and love.
Scripture References
Sermon Notes
In this powerful sermon, Pastor Donnell Wyche reflects on Jesus’ critique of the religious system in Mark 12 and the widow who gives all she has. Pastor Donnell challenges the common interpretation of this passage as merely a lesson in sacrificial giving and instead invites listeners to see the widow as a signpost of deep, radical trust in God. While Jesus condemns the corruption of the temple system, he lifts up the widow’s faith—not as a command to imitate her giving, but as an invitation to trust God with the same abandon and freedom. Her generosity is both a spiritual act and a quiet rebuke of the transactional, empty religion surrounding her.
Throughout the sermon, Pastor Donnell weaves together biblical critique and personal reflection, reminding the congregation that God is not an idol to be bargained with but a living presence who desires relationship. He emphasizes that true faith is not rooted in performance but in love—a love that responds to need not because of expected return, but because of alignment with God’s heart. The widow’s act of giving everything she has is only possible because she believes someone (God) will care for her—and that kind of trust is freeing.
Finally, Pastor Donnell calls the church to embody this faith through presence, generosity, and justice. Whether speaking up against broken systems or quietly buying groceries for a stranger, he urges each person to align their heart with God’s—ready to respond when the Spirit prompts. The sermon ends with a pastoral reminder: people don’t always need our solutions—they need our presence. And in a world marked by isolation and scarcity, faith like the widow’s shows us how to live with open hands and a heart shaped by God’s justice and love.
The Practice of Compassion in an Unstable World
July 6, 2025
Speaker: Rev. Donnell Wyche
Description
In this fourth sermon in the God at Work series, Pastor Donnell Wyche explores Jesus’ parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25–37) as a call to radical compassion in an unstable world. The message begins with a question posed to Jesus by an expert in the law: “What must I do to inherit eternal life?” Rather than answering directly, Jesus draws the man into a deeper conversation about love, mercy, and what it truly means to live. Pastor Donnell explains how Jesus resists the logic of empire—where worth is earned and compassion is conditional—and instead presents a vision of God as a generous, sufficient, and loving Father who desires mercy, not sacrifice. Pastor Donnell highlights that Jesus shifts the conversation away from legalism and boundary-setting by telling a better story—a story that bypasses arguments and invites transformation. The Samaritan’s compassion, not his credentials, is the turning point in Jesus’ parable. The priest and the Levite preserve religious appearance, but the Samaritan, moved by compassion, takes costly action. Pastor Donnell emphasizes that the original question “Who is my neighbor?” is left unanswered by Jesus because it’s the wrong question. The better question is, “Will I allow myself to be moved by compassion?”—a question that requires not theological certainty but a heart formed by God’s love. Bringing the message into the present, Pastor Donnell connects the call to compassion to real-life challenges facing communities today, including Ann Arbor’s land use debates. He reflects on how compassion invites us to see others not as threats or obstacles, but as neighbors who belong. Pastor Donnell encourages listeners to resist the impulse to restrict mercy and instead practice a compassionate presence rooted in God’s grace. In a world that asks us to draw boundaries, Jesus asks us to open our hearts and join our spirits with God’s—to love boldly, generously, and without condition.
Scripture References
The Practice of Mercy in an Unstable World
June 29, 2025
Speaker: Rev. Donnell Wyche
Description
In this third installment of the God at Work series, Pastor Donnell Wyche explores what God desires from us amid the uncertainty and instability of the world. Drawing from Hosea 6:6—“For I desire mercy, not sacrifice”—Pastor Donnell reframes our assumptions about pleasing God. Rather than asking for performance, ritual, or religious effort, God calls us to embody mercy. This mercy is not just a feeling, but a relational, transformative force that reorients us toward God and each other, even in the face of evil and injustice. Pastor Donnell emphasizes that, in Scripture, God doesn’t provide neat answers to the problem of evil, but instead offers witness and invitation—inviting us to respond mercifully in a broken world. Pastor Donnell illustrates that mercy isn’t abstract or reserved for grand gestures—it starts in everyday relationships and small, personal decisions. Whether it’s in how we speak to our family members, interact with neighbors, or respond to strangers, mercy is a discipline of love. He offers compelling personal examples, including his role in organizing a local “Warrant Resolution Day” to help people clear court debts and restore freedom. Through this story, he shows how mercy can take tangible form in systems and communities, not just individual interactions. In contrast to transactional religion, Pastor Donnell invites the congregation to participate in a faith rooted in God’s character—one that prioritizes compassion over control. Closing the sermon, Pastor Donnell brings it home with a challenge: where are you being invited to practice mercy? Whether in a crowded Costco checkout line or a tense neighborhood meeting, each situation is a chance to choose relationship over reaction. Echoing the prophets and Jesus himself, Pastor Donnell reminds us that faithful worship without mercy is hollow. The way forward is not through louder prayers or deeper sacrifices, but through the often quiet, often inconvenient practice of loving mercy—especially when it’s hardest to do.
Scripture References
The Practice of Peace in an Unstable World
June 22, 2025
Speaker: Rev. Donnell Wyche
Description
In this powerful sermon, Pastor Donnell Wyche invites the community to consider what it means to be a peacemaker in a world marked by instability, injustice, and unpredictability. Rooted in Romans 12:18—“If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone”—the message challenges simplistic or false notions of peace. Pastor Donnell reminds us that real peace is not about avoidance, politeness, or keeping quiet; it is an active, justice-rooted, and costly way of living that reflects God’s heart for wholeness and dignity. Drawing on both scripture and lived experience, Pastor Donnell explores how peace requires posture, participation, and power-awareness. He names the pain of being misunderstood, dismissed, or gaslit, and affirms that some people or systems may not want peace at all. Even so, Christians are called to be people of peace, not doormats. Peace, he emphasizes, should never come at the expense of truth or dignity, and peacemaking may require letting go, speaking up, or even walking away from harmful situations. The sermon closes with practical wisdom for living peaceably: stay grounded in God’s story, find beauty and stillness, engage scripture deeply, and lean into community. Even when efforts at peace seem to fail, God is present in the trying, the awkwardness, and the tears. God is at work in us and through us—right in the messy, faithful practice of peacemaking.
Scripture References
When the World Feels Like It’s Falling Apart
June 15, 2025
Speaker: Rev. Donnell Wyche
Description
In this first message of a new sermon series, Pastor Donnell Wyche invites us to wrestle with one of the most urgent questions of our time: Where is God in a world that feels like it’s falling apart? In light of recent violence and tragedies, Pastor Donnell names what many of us feel—fear, anger, helplessness, and confusion—and draws us into the biblical tradition of asking hard questions. The people of God have long cried out, “How long, O Lord?” and “Where are you?” Pastor Donnell reminds us that these questions aren’t signs of weak faith; rather, they are faithful expressions of grief, longing, and hope. Drawing on scripture—from Genesis to Psalms to the prophets—Pastor Donnell highlights a consistent truth: God hears the cries of the oppressed. God is not distant or indifferent. In fact, the biblical witness reveals a God who is deeply invested in humanity, who suffers alongside us, and who calls us to act with justice, mercy, and humility. While we may not always understand God’s timing or ways, scripture and the lived experience of the faithful tell a story of a God who cares and who invites us to co-labor in the work of healing and justice. As the sermon closes, Pastor Donnell offers four practical invitations: to act courageously in small, just ways; to create contemplative space to be with God; to learn by immersing ourselves in scripture that shapes our moral imagination; and to commit to community, walking with others in faith. When the world is unstable, these practices anchor us in God’s presence and call. Even in the darkness, we are not alone. God is near, and God is at work.