Live Stream
Featured Sermons
Our Sunday morning worship hour is the highlight of our week. It’s when we come together to praise God for all He has done for us.
Click here to view the sermons presented on Sunday mornings.
It will give you a great taste of what to experience when you visit us at Hoover!
Podcast
We’ve made it easy to listen to our lessons on the go. You can follow our podcast on Apple iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, or search for Hoover Church of Christ in your favorite podcast app!
Follow on iTunes: https://apple.co/2SLP89v
Follow on Google Play: https://bit.ly/2JH5BaW
Follow on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2JHXRWn
Complete Sermon Archive
At Mary and Martha’s House
Meals play a central role in Scripture. The crucial holiday in Israel’s calendar was a meal that commemorated their deliverance from captivity, and the central commemoration of Christians is a weekly meal that reflects on God’s ultimate deliverance from bondage. Our presence in the new heavens and earth is sometimes described as a huge feast where we take our places at a banquet table with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and the central part of our favorite Psalm is about God’s…
By This All People Will Know
Have you noticed rising levels of fear and anxiety in recent times? The stock market is way down (a bear market?), inflation is way up (an impending recession?), and the price of gas is ridiculous. Political polarization feels worse than in the past, so many people–especially teens and young adults–are struggling with mental and emotional health, the war in Ukraine shows no signs of abating, and our culture seems to have lost its mind (one of many examples: gender and…
The Cities We Build
In our text the people decided to build a city and a tower, but that wasn’t the problem. There’s nothing wrong with building, per se . . . the problems come from the reasons we build. The end of chapter 10 tells us that the “nations spread abroad on the earth after the flood,” but then immediately we’re told that the people decided to settle down in one place. It seems they wanted to maintain linguistic, cultural, and ethnic homogeneity…
You must be logged in to post a comment.