New City Church is a small, non-denominational church in Nashville, TN, practicing the way of Jesus together for the flourishing of our city. Here you can find our latest messages. For more info on who we are, what we do, and how to support what God is doing here, check out newcitynash.com

New City Church - Nashville
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Podcast Overview
New City Church is a small, non-denominational church in Nashville, TN, practicing the way of Jesus together for the flourishing of our city. Here you can find our latest messages. For more info on who we are, what we do, and how to support what God is doing here, check out newcitynash.com
Language
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Publishing Since
2/22/2022
1 verified contact email on file for New City Church - Nashville
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Recent Episodes

July 8, 2026
When God tells you to say no | Learning to Hear God Week 2 | Luke 14
<p>Every yes is also a no. Whenever we say yes to one thing, we're saying no to other things — and a lot of us forget that reality, feeling pressure to be all things to all people.</p><p>In this message on learning to hear the voice of God, we sit with two things Jesus said in Luke 14: a direct invitation to a banquet, and a statement about what it costs to respond. We look at why we settle for something that isn't God's best, why we struggle to believe his ways are actually better, and how a commitment to follow Jesus is also a commitment not to follow or worship other gods.</p><p>We don't say no because God wants to ruin our lives. We say no because we want a better yes. You don't have to settle for less. Come — the banquet is ready, and it's a wedding feast. And whose wedding? Ours.</p>

June 30, 2026
What Does God's Voice Sound Like? (Learning to Hear God, Part 1)
<p>This week we transition into a new series on learning to hear God's voice and what God's voice sounds like. As Trey shares, when he was in college, he came to believe that God didn't only speak through the Bible, but through the Holy Spirit — not against Scripture, but in accordance with it. But that left a problem: what does it feel like to hear God's voice? How do you know for sure if it's God's voice and not your own? Anybody ever wondered that?</p><p>We start in Mark 1 and 2, in the calling of Simon, Andrew, James, John, and Levi the tax collector — four ordinary people working ordinary jobs, and another guy working a job people really didn't like. Jesus comes to them while they're working and says, "Follow me," and immediately they leave everything. We so often miss this in the discipleship stories. We get caught up on "would I follow like that?" But it wasn't anything in particular about the people or what they offered. It was about the one who called them.</p><p>When it comes to hearing God's voice, so often we fixate on what he's calling us to do. But it's about who is calling you and who he is calling you. Following him here was relational: follow me, walk with me, talk with me, be with me. That's what discipleship starts with. God wants to spend time with you, and he wants to speak with you. The qualifier is just admitting you need it.</p><p>God wants you to hear his voice more than you want to hear his voice. And we believe he already is and already has.</p>

June 23, 2026
The Last Words in the Bible // Revelation 22:7-21
<p>Look, I am coming soon. These are nearly the last words of the Bible — and the question for us today is this: would you notice Jesus if he came to meet you today? Here and now?</p><p>Throughout our series, we've talked about what Revelation is and what it isn't. For many, it's been a book about deciphering the signs of the end of the world. But the word apocalypse doesn't mean "end of the world" — it means unveiling. It's pulling back the curtain to see beyond what you can see. Revelation, as Eugene Peterson said, is not about prediction. It's about perception.</p><p>So more than a code book for the future, this book pulls back the curtain on the present — on the dragon and his beasts, on power and propaganda that claim Jesus's name but look nothing like him. And it pulls back the curtain on where Jesus actually is: standing among the lampstands, among his church, wiping every tear from our eyes.</p><p>The one we worship isn't far off. He's close. He isn't playing hard to get. The prayer "Come, Lord Jesus" may be one of the most dangerous prayers you can pray — if you mean it. And frankly, even if you don't.</p><p>As we close our journey through Revelation, four questions to pray:</p><ul><li>Jesus, where am I wrong about you?</li><li>Where do I not trust you?</li><li>Where am I worshiping created things instead of you?</li><li>Where am I missing you in my life — will you pull back the curtain and show me?</li></ul><p>He is the bright morning star. The morning star appears when the night is at its darkest — still dark out, but it signals the night is over. Light is coming.</p><p>Come, Lord Jesus.</p><p>—</p><p>If you're in the Nashville area, we'd love for you to join us. If you're not, we'd love to help you get connected with a local church. New City Church | newcitynash.com</p>
211 total episodes available
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