Rev. W. Michael Bradley has served as a pastor in Northern Virginia and the surrounding area for 40 years. He is currently serving as the Associate Executive Director of NorthStar Church Network which serves over 170 churches by equipping, resourcing and encouraging churches to faithfully carry out the commission of Jesus to make disciples of all nations. He is passionate about expanding the Kingdom and making an eternal impact in Northern Virginia. Together, he and his wife Lois have raised 4 children and been married 41 years.
Galatians Week 17
We are in the final week of our series on Galatians, and Paul is giving his farewell address. Paul points us toward the essence of what he has been trying to say all along: we are meant for “new creation.” Transformation has been the goal all along, and this can only happen if we die to an old way of being and are raised to newness of life in Christ. Let’s dive into Galatians one last time!
Galatians Week 16
Paul returns to a spirit/flesh dichotomy and to an agricultural metaphor in Galatians chapter 6. “For the one who sows to his own flesh will from the flesh reap corruption, but the one who sows to the Spirit will from the Spirit reap eternal life.” Simply put, our actions, routines and habits form our character and our destiny. So what about you? What destiny is being formed right here and now through the choices of your life?
Galatians Week 15
In Galatians 6:1-5, Paul gives two commands. The first is to “bear one another’s burdens.” The second command is the near opposite: everyone must “bear one’s own load”. So which is it? Do we share our burdens or do we go it alone? Paul is getting at a deeper wisdom that recognizes the solution is both/and not either/or. Today our goal is to locate and begin to live out that which we are intended to carry alone and that which we are to bear with one another.
Galatians Week 14: The Fruit of the Spirit
Galatians Week 13
As we continue our reading through Galatians, we are well into chapter 5, and Paul is now contrasting walking by the “flesh” and being led by the “Spirit.” It can rightly be understood as a battle between two forces, and today we focus on the first of the two forces: what Paul means when he talks about the flesh. If we can understand this enemy combatant, then we can understand how it has already been defeated and therefore how to live in the freedom that Paul talks about throughout Galatians. Let’s dive in!
The Weightiness of Words
Bryan currently serves as the Executive Director of NorthStar Church Network. Prior to joining NorthStar, Bryan served for over 20 years in both senior pastor and associate pastor roles at several churches in the Northern Virginia area, including First Baptist Church of Alexandria. Bryan holds A.S. and B.S. degrees in Business, two masters degrees, and a Doctorate of Education in Leadership from Southern Seminary. Most importantly, Bryan greatly enjoys time with his wife Toni, and their three children, Brent, Austin, and Brianna. He and his family are members of FBC Alexandria.
Galatians Week 12
As Galatians continues, Paul remains concerned for the people of Galatia, that they keep Jesus and only Jesus at the center of their faith. It is not the keeping of the law that leads to union with God, it is Jesus’ righteousness. At this point, he then begins to build out an ethic based on Jesus’ example and the power of the Holy Spirit. Not surprisingly, it is an ethic that sounds exactly like what Jesus preached. The law is summed up in one word: love.
Galatians Week 11
We’ve taken a few months off from our deep-dive into the book of Galatians, but we’re back! Our summer series is going to resume (and finish) the book of Galatians, beginning in chapter 5. Here Paul is reminding us of much of what he has been saying from the beginning. Simply put: Jesus is enough. As the old hymn goes: “My hope is built on nothing less than Jesus’ blood and righteousness.” May we find that Jesus is enough in our lives too.
Called
Continuing the Elijah narrative from last week, this week we see him fulfilling one of God’s charges—namely, Elijah finds Elisha and calls him into ministry with him. In the New Testament passage for this week, we see Jesus doing this exact thing with his own disciples. Jesus even alludes to the calling of Elisha in his response to a would-be disciple. “Calling” is a word that we use often in the church, but there is also a lot of misunderstanding around the topic. Today we will look at what Scripture says about what it means to be called.
Two Truths and a Lie
If we simply turn the page from last week’s passage where Elijah was calling down fire from heaven, we arrive at today’s passage in which Elijah is on the run. He fears for his life. The once mighty and confident Elijah is suddenly weakened and afraid. It is in this state of mind that he cries out to God because, according to Elijah, he is all alone. But the truth is otherwise. He is not alone, and neither are you. Elijah has people in his life he could lean on. And more than that, God’s presence is there with him. May we find God’s presence and allow that to be enough.
Revival by Fire
In today’s passage we read about Elijah, the prophet of Israel, who stood against the false prophets of Baal and called down fire from heaven to demonstrate the power and presence of God. Like CS Lewis said of Aslan in the Chronicles of Narnia, the presence of God in Elijah's fire is not safe, but we can know that it is good. Fire, in fact, is a symbol used throughout the Bible—from the flaming swords guarding Eden to the lake of fire in Revelation 20 and any number of places in between. The fire represents many things, but today, on this day of Pentecost when the Holy Spirit is poured out on the church, I want to focus on the fire as purification leading to revival. Let’s dive in!
Hope Fulfilled
This is our final week in our Easter series on hope. Scripture, in a few places, gives us a vision of the redeemed world when all things are made new. A word of warning: one should be reminded of Paul’s words in 1 Corinthians 13, "For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known.” What we know from Scripture is still only partial knowledge of what’s to come, but even partial knowledge is enough. In fact, it is more than enough to sustain a lifetime of hope.
The Story of Hope
In our sixth installment of a series on hope we turn our attention to the story of hope as it unfolds in the Old Testament. The hope that is fulfilled in Jesus and will one day be fully realized in the new creation has its roots in the Old Testament. The story of the Old Testament is a story awaiting an ending because it is a story of hope deferred. Next week we plan to talk more about the ending of this story, but this week we talk about the promises of hope that are raised on the pages of the Bible’s first half. Let us turn there together.
People of Hope
An important life lesson is to surround oneself with people you want to be like. If you are going to be a person of hope, you need to surround yourself with people of hope. The church should be such a place, and I desire that our congregation be a community of hope. If we are to fully embrace what it means to be the church on a hill, we must cultivate hope as a collective virtue. We must embody it and shine its light as brightly as we possibly can.
Hope and Suffering
As we continue to think about the hope that we find in Christ’s death and resurrection, we turn today to an important topic for many of us, the topic of suffering. It is in our hardship that our hope is most challenged. We begin to ask why God would allow such difficulty. We sometimes begin to allow doubt to creep in. We might even lose hope and begin to despair that life will never be the same. Today we must address this issue head on and ask what we are to do when suffering strikes and how we can allow our hope to guide us through our hardest times. Let’s dig in.
Hope and Desire
For our third lesson on hope, we turn to the topic of desire. Scripture teaches us that one thing is necessary and one thing alone is the fountain out of which all desires must spring. The psalmist says it this way: “One thing have I asked of the Lord, that I will seek after: that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life.” Jesus says it this way, "Seek first the kingdom of God, and everything else will be added.” What do you desire? For what do you seek? And from what does your hope spring?
How to Hope
We are in the second week of an Easter series on hope. The Easter season is a time filled with hope. We can look around and see the promises of springtime and the length of daylight, and we are given a kind of hope. But Easter is far more than nice weather and longer days. We have a resurrection hope that fits us into a larger narrative of the redemption of all things. And so, this week, we continue talking about hope and what we can do to cultivate hope in our lives.
Easter Hope
Christ Is Risen! Christ Is Risen Indeed! Easter is a day filled with hope and promise. It is the day on which the future hopes that we all await, resurrection and (more importantly) union with God, are made possible. It is the day when death is defeated and sin has been dealt with. It is the day on which history turns because we know how the story ends. Our faith in God’s future is a faith in a future that brings goodness and redemption out of that which is evil and fallen. Christ is risen! Let us rejoice!
Palm Sunday
This is a Palm Sunday service in which we sing praises to the king. A king who rides a donkey into battle. Who wields his body and blood as the weapon of choice. Who takes the form of a servant though Lord of all. Who sides with the powerless though all-powerful himself. This is king Jesus. The king no one asked for. The king everyone needed. Let us worship the King of kings and Lord of lords.