C4 Church Hawaii
Welcome to the C4 Church Hawaii Podcast.
We are a dream-releasing church with a global impact.
Most of the teaching in our community is done by our Teaching Pastor, Chad Reis, and our Teaching Team.
We have Sunday morning services and meet in Honolulu, HI.
For more information, visit: https://c4.church
C4 Church Hawaii
Living In Christʻs Victory Over Sickness | Already Won | Week 4
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In this sermon, Pastor Chad tackles one of the most honest tensions in the Christian faith: if Jesus really defeated death, why does it still feel like our bodies are losing? Drawing from 2 Corinthians 4, he walks through Paul's raw, unfiltered confession that "outwardly we are wasting away" and shows why that's not a crisis of faith, but actually the very place where resurrection power becomes most visible. Whether you're facing a diagnosis, watching someone you love decline, or just feeling the quiet weight of your own mortality, this message offers a grounded, hope-filled anchor: because Jesus already won, your healing is already secured, even if it hasn't fully arrived yet.
Discussion Questions:
- Pastor Chad mentioned that aging or physical decline has a way of surfacing things we don't want to think about. What's one way your body has reminded you lately that it's "wasting away" — whether through aging, illness, or just the wear of life? How do you typically respond to those reminders?
- Paul describes us as "jars of clay", fragile and ordinary containers holding something precious. Where in your life have you felt pressure (from culture, church, or yourself) to appear stronger or healthier than you actually are? What has that cost you?
- The sermon continued on the "Already / Not Yet" tension; that Jesus has already won, but full healing hasn't fully arrived. Have you ever felt like unanswered prayer for healing meant something was wrong with your faith? How does the idea that healing is "secured but not yet arrived" either help or challenge that feeling?
- Joni Eareckson Tada said, "He has chosen not to hold me, but to hold me. The more intense the pain, the closer His embrace." Is that sentence easy or hard for you to believe right now, and why? What would it take for you to move toward that kind of trust in a season of physical suffering?
- Pastor Chad said "your cracked jar is not your embarrassment, it's your testimony." What is one area of brokenness, illness, or physical limitation in your life that you've been hiding rather than allowing God to use? What would it look like to let that become a place where His light shines through instead?