10 More Minutes
Welcome to Ten More Minutes, a podcast original from CrossPointe Church where we take a little extra time each week to sit with Sunday’s message. Hosted by Ryan Ritchie and Pastor David Rogers. Hardly a week goes by where we don’t wish we had more time. The dreaded clock moves fast! So, if something from this past Sunday stayed with you — stirred you, challenged you, or left you wanting a little more — this is that space.
Episodes
13 episodes
Ten More Minutes on Elijah & Faith
He poured water on the altar on purpose. Not a little. Enough to make success impossible unless God showed up. That one choice turns Elijah’s Mount Carmel showdown (1 Kings 18) into a piercing question for our lives: do we actually trust the on...
Ten More Minutes on Solomon & Wisdom
God asks Solomon a dangerous question: “What do you want me to give you?” Most of us can name a dozen “practical” answers in a heartbeat. Solomon doesn’t reach for power, success, long life, or wealth. He asks for an understanding heart, and th...
Ten More Minutes on Ruth & Devotion
Devotion isn’t proved by one big moment, it’s revealed by the steady choices you make when nobody’s watching. We sit down with Pastor Ross Strickland after his message on the book of Ruth and talk about the kind of faithfulness that holds when ...
Ten More Minutes on Joshua & Courage
“Be strong and courageous” can sound like a motivational poster until you realize God ties courage to something specific: his presence and his Word. Ryan and Marty McGinn look back at Joshua 1 and the moment Joshua steps into leadership after M...
Ten More Minutes on Moses & Confidence
We reflect on Moses in Exodus and trace how real confidence grows when we stop fixating on ourselves and start trusting God’s presence. We challenge the way insecurity masquerades as humility and land on a simple practice: remember what God has...
Ten More Minutes on Joseph & Integrity
Most of us don’t plan to blow up our integrity. We just get comfortable living near a boundary and calling it “fine.” Ryan Ritchie and Pastor David Rogers slow down Cross Point Church’s Sunday message to look closely at Joseph in Genesis 39, wh...
Ten More Minutes on Abram & Obedience
God tells Abram to leave everything familiar and walk into an unknown future and Abram goes. That one sentence in Genesis 12 confronts the way we treat obedience as either a personality trait or a religious checklist, because real obedience usu...
Ten More Minutes on The Empty Tomb
Easter Sunday moves fast, but the empty tomb deserves more than a quick drive-by. We sit down for a longer, calmer conversation about the resurrection of Jesus and why it still lands with force, even when you have heard the story for years. We ...
Ten More Minutes on Holy Week
Palm branches and cheering crowds are only the beginning. The middle of Holy Week holds some of the clearest, most challenging snapshots of Jesus’s heart and mission, and we slow down to walk through Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday wit...
Ten More Minutes on Children and the Kingdom of God
A kid walks up after church and says, “Pastor, I want to be baptized.” That kind of moment stops you in your tracks because it’s simple, bold, and honest, which is exactly the posture Jesus points to in Luke 18 when He tells His disciples not t...
Ten More Minutes on The Narrow Door
The question behind Luke 13 is uncomfortably personal: when Jesus talks about the narrow door, am I actually walking through it or am I just near the crowd? We take Ten More Minutes to slow down after Sunday’s message and get specific about ass...
Ten More Minutes on the Lord's Prayer
What if the most familiar prayer still has fresh work to do in your heart today? We sit with Luke 11 and the Lord’s Prayer and discover how simple words—Father, bread, forgive—reorder our lives from self-reliance to steady dependence. Rather th...
Ten More Minutes On A Plentiful Harvest
The clock on Sunday moves fast, but the questions and convictions linger. We open the door for ten more minutes that become a deeper journey into Luke 10, where Jesus says the harvest is plentiful and the laborers are few. That single line refr...