“Your Past Has Expired”
“Your Past Has Expired!” isn’t just a message—it’s a mandate. It challenges the listener to confront the tension between memory and momentum. It interrogates the soul with the question: How long will you serve a sentence for a crime that the Cross already paid for?
This word unpacks the divine paradox that God is progressive, but we are nostalgic. We romanticize what God has released, idolize what He’s already moved on from, and cling to familiar pain as if it’s our only form of proof that we once lived. Yet in this sermon, God serves an eviction notice to expired grace, stale strategies, and recycled regrets—announcing that something fresh, wild, and unprecedented is springing up right now.
It is the intersection of theology and therapy, purpose and pain, revelation and release. The Cross becomes the canvas where our past is canceled, and our potential is repainted in the blood of the Lamb.
This is not just a new chapter.
It’s a new book.
