This powerful New Year's video describes the uncertainty of the future, using fog and haze as a metaphor. It culminates in declaring the truth that through Christ, we have hope for the future and God has a plan for us and will use us to do great things (Jeremiah 29:11).
The new year is a time to look back and a time to look ahead. A time to thank God for His blessings and a time to consider what we need to change. Many resolve to exercise more, eat healthier, or read the Bible more. We just need to try harder, right? But, God says to seek Him first. He teaches us that His grace is sufficient. With upbeat music, and 3D graphics, this New Year's video will encourage your church to do their best, and trust God to do the rest.
The new year is a time of hopeful expectation of the future. But what is our hope in? This mini movie by Remedy Media points congregations to place their hope in the one place in which it will never fail. Ending with Romans 15:13 “May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.” Enjoy!
As we begin a New Year, let us remember that each one of us is called to worship our amazing God. A God whose mercies are new every morning. The old is gone, the new is here…It’s a new year to worship!
Humans love new things, but it seems we come by it honestly: God is all about new things, too. This spunky mini-movie is a great way to start off the new year or to set up a sermon about finances and materialism.
We all have things in our lives we wish we could erase. Thankfully, God redeems our past mistakes, our bad choices, and our failures. He offers us a clean slate.
Welcome your congregation to church with this short introduction made for the
Christmas season to celebrate the true meaning of the holidays, that He came for you.
This is the perfect video for your seasonal worship service.
Immanuel - God with us. That name is not only a name but a reality that lives and
breathes in us today and every day. And it really can change everything in us, through us.
At Christmas, we celebrate the greatest miracle of all. The miracle of God coming to us as a tiny baby, yet a King. Immanuel, God with us, yet an infant. The one who spoke everything into existence laid in a lowly manger. This powerful video uses a stirring rendition of Carol of the Bells and 3d animations to tell the Christmas story. The Good News that is for all people, that the Messiah has come. He is Savior of the world.
Hear the angels declare, hear the Earth proclaim, a savior has come! With beautiful Christmas visuals and inspiring backing music, this mini-movie is a perfect call to worship for any Christmas or Christmas Eve service.
Bells, reindeer, snowflakes, and mistletoe on ugly Christmas sweaters are often “loudly” proclaiming that it’s Christmas time. For some people, however, their ugly Christmas sweaters are matched only by their ugly attitudes. Reclaim this year’s Christmas season by having a little less ugly in your sweater. This Mini-Movie will help your church celebrate the beauty of Christmas.
Despite ‘Silent Night’ being one of the most well-known pieces of musical history, it was created in a moment of desperation. The first performance of this heartwarming hymn took place in a quiet Austrian village on Christmas Eve in 1818. It happened one night in the bitter cold of winter with a priest who was planning a special mass service featuring an organ that had played its last note.
Christmas is a celebration of Jesus coming into a dark world and filling it with the light of His
love. This mini-movie provides an uplifting reminder to seize the opportunities of the season
and let that light shine by sharing His love with others.
He is Jesus. Our Messiah, our Savior, our Redeemer and Deliverer. That night in Bethlehem, grace came to life, mercy was given breath and eternity was forever changed. He is Emmanuel…God with us.
How often do we consider the implications of what we believe about the very first Christmas? God’s original Christmas gift to us was immeasurably more than anything we could ever imagine. When you really stop to think about it, no miracle we seek is beyond hope.