In this week’s message at The Gathering in Colorado Springs, Chris Berglund explores how believers overcome accusation through the Melchizedek priesthood and the indestructible life of Christ within. This teaching calls us out of the “synagogue of Satan” and back into our true identity—union, belonging, and the unshakable priesthood we carry in Jesus.
The Gathering, Colorado Springs church, Leah Ramirez, Chris Berglund, cup of suffering, cup of Christ’s sufferings, union with Christ, ministering to the Lord, beholding Jesus, contemplative prayer, Sabbath Altars, prophetic teaching, Jeremiah, Job, suffering and glory, Christian community, spiritual formation, presence of God
Many believers are exhausted—not because they’re failing, but because they’re still trying to live toward God instead of from the Christ who lives within them. This message invites you to rebuild on the finished work, embrace real rest, and discover the well of life already inside you.
What if Sabbath isn’t inactivity but enthronement—Christ’s life reigning through us? From Noah’s dove and rainbow to the priestly rest we’re invited to right now, Genesis points to a single reality: the Kingdom within, enthroning Jesus in the heart until His life, not our striving, flows.
In this week’s message, Leah Ramirez shares a call for mothers and fathers in Colorado Springs to rise as spiritual parents—those who will love, intercede, and stay until the rain falls again. Drawing from Rizpah’s vigil in 2 Samuel 21, this message invites believers to become rooted in grace, build family through small groups, and embody steadfast love that restores a generation.

On Sunday at The Gathering, Chris Berglund shared about the boundary of blood—the covenant line established at the cross where fear and shame lose their power. Faith’s vision is seeing reality through the eyes of Christ: not as our circumstances appear, but as God has already finished them. From the Passover lamb to David’s victory over Goliath, to the cross of Jesus, we are reminded that in covenant we can declare with confidence, “It is finished.”
