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Launch Sunday at Connection Church
What a powerful day in the presence of the Lord!
On Launch Sunday at Connection Church, we opened God's Word to Ezekiel 47 and leaned into a message called "Rivers of Restoration." At first glance, Ezekiel's prophetic vision may seem like an unusual place to begin a launch service. It is mysterious, symbolic, and full of imagery. But this passage carries a living word for us today.
God is still releasing rivers of restoration.
This is not just an ancient vision about a future temple. It is a picture of what happens when the life of God flows from His presence into dry, broken, lifeless places. Wherever His river goes, restoration follows.
From Exile to Hope
To understand Ezekiel's vision, we have to remember where God's people were.
Israel was in exile in Babylon. Jerusalem had been conquered. The temple — the visible symbol of God's presence, power, and purpose among His people — had been destroyed. They were displaced, discouraged, and surrounded by the evidence of loss.
Many of us know what that kind of spiritual exile feels like. We know what it is to feel far from purpose, distant from promise, or disconnected from what God has spoken over our lives.
But Ezekiel's vision reminds us that God does not leave His people in ruins.
Earlier in Ezekiel, God gives the prophet a vision of dry bones coming back to life. That is revival — God breathing life into what was dead. But Ezekiel 47 shows us something more: a river flowing from the temple, bringing sustained restoration everywhere it goes.
God does not simply want to revive us for a moment. He wants to restore us into a lifestyle of His presence.
The River Begins in God's Presence
Ezekiel 47 opens with water flowing from the threshold of the temple. It begins in the place of God's presence.
That matters.
The river does not begin with human effort, clever strategies, programs, or personality. It begins with God Himself. True transformation always flows from His presence.
Before we can be people of power publicly, we must become friends of God privately. Before we can carry the river to our families, workplaces, neighborhoods, and city, we must first learn to abide where the river begins.
Jesus modeled this perfectly. Before His public ministry began, He was baptized, filled with the Spirit, and led by the Spirit. He said, "The Son can do nothing of his own accord, but only what he sees the Father doing" (John 5:19). Moses understood the same thing when he told the Lord, "If your presence will not go with me, do not bring us up from here" (Exodus 33:15).
Connection Church must be built on that same conviction. We do not simply need activity. We need presence. We do not simply need momentum. We need the river of God.
The River Flows Through the Altar
In Ezekiel's vision, the water flows from the temple and past the altar. That is significant because the altar is the place of surrender.
Altars are not only places where prayers are offered. They are places where things die so that life can come forth. In the Old Testament, sacrifices were placed on the altar. In the New Testament, Paul tells us to present our bodies as living sacrifices, holy and acceptable to God (Romans 12:1).
The river of restoration flows through surrender.
God is not asking for a polished version of us. He is asking for all of us. Our worry. Our striving. Our self-reliance. Our guarded places. Our plans. Our fears. Our need to control the outcome.
The question is not simply, "Do I want the river?" The question is, "Am I willing to surrender to the One from whom the river flows?"
Because the river does not bypass the altar. If we want to carry restoration, we must first become surrendered people.
From a Trickle to a River
As Ezekiel follows the water, he watches it deepen. First it is ankle-deep. Then knee-deep. Then waist-deep. Eventually, it becomes a river too deep to cross — water deep enough to swim in.
That is often how God works.
What begins as a trickle becomes a torrent. What starts small becomes unstoppable. God may begin with a whisper, a prayer meeting, a step of obedience, a small group of people, or a launch Sunday in a renovated building. But when the source is His presence, even a trickle carries destiny.
Ezekiel calls it a river before it looks like one. That is faith.
Sometimes we want to wait until something looks powerful before we believe God is in it. But God often asks us to recognize the river while it still looks small.
Connection Church may be in a beginning season, but beginnings matter. Seeds matter. Small streams matter. When God is the source, what starts small can become a river of restoration for families, neighborhoods, cities, and regions.
God's River Flows Toward Broken Places
Ezekiel says the river flows eastward, down into the Arabah, and eventually into the sea. In Scripture, east often carries the idea of exile and distance. Adam and Eve were driven east of Eden. Israel was carried east into Babylon.
In other words, the river flows toward the places of pain, exile, and brokenness.
That is the heart of God. He does not avoid dead places. He moves toward them. He does not wait for everything to be clean, convenient, and easy. He sends His life directly into what seems barren.
The river of God flows into marriages that feel dry. It flows into families that feel fractured. It flows into workplaces filled with stress. It flows into communities that have been overlooked. It flows into hearts that feel too far gone.
Wherever the river goes, life begins again.
The Dead Sea Becomes Fresh
Ezekiel 47 says that when the river enters the sea, the waters become fresh. This is a picture of the Dead Sea — a place known for its saltiness and inability to sustain life.
But when the river of God touches it, even the Dead Sea is transformed.
That is the power of restoration. Nothing is too dead for God. No person is too far gone. No family is beyond His reach. No community is too broken. No building, no calling, no dream, and no heart is beyond His ability to restore.
Even our own story as a church reflects this. What once looked forgotten, empty, or unusable can become a place filled with worship, prayer, healing, and purpose. God delights in taking what others overlook and turning it into a testimony of His goodness.
That is what restoration does. It does not merely improve what already looks alive. It brings life where life seemed impossible.
Many Kinds of Fish
Ezekiel also says that the river will produce "very many kinds" of fish. This is a beautiful picture of the kingdom of God.
When the river flows, it does not produce uniformity. It produces life. Many kinds of people. Many stories. Many backgrounds. Many testimonies. Many gifts.
The kingdom is bigger than our labels, preferences, and traditions. God's river reaches across denominational lines, cultural lines, generational lines, and personal histories. His restoration is not reserved for one type of person.
It is for everyone who will step into the river.
Are We in the River?
The invitation of Ezekiel 47 is not only to admire the river. It is to enter it.
We can stand near the river and still resist its flow. We can talk about restoration and still keep parts of our lives guarded. We can celebrate what God is doing and still cling to control.
But God is inviting us deeper.
Ankle-deep faith is a beginning. Knee-deep faith is progress. Waist-deep faith is surrender. But there is a place where the river becomes too deep to control — a place where we stop managing God and start trusting Him.
That is the invitation before us:
- Not just to visit the river, but to live in it.
- Not just to receive restoration, but to become carriers of it.
- Not just to build a church, but to become a people filled with the presence of God.
A Restored People in a Restored Place
Launch Sunday is not just about starting services. It is about stepping into the flow of what God is already doing.
We believe God is raising up Connection Church to be a place of presence, surrender, healing, and restoration. A place where dry bones live again. A place where the river flows. A place where families are strengthened, hearts are healed, and people discover the life of Jesus.
We are a restored people in a restored place, carrying a river of restoration into the world around us.
So the question is simple: Where will the river carry you?
May we surrender fully. May we go deeper. May we become people through whom the life of God flows freely.
Father, release Your river in us. Restore what is broken. Refresh what is dry. Bring life where there has been death. Let Your presence flow through us and into the world around us. In Jesus' name, amen.
Join us next Sunday as we continue this series at Connection Church.

