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Bryan Anthony

Bryan Anthony (birth year unknown–present). Born in the United States, Bryan Anthony is the lead pastor and elder of The Pilgrimage, a church in midtown Kansas City, Missouri, where he has served pastorally since 2002. Little is documented about his early life or education, but his ministry focuses on fostering a Christ-centered community through expository preaching and discipleship. Anthony’s leadership at The Pilgrimage emphasizes biblical teaching, spiritual growth, and engagement with Kansas City’s urban context, reflecting his commitment to local outreach. His sermons address practical faith and theological depth, aiming to connect Scripture with everyday life. As a pastor for over two decades, he has built a reputation for steady, relational ministry in a diverse neighborhood. Details about his family or published works are not widely available, as his public focus remains on pastoral duties. He said, “The church is not a building; it’s a people called to live out the gospel together.”
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Bryan Anthony preaches about the transformative power of the Holy Spirit, emphasizing that God's Spirit is not limited by our understanding or boundaries. He highlights how the early Jewish apostles struggled to grasp the inclusion of Gentiles in God's plan, but through divine interventions and outpourings of the Spirit, their hearts were opened to the reality of God's Kingdom. Anthony urges believers to hunger for the work of the Spirit, as it is a foretaste of the eschatological power and life to come, and warns against quenching the Spirit, which hinders our preparation for the future. He encourages the church to embrace the unpredictable leading of the Spirit, rather than restricting or controlling it, in order to experience the fullness of God's purity, power, and love.
Eschatology Made Present
“While Peter was still speaking these words, the Holy Spirit fell upon all those who were listening to the message. All the circumcised believers who came with Peter were amazed, because the gift of the Holy Spirit had been poured out on the Gentiles also. For they were hearing them speaking with tongues and exalting God.” -Acts 10.44-46a The Spirit of God is not confined to our categories and limitations. When we have settled into starchy subjectivity, and have failed to keep our hearts open to the Lord in child-like faith, it becomes His mission to burst our ideas at the seams, and to reveal His righteousness and love in ways that transcend our limitations. The early Jewish apostles were mostly bound in their understanding of the spreading of God’s Gospel. Though they had heard the “great commission” firsthand, it had yet to break into their practical understanding and faith. It was precious that they were setting forth the Son of God in Jerusalem and it’s surrounding regions, but the idea of Gentiles receiving the same Life was still blurry or contradictory in their minds. When Peter and his brethren witnessed the inbreaking of holy power in the house of Cornelius, their minds were changed immediately and dramatically. It required a trance and a vision to move Peter the first step from his subjective thinking, and it required a remarkable outpouring of the Spirit to seal the deal in his heart. The Lord is merciful to move us toward the reality of His heavenly Kingdom, and we can be intensely grateful that He is, for if we reject the work of His Spirit now, we become candidates for hardening our hearts towards the full expression of the Kingdom which is yet to come. The Spirit of God poured out in the midst of weak souls who are pursuing Him is the tangible foretaste of eschatological power and life. The joy, fire, conviction, wonder, intensity, and love that results from the activity of the Spirit is but a glimpse of the glories to come. When we speak of the Spirit as eschatological, we mean that it is eschatology made present. -Helmut Flender We would do well to open our hearts entirely to the Lord in hunger and anticipation of the work of His Spirit. To quench that hunger and faith is to cut ourselves off from the blessed “deposit” that He longs to give us, that we might be rooted and grounded in love, and prepared for the day of shaking to come. A church which seeks to restrict and control the Spirit, as too dangerous and unpredictable may be safe, but has signed its own death warrant. A church which seeks to follow where the Spirit leads will have to expect the unexpected and be prepared to be shaken to its core. -J.D.G. Dunn Lord, we invite you to shake our categories. Pour out Your Spirit on all flesh, that we may know and walk in Your own purity, power, and love. Amen!
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Bryan Anthony (birth year unknown–present). Born in the United States, Bryan Anthony is the lead pastor and elder of The Pilgrimage, a church in midtown Kansas City, Missouri, where he has served pastorally since 2002. Little is documented about his early life or education, but his ministry focuses on fostering a Christ-centered community through expository preaching and discipleship. Anthony’s leadership at The Pilgrimage emphasizes biblical teaching, spiritual growth, and engagement with Kansas City’s urban context, reflecting his commitment to local outreach. His sermons address practical faith and theological depth, aiming to connect Scripture with everyday life. As a pastor for over two decades, he has built a reputation for steady, relational ministry in a diverse neighborhood. Details about his family or published works are not widely available, as his public focus remains on pastoral duties. He said, “The church is not a building; it’s a people called to live out the gospel together.”