No Limits Ministries

No Limits Ministries

Share

Rev. Delman Coates, PhD serves as the Senior Pastor of Mt. Ennon Baptist Church, a megachurch located in Clinton, Maryland, since 2004.

07/05/2026

There are seasons when life feels like a valley of dry bones. We look around and see loss, disappointment, injustice, and deep weariness, and it can feel like hope has dried up right in front of us. Sometimes that valley shows up in our personal lives, in broken dreams, strained relationships, or battles we thought would be over by now.

Sometimes it shows up in our communities, where people carry the weight of inequity, grief, and uncertainty every single day. In Ezekiel 37, God meets Ezekiel in that very kind of place, a place marked by despair, and asks him to face what seems impossible. Yet that is where God reveals a powerful truth for all of us: what looks dead is not beyond God’s power. God still speaks into barren places, God still breathes life into what has gone silent, and God is still able to restore what we thought was gone for good. That is good news for weary hearts, and it is a reminder that even in the valley, God’s answer is still yes.

07/04/2026

Can these bones live?

When life feels broken, hope seems distant, and dreams appear dead, God still asks the same question He asked Ezekiel in the valley of dry bones: "Can these bones live?" The answer isn't found in our circumstances—it's found in God's power.

In this powerful message, Pastor Delman Coates reminds us that no situation is beyond God's ability to restore, renew, and resurrect.

The answer is still YES.

▶️ Watch the full message now at DelmanCoates.org.

07/03/2026

Seeing what needs to change isn't enough. You have to move. 👊🏾

The prodigal son didn't just feel bad about where he was. He made a decision: "I will arise and go to my father." That was his pivot. And it changed everything.

Here's the part we don't talk about enough: when YOU do the hard work of looking in the mirror — owning your choices, confronting your complicity, doing the inner work — you become dangerous for justice. 🔥

Because you can't fight broken systems if you haven't dealt with the brokenness inside yourself first.

It's time to rise up. Leave the pigpen. Come home.

👉 Watch "I'm Starting With The Man In The Mirror" — full message at DelmanCoates.org 👆

📖 Luke 15:11-20 |

07/01/2026

The moment everything changed for the prodigal son wasn't when he got rescued. It was when he got honest. 💡

Broke. Hungry. Alone. Feeding pigs. And then — he came to himself.

Four words that carry the weight of an entire transformation. He stopped pretending. He stopped minimizing. He took inventory of where he actually was.

When's the last time you did that? Really did that?

👉 Catch the full message at DelmanCoates.org

📖 Luke 15:11-20 |

06/30/2026

He didn't blame the famine. He didn't blame his friends. He didn't blame the economy. He looked in the mirror and said, "This is on me." 👊🏾

The prodigal son's turning point wasn't just hitting rock bottom — it was taking ownership of how he got there. No excuses. No finger-pointing. Just accountability.

That kind of honesty is rare. But it's the only thing that opens the door to real transformation.

What part of where you are right now belongs to you?

👉 Watch the full message at DelmanCoates.org

📖 Luke 15:11-20 |

06/28/2026

In 1988, Michael Jackson released the iconic song “Man in the Mirror.” It tells the story of someone who grows tired of turning a blind eye to the world’s suffering. He realizes that looking out the window at everyone else’s problems is not enough. To make a real difference, he has to start with the person he sees in the mirror. This powerful shift from observation to conviction is a profound spiritual truth. If we want to see transformation in our lives and in the world, we cannot just point fingers. We must begin with self-examination.

Jesus tells a similar story about a young man who had to look in the mirror. After squandering his inheritance in a distant land, the prodigal son hits rock bottom. It is only when he is broke, alone, and humbled that the Bible says, “he came to himself.” In that moment of clarity, he saw the gap between who he had become and who he was created to be. This story is not just an ancient parable; it is a picture of our own capacity to lose our way. But more importantly, it is a powerful reminder that no matter how far we have gone, we can always turn around and come home.

06/27/2026

It's easier to look out the window than it is to look in the mirror. 🪞

We see everyone else's problems clearly. We know exactly what they need to fix. But the moment we turn that same lens on ourselves? That's where it gets uncomfortable.

The prodigal son didn't start changing until he stopped pretending. The Bible says he "came to himself" — and that moment of radical honesty changed everything.

Where are you really right now? Financially. Emotionally. Spiritually.

Pastor Delman's new message is a word you didn't know you needed. 🔥

👉 Watch the full message tomorrow at DelmanCoates.org

📖 Luke 15:11-20 |

Want your organization to be the top-listed Non Profit Organization in Clinton?
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Address


9832 Piscataway Road
Clinton, MD
20735