• 3 Spiritual Stages Of Man
    Jun 30 2026

    Paul in Romans 8 draws a hard line between two minds. The natural mind is in the flesh, void of the Holy Spirit, and cannot please God. The carnal mind is enmity against God, not subject to His law, and its end is death. Christ in John 3 says a person must be born again. Ephesians 2 says God must quicken the dead. When the Spirit indwells, life and peace arrive because the Prince of Peace reigns in the heart.

    Paul then names three spiritual conditions: the natural, the spiritual, the carnal. The natural man will always mind the things of the flesh. First Corinthians 2 says he does not receive the things of the Spirit, counts them moría, dull and absurd, and chases what flatters the belly and the now. The very Life-giver stands in Scripture from Genesis to Revelation, yet unbelief refuses to come to Him for life.

    The spiritual man is the person controlled by the Spirit of God. His affections are set on things above, not on things of the earth. He discerns with the mind of Christ and makes righteous judgments because the Spirit’s job is to glorify Christ. His fruit bears witness. “You will know a tree by its fruit.” His appetite is the Word. “A verse a day does not keep Satan away.” The Word of Christ must dwell richly because the only way the Lord reveals Himself is by His Word, and the Spirit guides into all spiritual truth.

    The carnal Christian is a babe in Christ. Carnality is a lapse, not a lifelong condition. If a life runs on flesh from start to finish, it never knew God. John says God’s seed abides, and the one born of God cannot live in sin. So a sin check comes first before pointing at another. Paul requires study to show oneself approved unto God. Failure to grow in Scripture, to pray, to sit under biblical teaching, and to fellowship with the saints will stunt the soul. Company matters. Iron sharpens iron. Gathering with God’s people warms the heart that livestream cannot keep warm.

    Paul’s diagnosis of Corinth seals it. Envy, strife, divisions shout carnality, so he withholds meat and gives milk. The remedy for the natural man is the cross. God made Him who knew no sin to be sin so sinners could become righteous and receive the Spirit. The remedy for the carnal is confession and cleansing. The Spirit then restores peace, removes condemnation, and gives assurance of adoption. The delights of the spiritual man are in the age to come.

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    45 mins
  • Which cup are you drinking?
    Jun 30 2026

    When Jesus arrived at Golgotha, the soldiers offered Him vinegar mixed with gall, a common practice used to numb the pain of crucifixion. He tasted it and refused. This was not a small detail. Jesus came to bear the full wrath of the Father for the sins of the world, and accepting a numbing agent would have meant suppressing that wrath rather than fully enduring it. He discerned what was being offered before He decided, and He wanted no part of it. That moment carries a direct message for every believer about where we turn for comfort, wisdom, and strength.

    The world is still offering the same drink today. It looks different now, but the effect is identical: temporary relief, false comfort, and a dulling of the spiritual senses. The same three traps that pulled Eve away from God in the Garden, the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, are still at work. Everything the world offers appeals to the senses but profits nothing for the soul. As children of light, there is no reason to seek wisdom or direction from those who walk in darkness. Jesus also warned that lukewarmness carries serious consequences. Just as He spit out the gall and vinegar, He warned that He would spit out those who drift in indifference rather than walking in full commitment to Him.

    The path forward is not complicated, but it requires intentionality. Transformation comes through the renewing of the mind, and that happens when the Word of God is given priority over the noise and philosophies of this age. Every believer has been given the Holy Spirit, the very One who wrote Scripture, to guide them into all truth. He cannot apply the Word to a life that never opens it. The challenge is simple: replace one thing habitually turned to for comfort or answers with intentional time in Scripture. Jesus needed nothing from the world, and as His children, neither do we. Everything needed for life and godliness has already been given in Him.

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    41 mins
  • Difference between child of God and child of the devil
    38 mins
  • Who Are You Paying Tribute To?
    Jun 17 2026

    Who are you paying tribute to?

    * Matthew 22:15-22
    * Colossians 2:8-9
    * John 8:44
    * Hebrews 1:1-3
    * Colossians 1:15
    * Colossians 1:19


    * Luke 12:15-21 Matthew sets the trap plainly. “Whose image and superscription?” exposes hearts that love the coin more than the King. Christ refuses their snare and gives the dividing line that still cuts: “Render therefore unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s.” The coin bears Caesar. The human soul bears God. The question becomes simple and searching. Whose image marks a life?

    The plot to “entangle him in his talk” only proves that hypocrisy plays at religion while fighting Christ. Hypocrisy is an actor under an assumed character. The masks may change, but the heart stays the same. False churches still send their disciples. Vain philosophy still steals saints through traditions of men. Colossians says all the fullness of the Godhead dwells bodily in Christ. John says the Word “tabernacled” among us. That same Lord upholds all things by the word of his power and stands as the only Door into God’s presence.

    Christ’s word does not pass away. Lukewarm religion gets spewed out. The law does what it always does. It condemns, convicts, and leads the guilty to the Savior. The just shall live by faith, not by law. The coin teaches. Two images stand in conflict. The world lies under the wicked one. Satan still whispers, “Hath God said?” and still sells the old lie, “You will be as gods.” The belly still plays god. But the true Image stands before them. Tiberius claims “son of the divine Augustus.” The Father appoints the Son who is the brightness of glory and the express image of his person.

    Hebrews calls the Son the very imprint. Like a signet pressed into wax, the Son shows the invisible God in visible form. Faith in his atoning blood restores image and renews character. New birth makes a new race. Born of flesh stays flesh. Born of the Spirit bears the family likeness. Fruit proves life. Speech betrays the spring. The Spirit does not curse himself. John 15 gives the pattern. Abide in the Vine. Word in, life out. Pruning hurts but it multiplies fruit.

    Luke’s rich fool warns the hurried and the numb. Barns get bigger. Souls get summoned. “This night thy soul shall be required of thee.” Death fixes what life formed. The coin returns to Caesar. The image returns to God. So the call lands where Christ placed it. Whose image is on you?

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    30 mins