Bear Creek Community Church
Pastor David Watson opens with a familiar phrase — "do as I say, not as I do" — and uses it to launch into a pointed question: why are Christians hypocrites? Working through Acts 23, he identifies three types of hypocrites present in the passage. The first is the religious hypocrite, embodied by the high priest Ananias, who knew the law inside and out but whose corrupt motives led him to beat people down rather than draw them in. Pastor Watson shares a story from a tattoo parlor where a man told him he was the most authentic follower of Jesus he had ever met — precisely because so many others had acted like Ananias, wielding the Bible as a weapon rather than extending the love of Jesus. The second category is the ridiculous hypocrite, seen in the forty men who bound themselves under a curse to kill Paul without eating or drinking. Pastor Watson points out the obvious absurdity — these men were breaking God's commandments in the name of serving God. He connects this to modern phrases like "live your truth," arguing that when our truth conflicts with God's truth, we've simply made ourselves our own God. The third category, the redeemed hypocrite, is seen in Paul himself. When Paul snaps back at Ananias and then quickly corrects himself, citing Scripture, he models what it looks like to fall short and own it honestly. Pastor Watson's conclusion is clear: Jesus doesn't expect perfection, but He does call us to progress — to practice what we preach, and to live in the grace and forgiveness He purchased on the cross.
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