Reformation AM Podcast

Let Christ Be Formed in You, II

1 h 3 min · 10. Mai 2026
Episode Let Christ Be Formed in You, II Cover

Beschreibung

This powerful message takes us deep into the reality that God's transformation work begins from the inside out. Drawing from Galatians 4:19 and Hebrews 4:12, we're confronted with the truth that Christ must be formed within us—not as an outward performance, but as an internal metamorphosis of our very nature. The Word of God is described as living, active, and sharper than any two-edged sword, capable of dividing soul from spirit and exposing the deepest parts of our nature. This isn't about modifying behaviors or putting on a religious facade; it's about allowing God to undo what life has done to us. We're challenged to examine our hearts, which Jeremiah 17:9 reveals as deceitful and desperately sick. The message confronts us with uncomfortable questions: Why do we keep returning to the same patterns? What generational curses and transferred spirits have we unknowingly carried? The journey toward wholeness requires us to look honestly in the mirror of God's Word and allow Him to work on our nature, our character, and our DNA. This is about becoming complete in Christ, no longer tossed about by every wind, but grounded in our true identity as children of God who are being shaped by the Master Potter.

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Alle Folgen

24 Folgen

Episode Have You Ever Been Whooped By God? Cover

Have You Ever Been Whooped By God?

This powerful message confronts us with an uncomfortable but transformative question: Have we ever been corrected by God? Drawing from Hebrews 12, we're challenged to understand that divine correction isn't punishment—it's proof of our legitimacy as God's children. The message unpacks three critical truths: legitimacy through correction, God's intentionality versus intensity in our trials, and the fruit that correction produces in our lives. We're reminded that spoiled Christians lack credibility as believers because they refuse correction, clinging to their own righteousness while claiming God's name. The sermon walks us through the doctrine of salvation—justification (being saved from sin's penalty), sanctification (being saved from sin's power), and glorification (being saved from sin's presence)—showing how correction is essential at every stage. Without the Holy Spirit's conviction and the willingness to be corrected, we remain spiritually immature, addicted to the platform but negligent of the altar where death to self must occur. This isn't about physical discipline but about God getting our attention, changing our hearts, and separating us from the sin we've allowed to define us. The challenge is clear: Can we take correction from God, or are we too arrogant to grow?

Gestern1 h 22 min
Episode Let Christ Be Formed in You, II Cover

Let Christ Be Formed in You, II

This powerful message takes us deep into the reality that God's transformation work begins from the inside out. Drawing from Galatians 4:19 and Hebrews 4:12, we're confronted with the truth that Christ must be formed within us—not as an outward performance, but as an internal metamorphosis of our very nature. The Word of God is described as living, active, and sharper than any two-edged sword, capable of dividing soul from spirit and exposing the deepest parts of our nature. This isn't about modifying behaviors or putting on a religious facade; it's about allowing God to undo what life has done to us. We're challenged to examine our hearts, which Jeremiah 17:9 reveals as deceitful and desperately sick. The message confronts us with uncomfortable questions: Why do we keep returning to the same patterns? What generational curses and transferred spirits have we unknowingly carried? The journey toward wholeness requires us to look honestly in the mirror of God's Word and allow Him to work on our nature, our character, and our DNA. This is about becoming complete in Christ, no longer tossed about by every wind, but grounded in our true identity as children of God who are being shaped by the Master Potter.

10. Mai 20261 h 3 min
Episode Let Christ Be Formed in You Cover

Let Christ Be Formed in You

This powerful message centers on the transformative concept of Christ being formed within us, drawing from Galatians 4:19 where Paul expresses his labor pains until Christ is completely and permanently formed in believers. We're reminded that spiritual development is not an instant process but a journey requiring consistency, surrender, and often uncomfortable growth. The sermon uses the parable of the sower from Matthew 13 to illustrate how carelessly handled seeds can fall on unprepared ground, symbolizing how spiritual truth can be wasted when our hearts aren't properly cultivated. The hard ground represents our stubbornness and resistance to change. We learn that God must break up the fallow ground of our lives, disrupting our comfortable patterns to align us with His purpose. This isn't about creating an outward image of perfection but allowing an inward transformation that naturally displays itself externally. The message challenges us to examine whether Christ is truly being formed in us or if we're merely presenting a form of godliness without power. Development requires time, pressure, and the willingness to be shaped by God's hand, even when it means breaking cycles and facing uncomfortable truths about ourselves.

3. Mai 20261 h 32 min
Episode Bootleggers Cover

Bootleggers

This powerful message confronts us with a challenging question: Are we authentic Christians, or are we settling for a counterfeit version of faith? Drawing from Ephesians 4:17-24, we're invited to examine whether we've created our own shortcuts to salvation and deliverance, bypassing God's prescribed path. The concept of 'bootlegging' serves as a striking metaphor for how we often try to smuggle unauthorized versions of Christianity into our lives—creating our own rules, justifying our actions, and avoiding the genuine transformation that comes only through complete surrender to God. The message walks us through three critical stages: ignorance, learning, and renewal. We discover that ignorance isn't about being unintelligent, but about being uninformed and unwilling to know God intimately. Many of us have purposely avoided God's presence to justify our behaviors, taking His grace for granted while assuming we'll have time to turn around later. But Isaiah 55:6 reminds us to seek the Lord while He may be found—there's a window of opportunity that won't remain open forever. True learning requires us to sit at Jesus' feet like Mary did, positioning ourselves to receive rather than constantly running and doing. Finally, renewal demands that we actively put off the old self and put on the new man created in God's righteousness and holiness. This isn't passive—we must take responsibility for our transformation while allowing God to work in us. The armor of God isn't meant to protect our old sinful identity, but to guard the renewed person we're becoming in Christ.

19. Apr. 20261 h 16 min
Episode Get With The Program Cover

Get With The Program

This powerful message confronts us with a challenging question: Why do we insist on jailbreaking our lives when God has already programmed us perfectly for His purpose? Drawing from Ephesians 2:8-13, we're reminded that grace isn't just something we receive—it's something that flows through us to others. The sermon uses the brilliant metaphor of jailbroken devices to illustrate how we often manipulate our lives to fit our own narratives, voiding the divine warranty and blocking the updates God wants to install in us. We learn that we were created as God's workmanship before we even took our first breath, equipped with everything necessary for the journey ahead. The real work isn't in fixing ourselves through our own efforts, but in allowing God to work in us. When discomfort comes, we're tempted to take control and jailbreak our faith, customizing our Christianity to avoid the hard parts. But true spiritual maturity means recognizing that God's programming is perfect—we just need to stop interfering with His updates. The call here is radical: work out your salvation by letting Him work on you, regulate your emotions instead of ignoring them, and minister to people's pain rather than fighting their reactions. This message challenges us to examine whether we're truly unified with God's program or running a jailbroken version of Christianity that leaves us vulnerable, unstable, and ineffective.

12. Apr. 20261 h 4 min