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A House of Prayer | Mark 11:12-25

40 min · 28 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio A House of Prayer | Mark 11:12-25

Descripción

Mark places the scene at the head of the passion week and frames it as an intercalation. The fig tree and the temple are bound together so that each interprets the other. Jesus rises from Bethany hungry, sees a leafy fig tree, and pronounces, “May no one ever eat fruit from you again.” The fig tree stands there with the look of life but no fruit, and Jesus treats it as an enacted parable of judgment. The tree’s leaves promise what its branches do not deliver. So temple-centered religion, thick with ceremony and traffic, promises nearness to God while remaining spiritually barren. The temple scene supplies the meat of the Markan sandwich. Jesus drives out buyers and sellers, overturns tables, and blocks vessels from moving through the outer court. The action is not a bid to seize control or a call to mere prayer renewal. If Jesus wanted to renew temple worship, he would not cut off the very services that enabled sacrifices and temple tax. Instead, his disruption functions prophetically. By halting sacrifice, he signals that the temple system itself is under judgment and that its time is short. Isaiah 56 and Jeremiah 7 sharpen the point. Isaiah’s “house of prayer for all nations” announces inclusion, not permanent segregation behind a dividing wall. Jeremiah’s “den of robbers” is not a marketplace scam but a hideout, a place of false security where guilty hearts imagine they are safe because they frequent holy space. The temple has become a refuge for unrepentant people who trust a place and a program rather than God. History will vindicate Jesus’s words when Rome levels the temple in AD 70. Returning to the withered fig tree, Jesus points his disciples not to a technique but to a source. “Have faith in God.” Whoever says “to this mountain” will see God act. The mountain in view is the Temple Mount, and the promise of answered prayer serves the same movement from old system to new covenant. The effectiveness of prayer rests in a relationship given by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone. Hence the word about forgiveness. Those who stand forgiven extend forgiveness, because grace received remakes the heart. Leaves without fruit will not do. Faith in God bears the fruit of bold, humbled prayer and reconciled lives.

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episode A House of Prayer | Mark 11:12-25 artwork

A House of Prayer | Mark 11:12-25

Mark places the scene at the head of the passion week and frames it as an intercalation. The fig tree and the temple are bound together so that each interprets the other. Jesus rises from Bethany hungry, sees a leafy fig tree, and pronounces, “May no one ever eat fruit from you again.” The fig tree stands there with the look of life but no fruit, and Jesus treats it as an enacted parable of judgment. The tree’s leaves promise what its branches do not deliver. So temple-centered religion, thick with ceremony and traffic, promises nearness to God while remaining spiritually barren. The temple scene supplies the meat of the Markan sandwich. Jesus drives out buyers and sellers, overturns tables, and blocks vessels from moving through the outer court. The action is not a bid to seize control or a call to mere prayer renewal. If Jesus wanted to renew temple worship, he would not cut off the very services that enabled sacrifices and temple tax. Instead, his disruption functions prophetically. By halting sacrifice, he signals that the temple system itself is under judgment and that its time is short. Isaiah 56 and Jeremiah 7 sharpen the point. Isaiah’s “house of prayer for all nations” announces inclusion, not permanent segregation behind a dividing wall. Jeremiah’s “den of robbers” is not a marketplace scam but a hideout, a place of false security where guilty hearts imagine they are safe because they frequent holy space. The temple has become a refuge for unrepentant people who trust a place and a program rather than God. History will vindicate Jesus’s words when Rome levels the temple in AD 70. Returning to the withered fig tree, Jesus points his disciples not to a technique but to a source. “Have faith in God.” Whoever says “to this mountain” will see God act. The mountain in view is the Temple Mount, and the promise of answered prayer serves the same movement from old system to new covenant. The effectiveness of prayer rests in a relationship given by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone. Hence the word about forgiveness. Those who stand forgiven extend forgiveness, because grace received remakes the heart. Leaves without fruit will not do. Faith in God bears the fruit of bold, humbled prayer and reconciled lives.

28 de jun de 202640 min
episode The Hardest Line in the Prayer | Matthew 6:12; Matthew 18:21-35 artwork

The Hardest Line in the Prayer | Matthew 6:12; Matthew 18:21-35

Sermon Big Idea: Forgiven people, forgive people. Sermon Overview: Harvard's Global Flourishing Study surveyed 207,000 people across 23 countries measuring health, happiness, relationships, and meaning — and one of the strongest predictors of human flourishing wasn't a vaccine, a policy, or an economic system. It was forgiveness. Researchers concluded it was a public health issue worthy of greater attention. What's striking is that 2,000 years before the study, Jesus taught his disciples to pray, "Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors" — announcing for free what Harvard spent millions to discover. This is the hardest line in the Lord's Prayer, and the big idea is simply this: forgiven people forgive people. Our Problem: Spiritual Pretense The first half of the petition exposes a problem most of us avoid — pretense. Jesus uses the word "debt" deliberately, recovering its first-century weight: not a credit card balance, but a life-or-death, shame-filled bondage with no way out. That's what we owe God. Yet our internal lawyer constantly defends us, minimizes our sin, and keeps us from the confession that opens the door to receiving forgiveness. The prayer forces us to see ourselves accurately — as debtors who need grace, not defendants who need acquittal. The Picture: A Parable of Forgiveness Pastor Jason shows how the petition then pivots sharply outward. The small phrase "as we also have forgiven" turns the Lord's Prayer into a self-audit, connecting what we receive from God to what we extend to others. We must reflect, “How am I doing with forgiveness when it comes to others?” Jesus wants that reality to be included in our conversation with the Father. The Lord illustrates this dynamic in Matthew 18 with the Parable of the Unmerciful Servant — a man forgiven an unimaginable debt who immediately chokes a fellow servant over a fraction of what he owed. The contrast is staggering and intentional. The Practice of Forgiveness: What it is and isn’t Because forgiveness is so easily misunderstood, it's worth being precise about what it is and isn't. Forgiveness is not saying what happened was okay, not forgetting, not automatic trust, and not the same as reconciliation. That last distinction matters most — forgiveness is something one person does before God, while reconciliation is something two people do together and requires the willingness of both parties. When we separate the two, we remove one of the biggest excuses we use to avoid forgiving. What forgiveness actually is, is a release of the debt — a decision to stop being the one who punishes, to hand the ledger to God, and to trust him as judge rather than taking that role ourselves. As Tim Keller puts it, forgiveness is a form of voluntary suffering — costly, but chosen. And it may need to happen repeatedly, in layers, as God reveals deeper places where the debt is still being held. The Power of Forgiveness: Cross and Resurrection The power to actually do this doesn't come from digging deeper into yourself — every other framework for forgiveness points inward, but the gospel points outward. On the cross, God absorbed the full cost of our debt, canceling the charge of our legal indebtedness and nailing it there, as Colossians 2:13–14 declares. Because Jesus had no debt of his own, his death could count for ours. The invitation isn't to try harder or choose forgiveness through willpower — it's to remain connected to the life of the risen Christ, the vine, so that forgiveness becomes fruit that grows in you rather than a burden you manufacture on your own.

21 de jun de 202645 min
episode Daily Bread | Matthew 6:11, Exodus 16, Psalm 78, John 6:27-35 artwork

Daily Bread | Matthew 6:11, Exodus 16, Psalm 78, John 6:27-35

Sermon Big Idea: Jesus teaches us to pray "give us today our daily bread" because learning daily dependence on God is the only cure for self-sufficiency. Sermon Summary: Food has a way of telling the story of a people. The bánh mì sandwich — that iconic Vietnamese street food found on every corner from Hanoi to the countryside — carries within it over 170 years of complex history, the fingerprints of French colonialism, and the resilience of a culture that took something foreign and made it beautifully its own. In a similar way, when Jesus teaches his disciples to pray "give us today our daily bread," he is not offering a simple request about grocery needs. He is invoking a long and layered story — Israel's story — and exposing something uncomfortable about the default condition of every human heart: our instinct toward self-sufficiency. To understand what Jesus has in mind, we have to travel back 1,400 years to the wilderness of Exodus 16. Fresh from the miraculous parting of the Red Sea, Israel collapses into grumbling within weeks. God responds not with punishment but with provision — manna, bread from heaven, given one day at a time. The dailiness is deliberate. God designs a test in which the only way to pass is to trust that what he provided today he will provide again tomorrow. Those who hoard the manna discover it rots overnight, crawling with maggots — a graphic and unforgettable image of what self-sufficiency produces. The lesson is clear: self-sufficiency always decays. Whatever we grasp to secure our lives apart from God eventually rots. But was Israel's failure a one-time exception or a recurring pattern? Four hundred years later, the poet Asaph answers that question in Psalm 78, retelling the manna story as a warning to a new generation who never tasted the wilderness but carry the same instincts. Asaph identifies the root issue beneath Israel's grumbling not as ingratitude or impatience, but as unbelief — they did not trust God to care for them. Self-sufficiency, the sermon argues, is not ultimately a discipline problem. It is a belief problem — a distorted vision of who God is and whether he can truly be trusted with tomorrow. The story of bread reaches its climax in John 6, where Jesus feeds five thousand people and then confronts a crowd still chasing physical provision a thousand years after the manna. Jesus reorients their hunger entirely: "I am the bread of life." He is not merely a better supplier of what they already want — he is the source, the sustenance, and the satisfaction their self-sufficiency has always been searching for. When Jesus teaches us to pray "give us today our daily bread," he is inviting us into a daily practice of dependence that cuts against every natural instinct we have. The cure for self-sufficiency is not trying harder to trust — it is coming to the One who is himself the Bread of Life, today and every day.

15 de jun de 202642 min
episode Your Kingdom Come | Matthew 6:10 artwork

Your Kingdom Come | Matthew 6:10

Sermon Big Idea: Praying "Your kingdom come, your will be done, ”is a bold request that seeks and welcomes God’s "holy disruption" into everyday life.  Sermon Summary: If you were asked to summarize the central mission of Jesus in one sentence, what would you say? Most people point to his ethical teachings — love your neighbor, care for the poor, treat others the way you want to be treated. And while those things are true, they are not the core. The driving force behind everything Jesus said and did was the kingdom of God. It's the first thing he preached, the lens through which he saw the world, and the reality he invited every person he met to enter. And right in the middle of the prayer he taught his disciples to pray, he places two of the most dangerous petitions in all of Scripture — your kingdom come, your will be done. Most of us approach prayer like a corporate boardroom — we come with our agenda prepared, our plans already mapped out, and we're hoping God will sign off. Or we treat him like a divine notary, presenting our finished five-year plan and waiting for his stamp of approval. But Jesus teaches us something radically different. The kingdom of God is not a geographical territory — it is the reign and rule of God advancing over his people and his world. It arrived in Jesus — in healings, forgiveness, and resurrection power — and it is still advancing today. When we pray your kingdom come, we are not asking God to start something. We are joining something already in motion, and inviting his reign to take over every corner of our lives we have not yet surrendered. That surrender is costly — and Jesus knew it. In the Garden of Gethsemane, the night before the crucifixion, he prayed your will be done three times, sweating drops of blood, already beginning to taste the cup of divine wrath he would drink fully on the cross. He didn't suppress his anguish or pretend the Father's will was easy. He named it, felt the full weight of it, and surrendered to it anyway. That is the model Jesus gives us for praying your will be done — not passivity, not the erasure of desire, not the pretending away of pain, but the honest, repeated, courageous surrender of our will to his. It is one of the hardest prayers a human being can pray. And Jesus prayed it first, at the highest possible cost, so that we could pray it too. But the disruption always has a destination. Jesus doesn't call us to surrender for its own sake — he calls us toward the most hope-filled phrase in the entire prayer: on earth as it is in heaven. Heaven is the realm where God's will is done completely, joyfully, and without resistance. Earth is where the gap between what God intends and what actually exists remains painfully wide. And this prayer is our declaration that we want that gap to close — starting in us, moving through us, and spreading into every relationship, every community, and every corner of the world around us. The kingdom advances one surrendered life at a time, like dawn pushing back darkness — gradually, certainly, unstoppably — until the day it arrives in full.

8 de jun de 202659 min
episode Before You Ask Anything | Matthew 6:9 artwork

Before You Ask Anything | Matthew 6:9

Sermon Big Idea:  Before Jesus teaches us to ask, he teaches us to see. The way we see God determines everything about how we pray. Sermon Summary:   The Lord's Prayer is the most memorized set of words in human history — recited by an estimated two billion people every single day, in hundreds of languages, across every culture and time zone on earth. Within fifty years of the New Testament the earliest Christian discipleship manual — the Didache — was already instructing new believers to pray it three times a day. And yet familiarity may be the very thing keeping us from actually hearing what Jesus said. This week we slowed all the way down on the opening words of the prayer — Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name — and discovered that before Jesus teaches us to ask for anything, he first teaches us to see. Because the way we see God determines everything about how we pray. The word Father did not appear out of nowhere in Matthew 6. It has a history — and that history makes what Jesus does with it in the Sermon on the Mount genuinely revolutionary. In the entire Hebrew Bible — half a million words — God is portrayed as Father only fifteen times. When it appears it is national language describing God's relationship to Israel as a people, or royal language reserved for the king in the Davidic Covenant of 2 Samuel 7:14. In Isaiah 63 a desperate, broken nation reaches for the word in their darkest hour — but it is still a corporate cry from a distance. And then in John 17 we are allowed to listen to the most intimate prayer ever prayed — Jesus speaking to the Father before the crucifixion, reaching back before creation to the glory they shared before the world began. This is the eternal, unguarded conversation of the Son with the Father — the oldest, deepest, most glorious relationship in existence. And in Matthew 6:9 Jesus turns to ordinary fishermen, tax collectors, and peasants and says: this is how I pray. Use my word. Join my intimacy. The door is open for you. But Jesus does not stop at establishing the relationship. He immediately tells his disciples what to want first — and it is not bread, not forgiveness, not protection. The first petition of the prayer is hallowed be your name. In Jewish culture a name represented far more than a label — it carried the entire character, reputation, and identity of a person. To hallow God's name is to pray that everything God is would be treated as it deserves — honored, revered, set apart — in the world and in our own lives. The London black cab illustration brought this to life: to earn the right to drive the iconic black taxi in London a driver must pass The Knowledge — one of the most demanding professional examinations in the world, requiring the memorization of 25,000 streets across the most complex city on earth, taking an average of three to four years to complete. Every driver who earns that license carries a responsibility — to uphold the name and reputation of a tradition built over generations. If a cab driver takes that seriously, how much more seriously should we desire to uphold the name we carry as followers of Jesus? The gospel anchor underneath both of these opening petitions is this: we can only say Father because of what Jesus did. The intimacy implied in the word Abba — the access, the closeness, the welcome — was purchased at the cross. The veil in the temple was torn from top to bottom the moment Jesus died — torn from the top because God tore it, not from the bottom because we earned our way through. And we cannot hallow God's name in our own strength — Jesus hallowed it perfectly in our place, representing the Father's character without distortion or failure for thirty-three years, and then going to the cross to cover every way we have failed to. Hallowed be your name is therefore not a promise we make — it is a prayer we pray. We are asking God to do in us what we cannot do for ourselves. We come to prayer not as people who have earned their standing but as people who have been given something we did not deserve — at a cost we could never pay — and who want to spend the rest of their lives making sure it is represented well.

1 de jun de 202645 min