NHPBC Sermons
Your workplace habits preach, whether you mean them to or not. We open Titus 2:9–10 and bring it straight into the real world of supervisors, deadlines, unfair criticism, and the daily temptation to complain, cut corners, or quietly take what isn’t ours. We also slow down to address the hard question behind the text: why does the Bible speak to “slaves and masters,” and what does that mean today? We clarify what Scripture condemns, what Paul is doing pastorally, and how the principle applies to modern employees and employers without pretending the situations are identical. From there, the command is plain: submit to your supervisor. And the details are uncomfortably specific: don’t talk back, don’t steal, be well pleasing, and demonstrate utter faithfulness that can be fully trusted. The surprising center of the passage is the “why”: our integrity at work can adorn the teaching of God our Savior. We can’t improve the gospel itself, but we can live in a way that makes people take notice. We tackle the objection that Christianity is just a tool for oppressors by looking at the cross, then walk through three ways submission can display Jesus: it shows Christlike humility, it reveals a realistic view of what we truly deserve apart from grace, and it proves our greatest treasure is Christ rather than the rat race. Listen, share with a coworker or friend, and leave a review with one takeaway you want to practice this week.
208 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de NHPBC Sermons!