NHPBC Sermons

NHPBC Sermons

Titus 2:9-10 - Gospel Witness in Public Life

35 min · 24 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Titus 2:9-10 - Gospel Witness in Public Life

Descripción

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.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de NHPBC Sermons!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

208 episodios

episode Imago Dei Series: Conscience - Moral Responsibility artwork

Imago Dei Series: Conscience - Moral Responsibility

Your conscience can be loud and still be off. We start in Romans 2 with that unsettling idea that even people without the written law have an inner witness that can accuse or excuse them, then we ask the question most of us avoid: should we trust that inner voice at all? We walk through five big movements that shape a biblical view of the Christian conscience. First, we define conscience as a God-given human capacity for moral judgment, tied to being made in the image of God. Then we deal with the hard reality of a seared conscience from Romans 1 and 1 Timothy 4, where repeated suppression of truth can numb your moral sensitivity. From there, we move to the hinge of the whole conversation: how the gospel of Jesus Christ cleanses an evil, accusing conscience. Hebrews shows why old sacrifices could not truly quiet guilt, and why Christ’s finished work brings real assurance instead of endless self-penance. From practical Christian living, we turn to 1 Corinthians 8 and Romans 14 to talk about disputable matters, weak and strong consciences, and how Christian freedom works in real life. We name the dangers on both sides: becoming desensitized to sin or becoming overly sensitive in ways that go beyond Scripture. Finally, we bring it into community, where love matters more than winning, and where we learn not to make our conscience the pope for others or treat other believers as obstacles to our rights. If you want a stronger, Scripture-shaped conscience and healthier conversations about gray areas, listen through to the end, then subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it.

1 de jun de 202635 min
episode Titus 2:11-15 - Looking Back and Living Now artwork

Titus 2:11-15 - Looking Back and Living Now

You can spend your whole life staring in the rearview mirror or living on promises about “someday.” Titus 2:11-15 pulls us back to something sturdier: what God has already done in Jesus Christ and what He will do when Christ appears again in glory. That past grace and future hope are not abstract doctrines for a shelf. They are fuel for the present, especially when obedience feels ordinary, slow, and costly. We walk through how the grace of God “appeared” in the incarnation, why grace is more than leniency, and how salvation reaches all kinds of people across every background and season of life. Then we slow down on verse 14: Jesus gives Himself to redeem us from lawlessness and to cleanse us, making us a people who belong to Him. Redemption means we are bought back. Cleansing means grace goes beyond forgiveness and actually washes what sin has stained. The conversation turns practical with what Titus calls the training power of grace. Grace does not excuse worldliness; it teaches us to say no to ungodliness and yes to a sensible, righteous, godly life right now. If you care about Christian sanctification, good works, and what godliness truly looks like in daily decisions, this message lays out a clear gospel order: not saved by good works, but saved for good works. If this encouraged you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it. What is one “no” you need grace to help you say this week, and what is one “yes” you want to practice?

31 de may de 202633 min
episode Titus 2:9-10 - Gospel Witness in Public Life artwork

Titus 2:9-10 - Gospel Witness in Public Life

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.

24 de may de 202635 min
episode Imago Dei Series: The Church, The Body of Image Bearers artwork

Imago Dei Series: The Church, The Body of Image Bearers

If you’ve ever felt like you should be able to grow spiritually on your own, this message will challenge you in the best way. We ask a question that quietly sits under so much Christian self improvement talk: where does the image of God actually grow? The answer is not isolation, not a private spiritual journey, and not willpower. The answer is the church, the body of Christ, where God restores his image in a people and makes Christ’s likeness visible in real human relationships. We move through five big biblical “movements” using Ephesians 2, 1 Corinthians 12, Galatians 3, Ephesians 4, and Colossians 3. You’ll hear why the cross creates a “new humanity,” why unity and diversity are God’s design, and why your gifts and presence are not optional extras but part of how the Spirit builds the whole body. We talk about the pressure of modern individualism, the quiet power of unseen faithfulness, and why the New Testament refuses to describe Christianity as a solo path. Then we get practical and personal. Corporate maturity grows as we speak the truth in love, bear one another’s burdens, and practice forgiveness patterned after Christ. Compassion, kindness, humility, patience, and love aren’t abstract virtues; they are the relational shape of sanctification. If you want spiritual growth, discipleship, and Christlikeness, you need the people sitting next to you. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who feels stuck, and leave a review to help others find the series.

18 de may de 202643 min
episode Titus 2:7-8 - Blueprint for All artwork

Titus 2:7-8 - Blueprint for All

One scandal can erase decades of influence, not because the words suddenly change, but because the gap between the message and the messenger becomes the loudest thing people hear. We start with the cautionary story of Henry Ward Beecher and then turn to Titus 2:7-8, where Paul looks Titus in the eye and raises the stakes: the gospel is not only something we believe, it is something we embody, especially when the surrounding culture is eager to dismiss Christianity as hollow talk. From there, we get painfully practical. We talk about what happens when the pulpit loses reverence, when preaching becomes a spectacle, and when shock value substitutes for careful handling of Scripture. But we do not keep it at “pastor problems.” The same warning reaches into living rooms, parking lots, workplaces, and classrooms, wherever our words about Jesus collide with impatience, gossip, hypocrisy, or hidden motives. If you have ever felt hurt by a leader whose life contradicted their teaching, or if you have felt the weight of inconsistency in your own heart, this passage names the problem without flinching. Paul gives three anchors for gospel credibility: a life marked by beautiful, visible good works; a voice shaped by integrity and dignity; and a message that is sound beyond reproach. Then we end where the hope is: Titus 2 says grace does not just save, it trains. God’s grace in Jesus Christ can open the “compartments” we would rather keep closed and bring health where there has been rot. If this helped you, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it.

17 de may de 202648 min