Pettisville Missionary Church
Pastor Kent preaches from Matthew 5:21-30, using two Old Testament illustrations to set up the text: Cain's murder of Abel (rooted in jealousy and unchecked anger) and David's adultery with Bathsheba (rooted in an unchecked gaze that spiraled into covetousness, deceit, and murder). Both stories show how sin escalates when left unaddressed at the heart level. He draws three main points from Jesus's teaching: 1. Anger and lust are matters of the heart, not circumstance. Since everyone carries a sin nature inherited from Adam, the heart is naturally selfish and self-centered. That selfishness is the root from which both anger and lust grow. 2. These sins are a big deal to God, even though our culture (and at times the church) treats them as minor or normal. Jesus raises the bar beyond the letter of the law ("do not commit adultery") to the internal posture of the heart: a lingering, cherished gaze, not a first glance, constitutes adultery in God's eyes. Kent clarifies this isn't about noticing beauty but about the deliberate "second look." 3. Deal with anger and lust aggressively. Jesus's language about plucking out an eye or cutting off a hand is hyperbole meant to jolt us into serious action, not literal self-harm (he references Origen's historical self-mutilation as a cautionary example that missed the point, since the issue is the heart, not the body). Practical steps include cutting out certain media, using accountability software, or stepping back from environments that fuel temptation.
51 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Pettisville Missionary Church!