Reformation AM Podcast

Session 3 - The Depth of Christ

1 h 19 min · 26 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Session 3 - The Depth of Christ

Descripción

This powerful teaching challenges us to reconsider what spiritual depth truly means. Drawing from Ephesians 3:17-19, we explore the four dimensions of Christ's love: breadth, length, depth, and height. While breadth represents our foundation and length our boundaries, depth requires something counterintuitive—going down before we can go up. The message confronts our natural desire for constant elevation and recognition, reminding us that true spiritual maturity comes through humility, suffering, and even failure. We learn that deep calling unto deep means embracing seasons of abasement, where God strips away our pride and self-sufficiency. The teaching uses vivid examples—from believers who've struggled with addiction to leaders who've faced their own inadequacies when confronting demonic forces. What emerges is a liberating truth: our testimonies of falling and rising give us authentic authority to minister to others. The depth we gain through valleys, failures, and seasons of hiddenness becomes the very foundation for the heights God wants to take us to. This isn't about celebrating failure, but recognizing that God uses our lowest moments to develop the character and compassion necessary for true kingdom impact. When we stop running from the basement seasons and instead allow God to do deep work in us, we develop roots that cannot be shaken and a testimony that can genuinely help others find freedom.

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28 episodios

episode Session 2 - The Length of Christ artwork

Session 2 - The Length of Christ

This teaching challenges us to examine the spiritual boundaries God has established in our lives. Drawing from Zechariah 2, Job 24, and 2 Corinthians 10, we're confronted with a powerful truth: God has set specific measures, bounds, and landmarks for each of us. The message reveals that the length of our spiritual influence must match the breadth of our foundation—we cannot extend our reach beyond what God has built within us. Like the New Jerusalem described in Revelation 21, our spiritual dimensions must be balanced and equal. This isn't about limitation, but about divine order and effectiveness. When we try to operate beyond our God-given boundaries—whether in ministry, relationships, or calling—we lose our authority and influence. We may preach, but we cannot rule outside our assigned territory. The teaching reminds us that many are called, but few are chosen, and the difference lies in our willingness to be seasoned, corrected, and developed within the bounds God has set. Our habitation matters eternally—it's where our angels work, where our prayers have authority, and where we're called to establish kingdom rule. The question we must ask ourselves is: Are we content with what God has given us, or are we constantly comparing ourselves to others and stretching beyond our measure?

26 de jun de 20261 h 34 min
episode Session 3 - The Depth of Christ artwork

Session 3 - The Depth of Christ

This powerful teaching challenges us to reconsider what spiritual depth truly means. Drawing from Ephesians 3:17-19, we explore the four dimensions of Christ's love: breadth, length, depth, and height. While breadth represents our foundation and length our boundaries, depth requires something counterintuitive—going down before we can go up. The message confronts our natural desire for constant elevation and recognition, reminding us that true spiritual maturity comes through humility, suffering, and even failure. We learn that deep calling unto deep means embracing seasons of abasement, where God strips away our pride and self-sufficiency. The teaching uses vivid examples—from believers who've struggled with addiction to leaders who've faced their own inadequacies when confronting demonic forces. What emerges is a liberating truth: our testimonies of falling and rising give us authentic authority to minister to others. The depth we gain through valleys, failures, and seasons of hiddenness becomes the very foundation for the heights God wants to take us to. This isn't about celebrating failure, but recognizing that God uses our lowest moments to develop the character and compassion necessary for true kingdom impact. When we stop running from the basement seasons and instead allow God to do deep work in us, we develop roots that cannot be shaken and a testimony that can genuinely help others find freedom.

26 de jun de 20261 h 19 min
episode MySpace artwork

MySpace

This powerful message takes us on a journey through John 1:1-14, exploring the profound mystery of the Word becoming flesh and dwelling among us. We discover that God didn't just create us and leave us to figure things out on our own. Instead, He entered our space, put on human limitations, and walked through every struggle, temptation, and challenge we face. The message draws a compelling parallel between how parents must enter their children's world to truly understand them, and how God descended into our reality through Jesus Christ. We're challenged to examine our own spaces, the areas of our lives where we've been given authority, and ask ourselves whether we're truly allowing God to do the work of deliverance in those places. The sermon confronts us with an uncomfortable truth: many of us have been avoiding the pain of true deliverance, choosing instead to manage our problems rather than deal with them. Like a child being born, deliverance is traumatic but necessary. We cannot experience new life without going through the difficult process of letting go of what's been holding us back. The question we must answer is whether we're willing to stop running from our issues and instead embrace the transformative work God wants to do in us.

21 de jun de 20261 h 6 min
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Who’s Telling The Truth?

In a world saturated with conflicting voices and competing truths, we're challenged to examine whose truth we're actually following. Drawing from 2 Timothy 4, this message confronts us with an uncomfortable reality: false teachers may use the same Christian vocabulary we do, but they're operating from an entirely different dictionary. The question isn't just about identifying false teaching out there, but about examining the dictionary of our own hearts. What is the source of the meanings we assign to our beliefs? Are we allowing our preferences, experiences, and personal narratives to become law in our lives, or are we submitting to God's truth? The message walks us through three essential components of sound ministry: convince, rebuke, and exhort. To convince means giving someone a reason to believe, standing as a herald who speaks on behalf of the King. But we can only share from the fruit of our own lives, from what God has actually done in us and what we've witnessed Him do in others. Rebuking isn't about attacking but about warning with wisdom and humility, approaching others as family. And exhortation means coming alongside someone with encouragement, especially after revealing hard truths. The sobering reality is that people will heap up teachers who tell them what their itching ears want to hear, elevating voices that affirm their desires rather than challenge their hearts. But Jesus himself is personified as Truth, and His truth doesn't just reveal facts, it reveals context, heart posture, and hidden agendas. When we live in truth, we set a tone that protects us and others from stumbling blocks. The call is clear: endure sound doctrine, endure afflictions, and do the work of an evangelist both publicly and privately, ensuring that what happens behind closed doors matches what people see in front of them.

14 de jun de 20261 h 20 min
episode Have You Ever Been Whooped By God? artwork

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?

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