Salt & Light Christian Church

Living in the Spirit | Luke Edgerton | 4/26/2026

45 min · 26 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Living in the Spirit | Luke Edgerton | 4/26/2026

Descripción

This sermon explores the transformative power of the Holy Spirit versus adherence to the written law alone. Pastor Luke emphasizes that the true gospel of Jesus Christ is under constant threat from false gospels that place other agendas before Christ himself. He contrasts the Old Covenant (God with us) and the New Covenant (God in us through the Holy Spirit), explaining that following God's commands without the empowerment of the Holy Spirit leads to death, but the Spirit brings life and freedom. The message calls believers to live as "letters from Christ" - their lives serving as recommendations of God's character rather than relying on mere words or documentation. The sermon concludes with a powerful reminder that where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom, and encourages believers to open themselves fully to the Holy Spirit's presence and power. Key Points: -The true gospel is the gospel of Christ alone; any word placed before "gospel" creates a false gospel that dilutes Christ's power -The prosperity gospel prioritizes God's provision over God's revelation in Jesus -The social justice gospel prioritizes equity over eternity -Both forms of the gospel - incentivizing (you need a Savior) and liberating (you have a Savior) - must be shared together -Christians must speak "in Christ" from their redeemed identity, not from flesh or negativity -Peddlers of God's Word use it as a commodity to be sold; people of the Word use it as a message to be told -Our lives should be "deliverable letters from Christ" - living recommendations of God's character -The letter kills, but the Spirit gives life; we cannot follow God's commands without the Holy Spirit's help -Understanding Scripture is not a prerequisite for obeying it; obedience often leads to understanding -The Old Covenant was God with His people; the New Covenant is God in His people through the Holy Spirit -Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom; where He is not, there is no freedom -We must not resist the Holy Spirit out of fear or unfamiliarity Scripture Reference: -2 Corinthians 2:12-13 -2 Corinthians 3:1-18 (primary focus) -Galatians 1:6-9 -Romans 7:6 -1 Samuel 16 (referenced regarding the Spirit departing Saul and rushing upon David)

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Salt & Light Christian Church!

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

84 episodios

episode Waging War in the Spiritual Realm artwork

Waging War in the Spiritual Realm

Sermon Summary: This sermon explores the spiritual warfare that Christians face, emphasizing that our battle is not against flesh and blood but against spiritual forces in heavenly places. Pastor Luke teaches that while we live in physical bodies, we do not wage war according to the flesh but through divine power accessed via prayer, fasting, worship, and Scripture. The message addresses how demonic strongholds—including the occult, the sexual reorientation revolution, and false religions—affect believers through spirits of rejection, orphanhood, and betrayal. The sermon emphasizes that God's divine power, not human willpower, is necessary to overcome these spiritual battles. It concludes with a powerful reminder that Christians must identify themselves according to God's Word rather than the enemy's accusations, loving people (the hardware) while hating the evil ideologies (the software) that bind them. Key Points: -The battle for Christians is not against what is seen but against unseen spiritual forces and authorities -Trauma creates opportunities for demonic spirits (orphan spirit, rejection, betrayal) to influence and complicate lives -Divine power is accessed through prayer, fasting, worship, and Scripture study—not through human willpower alone -Spiritual weapons include the Bible, prayer, faith, and the power of the Holy Spirit -Three major strongholds in modern culture: the occult, the sexual reorientation revolution, and world religions -Every person bears the image of God (Imago Dei) regardless of their salvation status -Christians must "love the hardware, hate the software"—love the person but hate the evil ideology -Arguments and lofty opinions (like Calvinism, Dispensationalism, Cessationism) must stand up to Scripture -Authority in ministry is given by God for building up and empowering others, not overpowering them -Substance trumps appearance and delivery style in ministry -Christians should identify themselves according to what God says about them, not what the devil says Scripture Reference: -2 Corinthians 10:1-17 (primary passage) -Ephesians 6:12 -Joel 2:32 -Ephesians 6:17 -Galatians 1 -Psalm 139:14 -Jeremiah 1:5 -Proverbs 6:16-19 -Proverbs 8:13 -John 3:16

7 de jun de 202649 min
episode Testing God's Currency | Luke Edgerton | 5/31/2026 artwork

Testing God's Currency | Luke Edgerton | 5/31/2026

Sermon Summary: This sermon challenges believers to understand that God's currency is trust, not the American dollar. Drawing from 2 Corinthians 8-9, the pastor confronts both the prosperity gospel and the poverty gospel as lies, teaching instead that God invites us to test Him specifically in the area of finances. The message emphasizes that generosity flows from understanding how much God has given us in Christ, and that Christians should give their first fruits to God—not reluctantly or under compulsion, but as an act of worship. The sermon calls believers to move from being consumers to contributors by trusting God with every area of life, including money, and challenges the congregation to increase their giving by one percentage point to test God's faithfulness in provision. Key Points: -God's currency is trust, not the American dollar; promises are appropriated by faith, not automatically received -The Macedonian churches gave generously out of their poverty because they understood the gift of Jesus Christ -Joy does not come from a full bank account but from the salvation found in Jesus -Comparison with others leads to chronic disappointment; focus on what God has provided for you -Giving yourself first to the Lord aligns everything else in proper order -The poverty gospel is as false as the prosperity gospel; God doesn't punish people by providing wealth -Money is a tool to accomplish greater goals, not the goal itself; when money becomes the goal, it becomes our god -If you're living paycheck to paycheck, you likely have a spending problem, not an income problem -Malachi 3:10 is the only place where God invites us to test Him—specifically regarding financial stewardship -How you give to God is how God gives to you; whoever sows sparingly reaps sparingly -God loves a cheerful giver, not one who gives reluctantly or under compulsion -When Jesus is Lord of your life, He must be Lord of your finances too -Everything the Father has is available to us, but must be received by faith Scripture Reference: -2 Corinthians 8:1-15 -2 Corinthians 9:1-15 -Malachi 3:10 -Matthew 6:24 -Proverbs 3:9-10 -James 4:11 -Luke (reference to Jesus teaching about faithfulness with little leading to more)

31 de may de 202652 min
episode Receiving God's Correction with Godly Grief | Drew Gessner | 5/24/2026 artwork

Receiving God's Correction with Godly Grief | Drew Gessner | 5/24/2026

Sermon Summary: This sermon explores the Apostle Paul's second letter to the Corinthians, focusing on how believers should receive correction from God. The central message emphasizes that God's correction comes from a place of fatherly love, not condemnation. Drew introduces the concept of "godly grief" versus "worldly grief," explaining that godly grief leads to repentance and life, while worldly grief leads to death. Using the acronym FRAME (Fear of God, Resentment toward sin, Authenticity, Motivation, Enlightenment), the sermon provides a practical framework for responding to God's correction. The ultimate goal is not punishment but transformation, leading to confidence in our relationship with God and assurance that we will continue to choose Him. The sermon concludes with the encouraging truth that repentance brings joy and confidence, not shame, and that God's promises to dwell with us, welcome us, and be our Father remain constant regardless of our sin. Key Points: -God promises to dwell with us, welcome us, and be our Father before calling us to repentance -God's love does not require perfection, but our love for God does require repentance -Spiritual guides should be morally upright, genuinely caring, and bold enough to speak truth -Godly grief leads to repentance and life, while worldly grief leads to death -The FRAME acronym: Fear of God, Resentment toward sin, Authenticity, Motivation, Enlightenment -Paul's correction was motivated by love for the Corinthians' salvation, not desire for punishment -Repentance reveals our earnestness to follow God to ourselves, building internal confidence -True confidence comes from knowing we will choose God, not from self-determination alone -God's correction should be received with joy because it leads to transformation and abundant life Scripture Reference: -2 Corinthians 6:16-18 -2 Corinthians 7:1-16 -The parable of the Prodigal Son (referenced) -The story of the Rich Young Ruler (referenced)

24 de may de 202639 min
episode Hearing God's Voice | Luke Edgerton | 5/17/2026 artwork

Hearing God's Voice | Luke Edgerton | 5/17/2026

Sermon Summary: This sermon from 2 Corinthians 6 challenges believers to not receive God's grace in vain but to actively respond to it. Pastor Luke emphasizes that "now is the day of salvation" and believers should not wait for perfect circumstances to follow Jesus. The central message focuses on the necessity of the Holy Spirit being at the center of Christian life and ministry. Using Paul's resume of suffering and endurance, the pastor illustrates that effective ministry requires the power of the Holy Spirit, not human strength alone. The sermon culminates in a powerful teaching about how Christians are the temple of God, and therefore God desires to speak to them—but the noise of life and competing voices often drown out His voice. Believers must quiet the background noise and create space to hear God speak in His temple. Key Points: -We receive God's grace in vain when we do nothing with it—when we don't give it, rely on it, or thank God for it -Today is the day of salvation; there are no prerequisites or perfect circumstances required to come to Jesus -Obstacles like membership, tithing, dress code, marital status, or income level should never prevent someone from placing faith in Christ -Paul's ministry resume centered on the Holy Spirit, not his credentials or personal strength -Personal change precedes circumstantial change in the Christian life -The Holy Spirit must be in the middle of our lives, marriages, businesses, and churches -A life of godliness without the Holy Spirit is impossible—it's wishful thinking -Receiving the gift of the Holy Spirit at baptism is different from yielding to the Holy Spirit daily -We are the temple of the living God; we don't go to church, we show up as church -God speaks where He dwells, and He has chosen to dwell in believers -God will never contradict His written Word when speaking to us -The noise of the enemy and competing voices in our lives prevent us from hearing God's voice -God doesn't raise His voice; we must get quiet to hear Him -We cannot treat our temple like an apartment complex with multiple voices—only God's voice belongs there Scripture Reference: -2 Corinthians 6:1-18 (primary text) -Isaiah 49:8 (quoted in verse 2) -Isaiah 59:19 (about the Spirit raising a standard against the enemy) -Acts 18 (story of Apollos learning about the Holy Spirit) -Psalm 55:1-3 (about the noise of the enemy) -Isaiah 52:11, Ezekiel 20, 2 Samuel 7, Isaiah 43 (Old Testament references in closing verses)

17 de may de 202644 min
episode Living in the Tent While Waiting for Home | Luke Edgerton | 5/10/2026 artwork

Living in the Tent While Waiting for Home | Luke Edgerton | 5/10/2026

Sermon Summary: This sermon from 2 Corinthians 5 explores the tension Christians experience living in temporary, earthly bodies while awaiting their eternal dwelling with God. The pastor emphasizes that believers can have confidence and certainty about eternity through the guarantee of the Holy Spirit. The message challenges Christians to shift their focus from the seen realm to the unseen realm, walking by faith rather than sight. Central themes include the fear of the Lord as proper reverence and submission rather than mere respect, the importance of pleasing God as our primary aim, and the transformative power of being "in Christ" as a new creation. The sermon culminates in explaining double imputation—Christ's righteousness credited to believers while their sin was imputed to Him—and emphasizes that salvation must be received by faith, not earned through works. Key Points: -Life in this world is like living in a tent while waiting for a permanent home in eternity -Christians can know with certainty about their eternal future through the Holy Spirit as God's guarantee -We must walk by faith, not by sight, trusting in what we cannot see rather than what we can control -The fear of the Lord is genuine fear and submission to God's authority, not merely respect or honor -Our primary aim should be to please God in everything we do -All people will appear before the judgment seat of Christ and be evaluated for what was done in the body -Who we fear is who we aim to please—fearing God leads to worshiping Him, fearing anything else is idolatry -God evaluates the condition of the heart, not outward appearances or achievements -The love of Christ should control us, not fear of man, pursuit of power, or self-preservation -Being "in Christ" makes us new creations—the emphasis is on being IN CHRIST specifically, not any other religious system -Double imputation means Christ's righteousness is credited to our account while our sin was imputed to Him -Salvation must be received by faith, like receiving a gift, not earned through works Scripture Reference: -2 Corinthians 5:1-21 (primary passage) -2 Corinthians 4:18 -Hebrews (reference to faith pleasing God) -1 Samuel 15-16 (God looking at the heart when choosing David as king)

10 de may de 202646 min