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Galatians 6:11-18

1 h 0 min · 5 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio Galatians 6:11-18

Descripción

Pastor Jeff closes the Galatians series covering 6:11-18. The large handwriting in verse 11 most likely reflects a physical infirmity, probably poor eyesight, not a rhetorical device. Two commonly cited Greek parallels for the "gouge out your eyes" idiom in 4:15 being a standard expression turned out to be unverifiable, a lesson in source checking that applies equally to ancient commentators and modern AI. The Judaizers' real motivations were pride and fear of Jewish persecution, not genuine concern for the Galatians. Paul's counter is to boast only in the cross, through which the believer is crucified to the world and the world to him. The six-point rule of verses 14-15 defines the standard: boast in the cross, trust Christ alone, submit to him as Lord, add no personal merit, recognize no racial barrier, and understand that only new creation status matters. The "Israel of God" in verse 16 is best read as a separate group from the church receiving a parallel blessing, not an equation of the two. Paul closes calling the Galatians brothers, bearing the marks of persecution as his credentials, and sealing everything with Amen.

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39 episodios

episode Hosea 1 artwork

Hosea 1

Pastor Jeff opens a new series on the minor prophets beginning with Hosea 1. The prophet ministered to the northern kingdom of Israel in its final decades before the Assyrian exile of 722 BC, a period of outward prosperity under Jeroboam II that masked deep spiritual corruption, pagan syncretism, and elite abuse of the poor. Yahweh commands Hosea to marry Gomer, a woman of harlotry, as a living metaphor for Israel's unfaithfulness to her covenant husband. Their three children are given prophetic names: Jezreel, signaling judgment on the house of Jehu in the valley where that dynasty seized power through bloodshed; Lo-Ruchamah, meaning no mercy, pointing to the withdrawal of Yahweh's compassion from Israel while Judah is spared; and Lo-Ami, not my people, the most shocking declaration of all, that genetic heritage alone does not make someone a child of God. Yet judgment is not the final word. Verse 10 promises that in the same land where they were disowned, a future faithful Israel will be called children of the living God, reunited under one head, fulfilled ultimately in Christ.

12 de jul de 20261 h 0 min
episode Galatians 6:11-18 artwork

Galatians 6:11-18

Pastor Jeff closes the Galatians series covering 6:11-18. The large handwriting in verse 11 most likely reflects a physical infirmity, probably poor eyesight, not a rhetorical device. Two commonly cited Greek parallels for the "gouge out your eyes" idiom in 4:15 being a standard expression turned out to be unverifiable, a lesson in source checking that applies equally to ancient commentators and modern AI. The Judaizers' real motivations were pride and fear of Jewish persecution, not genuine concern for the Galatians. Paul's counter is to boast only in the cross, through which the believer is crucified to the world and the world to him. The six-point rule of verses 14-15 defines the standard: boast in the cross, trust Christ alone, submit to him as Lord, add no personal merit, recognize no racial barrier, and understand that only new creation status matters. The "Israel of God" in verse 16 is best read as a separate group from the church receiving a parallel blessing, not an equation of the two. Paul closes calling the Galatians brothers, bearing the marks of persecution as his credentials, and sealing everything with Amen.

5 de jul de 20261 h 0 min
episode Galatians 5:26-6:10 artwork

Galatians 5:26-6:10

Pastor Jeff covers Galatians 5:26-6:10, where Paul gives practical instruction flowing from life in the Spirit. Believers should avoid conceit, provocation, and envy, and when a brother falls into sin, restore him gently, a process of mending, not a moment, with the warning that the restorer himself remains vulnerable to temptation. Bearing one another's burdens, financial, emotional, or spiritual, fulfills the law of Christ, the command to love sacrificially as he loved us. Self-examination matters more than comparison to others, since each person bears his own load and will answer individually before God. Paul closes with the sowing principle: sowing to the flesh reaps corruption, sowing to the Spirit reaps eternal life, urging believers not to grow weary in doing good, especially toward fellow believers, while never losing sight that the greatest good for an unbeliever is the gospel itself.

28 de jun de 20261 h 0 min
episode Galatians 5:13-25 artwork

Galatians 5:13-25

Pastor Jeff covers Galatians 5:13-25, addressing the opposite danger from legalism: libertinism. Christian freedom is not license for the flesh but freedom from sin's bondage to serve one another, the doulos service of a willing bondservant modeled on Christ himself. The whole law is fulfilled in loving one's neighbor, and the law still offers good instruction even though it cannot save. Paul's remedy for the flesh-versus-Spirit conflict is to walk by the Spirit, which is both an encouragement, the Spirit empowers resistance to fleshly desires, and a test, a pattern of yielding to the flesh signals one isn't walking in step with the Spirit. The works of the flesh, common and even celebrated in Greco-Roman culture, stand opposed to the fruit of the Spirit, characteristics natural to the new nature believers receive in Christ. That old nature has already been crucified; the call now is simply to keep in step with the Spirit who leads the way.

21 de jun de 20261 h 0 min
episode Galatians 5:7-15 artwork

Galatians 5:7-15

Pastor Jeff works through Galatians 5:7-15, opening with a personal running story that frames Paul's race metaphor. The Galatians were running well until the Judaizers cut them off. The Judaizers' persuasion is not from God, and Paul compares their false teaching to leaven that, left unchecked, corrupts the whole batch. Despite his concern, Paul's confidence rests in the Lord and the Spirit's guarantee, not in the Galatians themselves. His blunt condemnation of the Judaizers, including the pointed sarcasm of verse 12, gives way to a constructive answer to the question legalism raises: if the law is gone, does anything govern behavior? Paul's answer is Christian freedom rightly understood. Freedom in Christ is not license for the flesh but liberation from slavery to sin so that believers are now free to love and serve one another. The whole law is fulfilled in one command: love your neighbor as yourself.

14 de jun de 20261 h 0 min