The Gospel Ship
In this sermon on Matthew 5:33–37 and Exodus 20:7, Reverend Jack Hamilton explains what it means to take the Lord’s name in vain and the seriousness of our words. He contrasts the Pharisees’ shallow legalism with Christ’s deeper teaching that our speech must be truthful and reverent. Drawing from Scripture—including Jesus before the high priest, Paul’s solemn appeals to God, and even God Himself swearing by His own name—Hamilton shows that legitimate oaths have biblical precedent, but careless or trivial swearing profanes God’s holiness. He emphasizes that discipleship requires integrity: our “yes” must mean yes and our “no,” no. From James’ warning about the untamable tongue to the rampant profanity in modern culture, Hamilton warns believers to guard their lips, keep their promises, and use words to bless, not curse. Key Themes: • The Third Commandment: not taking God’s name in vain • The difference between Pharisees’ outward legalism and true discipleship • Legitimate biblical oaths vs. trivial swearing • Jesus’ teaching: let your yes be yes, and no be no • Paul’s appeals to God as witness • God and angels swearing by His own name (Hebrews 6; Revelation 10) • The destructive power of the tongue (James 3) • Integrity in promises, vows, and daily speech • Modern profanity and careless language as dishonoring to God • True discipleship: relationship with Christ, not just religion
12 episodios
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