Heed The Word

Justice, Mercy, And Faith Over Empty Religion

25 min · 7. mai 2026
episode Justice, Mercy, And Faith Over Empty Religion cover

Beskrivelse

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2020122/fan_mail/new] What if looking righteous is the very thing keeping you from being changed? We take a hard look at Jesus’ scathing words to the Pharisees and uncover why the “weightier matters”—justice, mercy, and faith—are the true markers of a life anchored in God. From tithing spices to whitewashed tombs, we unpack how easy it is to major in minors, curate a spotless image, and miss the one question that matters: does God have your heart. We walk through the vivid metaphors in Matthew 23 and then widen the lens with Romans 1–2. Creation points to God, conscience bears witness, and no pedigree can shield us from truth. The challenge is sharp but freeing: hypocrisy isn’t failing the standard; it’s pretending you don’t. Real obedience flows from the inside out, where mercy outweighs image, justice guides decisions, and faith breaks our addiction to approval. Along the way, we name practical signs of drift—harsh judgment, performative spirituality, and idolizing religious routines—and offer simple steps to return to first love. There’s hope threaded through the warning. Many who once resisted later believed, and that same grace is open now. We point to the daily practices that keep the heart soft: honest confession, quick forgiveness, humble self-examination, and a steady gaze on Jesus rather than the crowd. If you’re ready to trade performance for presence, and image for integrity, this conversation will help you realign your soul around what God values most. If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs the encouragement, and leave a review so more listeners can discover these teachings. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2020122/support]

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Alle episoder

113 Episoder

episode The Cross, Compassion, And The Cost Of Our Salvation cover

The Cross, Compassion, And The Cost Of Our Salvation

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2020122/fan_mail/new] What looks like weakness from the crowd’s view is actually the fiercest kind of strength. We walk through Luke 23 with clear eyes: a governor who admits he finds no fault, soldiers who mock, leaders who demand a sign, and a Savior who refuses the shortcut. The tension peaks at a single demand—“Save yourself”—and the gospel’s answer is stunning. If Jesus comes down, love loses. If he stays, love wins. I take you from the judgment seat to the hill called Golgotha, pausing with Simon of Cyrene as he’s pulled into the story by a Roman command and changed by proximity to Jesus. We listen to the “Daughters of Jerusalem” warning, a prophecy that lands within a generation. We linger where the nails land, not for spectacle, but to see what love does under pressure: “Father, forgive them.” That prayer is not wishful thinking; it’s answered as thousands repent in the early church. Along the way, we reckon with Pilate’s claim to power and Jesus’ reply that authority is given from above. Suffering is not random. God weaves purpose into pain, even when the crowd can only see failure. This conversation is pastoral and practical. We speak to shame and failure with Romans 5:8—love demonstrated, not just declared. We ask what forgiveness looks like when words cut and actions wound. We admit the economy is rough, work is thin, and fear is loud, yet we anchor in a God who counts hairs and keeps promises. The cross becomes both rescue and roadmap: choose obedience over optics, mercy over mockery, endurance over ease. If you’re hurting, doubting, or just tired, consider the love that would not come down so you could rise. If this spoke to you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review to help others find it. Your voice helps spread good news where it’s needed most. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2020122/support]

31. mai 202626 min
episode Pilate’s Choice cover

Pilate’s Choice

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2020122/fan_mail/new] A crowd demands Barabbas, Pilate calls Jesus innocent, and then caves to the loudest voices. We walk through Luke 23 with clear eyes, exploring how fear of man, hunger for approval, and the love of ease can bend a conscience until justice breaks. Along the way, we hold up a mirror: where are we trading what is right for what is easy, and what happens to our souls when we do? We also get practical about unity. If Herod and Pilate can find common cause to do harm, why can’t believers unite to do good? We talk about essentials that anchor our faith, the liberty that lets us differ without division, and the quiet power of churches serving side by side. From worship styles to ministry methods, we draw a line between preferences and the gospel, and we invite listeners to cross old fences for the sake of real need. Then we pivot to the heart-level fight James names so well: friendship with the world versus friendship with God. Submission is not a slogan; it is a path. Resist the devil by first bowing to Christ. Let grief over sin soften you, and watch how God lifts the humble. If your conscience has been noisy lately, this conversation points you back to the still small voice that Pilate ignored—and the grace that can steady your steps when the crowd starts shouting. If this resonated, share it with a friend, subscribe for future teachings, and leave a rating so others can find the show. Your support helps more people hear the gospel and learn to stand with courage and kindness. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2020122/support]

28. mai 202625 min
episode Pilate, Herod, And The Kingdom Not Of This World cover

Pilate, Herod, And The Kingdom Not Of This World

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2020122/fan_mail/new] A night of mockery gives way to a morning of politics as Jesus is pressed by religious leaders, examined by Pilate, and paraded before Herod—yet he never trades truth for theater. We walk through Luke 22–23 to see how false charges morph from blasphemy to treason, why Pilate’s tangled history leaves him cautious yet convinced of Jesus’ innocence, and how Herod’s craving for a miracle ends in contempt when Jesus refuses to perform. Along the way, we face the piercing line: “My kingdom is not of this world,” a claim that reframes power, justice, and loyalty. We dig into the backstory of Pilate’s strained rule—provocations in Jerusalem, bloodshed over an aqueduct, and pressure from Rome—that makes the Passover crowd a volatile backdrop. Then we trace the leaders’ hypocrisy as they avoid ritual defilement while plotting an unjust death, straining gnats and swallowing camels. The conversation turns to the deeper question of unity: why sworn enemies can unite to do harm while believers splinter over minor differences, and what it would look like to pursue unity in the essentials—Christ’s deity, the authority of Scripture, the cross and resurrection, and salvation by grace through faith—so we can meet real needs together. This is a story about truth standing steady in a storm of ambition, fear, and pride. It’s also a challenge to us to render to Caesar without worshiping Caesar, to choose integrity over optics, and to link arms across faithful churches for the good of our communities. Listen, reflect, and share your takeaways—then subscribe, leave a rating, and pass this along to a friend who cares about unity and the gospel’s public witness. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2020122/support]

24. mai 202626 min
episode Sifted And Strengthened cover

Sifted And Strengthened

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2020122/fan_mail/new] The room is ready, the cup is poured, and the question hangs in the air: what does greatness look like when the King kneels with a towel? Walking through Luke 22, we follow Jesus from a house filled with the aroma of worship to a table set for flawed friends—a betrayer, a denier, a doubter—whom He still calls family. Pastor Ken draws a sharp line between sifting that strengthens and compromise that corrodes, showing how small, unattended choices can open the door to larger failures, and how obedience—no matter how ordinary—never goes to waste. We step into the details of divine providence as Jesus directs the disciples to a man carrying water and an upper room prepared at just the right time. That precision reminds us that He knows our fears, our secrets, and our needs—and loves us anyway. At the table, the Passover reaches its fulfillment as Christ offers His body and blood, inaugurating the new covenant where forgiveness rests not on our merit but on His mercy. Even as betrayal sits within arm’s reach, Jesus extends compassion and a final chance to turn back, revealing a heart that longs to restore rather than condemn. When the conversation drifts into status and rank, Jesus answers by washing feet. Greatness in His kingdom moves from platform to posture, from acclaim to service. We explore what it means to trade comparison for calling and to find blessing not in knowing the right words but in doing the humble work love requires. If you’ve felt the sting of sifting or the pull of compromise, this message points you to the steady ground of worship, obedience, and grace. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs courage today, and leave a review to help others find these teachings. What part stayed with you—the table, the cup, or the towel? Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2020122/support]

21. mai 202624 min
episode When The World Shakes, Hold Fast To Jesus cover

When The World Shakes, Hold Fast To Jesus

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2020122/fan_mail/new] What if the loudest headlines are not the most important signals? We walk through Luke 21 and 2 Thessalonians to face wars, disasters, and deception with clear minds and steady hearts. Instead of panic, Jesus gives a pattern: love the truth, refuse fear, and treat pressure as an occasion for testimony. That shift changes how we read the news, handle conflict, and speak when called to give an account. We unpack the tension at the center of Jesus’ words: some will face death, yet not a hair of your head shall be lost. The key is eternal perspective. When the Spirit supplies wisdom in the moment, courage isn’t bravado; it’s trust. We look at the historical fall of Jerusalem, why Jesus told people to flee, and how prophetic warnings operated as mercy that saved lives. The tragic siege under Titus, the scattering, and the long trampling by Gentiles set a sober backdrop for hope that does not disappoint. We also wrestle with the times of the Gentiles, the significance of 1967, and why we avoid dogmatic timelines while holding fast to a clear mission: the gospel of the kingdom must reach all nations. Along the way, we explore the meaning of by patience possess your souls, showing how cheerful, enduring faith becomes the way we discover our truest selves in Christ. When love grows cold around us, we heat our hearts with Scripture, prayer, and obedience, trusting that God comforts and establishes us in every good word and work. If this conversation steadied your faith or sparked new questions, share it with a friend, subscribe for more verse-by-verse teaching, and leave a review to help others find the message. Your voice helps spread the word and strengthen the church. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2020122/support]

17. mai 202626 min