Kingdom Abide

True Loyalty and the Offense Trap

38 min · 1. maj 2026
episode True Loyalty and the Offense Trap cover

Description

We often define friendship by loyalty—but is it just loyalty at our convenience? In Part 9 of our series on Sin, we tackle the difficult dynamic of responding to other people's brokenness. When a friend is hurting or "missing the mark of identity," do we join them in their anger and "talk trash," or do we love them enough to point them back to reality? We dive into the difference between being an "enabler" of dislocation and being a truly loving friend who offers a safe place for relocation.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Kingdom Abide community!

Get Started

2 months for 19 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

25 episodes

episode Moving Beyond Behavior Modification artwork

Moving Beyond Behavior Modification

If sin is essentially the "fruit" of living in a dislocated reality, how do we practically stay "located" in the Father? In this episode, we explore the connection between our spiritual fruit and the ancient practice of Shabbat (Sabbath). We discuss how Galatians 5 provides a summary of humanity: showing that we will inevitably bear fruit—either of the flesh or of the Spirit—depending on where we are "walking." Rather than trying to manually fix our behavior (or "staple fruit" to a dead tree), we look at Sabbath as the design-level solution for maintaining union. By implementing a "stop-work order" for our bodies and minds, we create a sanctuary in time where we can disconnect from the performance-driven world and reconnect with our identity as the Beloved.

23. apr. 202643 min
episode The Faithfulness of The Son (Sin Part 6) artwork

The Faithfulness of The Son (Sin Part 6)

In this episode, we dive into one of the most significant translation shifts in the New Testament: the difference between having "faith in Jesus" and living by the "faith of Jesus." We explore how our justification isn't rooted in our ability to believe or our performance of trust, but in the objective faithfulness of Christ Himself. If our standing with God is based on His actions rather than ours, how does that change the way we view sin and its consequences? We discuss how "missing the mark" isn't a matter of varying degrees of "badness," but a singular issue of dislocation from our Father as well as our true identity. Whether the fruit is a minor offense or a major failure, the root is the same: a lack of union and a failure to abide.

12. apr. 202623 min