St. Mary Magdalene Orthodox Church Bible Study

June 21st, 2026: Celebrate God, Not Pride

16 min · 21. juni 2026
episode June 21st, 2026: Celebrate God, Not Pride cover

Description

In this sermon, Fr. Stephen Osburn reflects on Matthew 6 and the command to “seek first the Kingdom of God.” The Gospel teaches that the heart cannot serve two masters. Orthodox Christianity understands this as a direct call to turn away from self-rule and place God at the center of life. This sermon asks a simple but serious question: are we seeking God first, or are we still trying to serve ourselves? The sermon explains the Lord’s teaching about the sound eye, the divided heart, and the danger of being ruled by pride, desire, and comfort. The Orthodox Church teaches that the spiritual life is not built on affirming every feeling or following every desire. It is built on repentance, prayer, fasting, obedience, worship, and healing. When the self becomes the center, darkness spreads, but when God becomes the center, the whole life begins to be filled with light. This matters because the Gospel is not only about what we believe in our minds. It is about how we live each day. Orthodox Christians are called to shape their homes, schedules, habits, and choices around the life of the Church. Coming to services, praying at home, fasting, confessing sins, and speaking openly about the faith are not extra religious activities. They are part of learning to seek first the Kingdom. This sermon invites listeners to think honestly about what is ruling their hearts. The path of salvation begins with a real turn toward God, even if that first step feels small. The spiritual life is a lifelong process, but it must begin today. The Orthodox Church offers a life of repentance, healing, and communion with God for all who are willing to come and see.

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episode June 21st, 2026: Celebrate God, Not Pride artwork

June 21st, 2026: Celebrate God, Not Pride

In this sermon, Fr. Stephen Osburn reflects on Matthew 6 and the command to “seek first the Kingdom of God.” The Gospel teaches that the heart cannot serve two masters. Orthodox Christianity understands this as a direct call to turn away from self-rule and place God at the center of life. This sermon asks a simple but serious question: are we seeking God first, or are we still trying to serve ourselves? The sermon explains the Lord’s teaching about the sound eye, the divided heart, and the danger of being ruled by pride, desire, and comfort. The Orthodox Church teaches that the spiritual life is not built on affirming every feeling or following every desire. It is built on repentance, prayer, fasting, obedience, worship, and healing. When the self becomes the center, darkness spreads, but when God becomes the center, the whole life begins to be filled with light. This matters because the Gospel is not only about what we believe in our minds. It is about how we live each day. Orthodox Christians are called to shape their homes, schedules, habits, and choices around the life of the Church. Coming to services, praying at home, fasting, confessing sins, and speaking openly about the faith are not extra religious activities. They are part of learning to seek first the Kingdom. This sermon invites listeners to think honestly about what is ruling their hearts. The path of salvation begins with a real turn toward God, even if that first step feels small. The spiritual life is a lifelong process, but it must begin today. The Orthodox Church offers a life of repentance, healing, and communion with God for all who are willing to come and see.

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episode June 14th, 2026: The Parish Where Saints Are Formed artwork

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