Offense of the Gospel

Jim Leffel
Mark 2:23-3:12

The sabbath law prescribed a weekly day of rest and celebration. The purpose of the law was for our good, and was meant to be a system of values and priorities. When Jesus gleans on the Sabbath, which was allowed by the law, the religious leaders are filled with murderous rage. This is because the kind of grace that changes lives also exposes religious impotence and sick attitudes, challenges assumptions, and threatens self-justification.

Where is the Lord?

Jim Leffel
Jeremiah 2:1-28

God seeks relationships with people like a lover who pursues a loved one and like a father who cares for and protects his children. People want the blessings of God, but not God Himself. Everyone worships something (comfort, approval, control, impact, etc.). These things are unworthy and lead to emptiness. God alone is worthy of our worship.\r\n

Why the Law?

Jim Leffel
Galatians 3:19-4:7

Paul argues for the goodness of grace by explaining the purpose of God's law. The Law was used by God to diagnose our moral guilt before God, and to show what God is truly like. The Law was given temporarily for people to see their need for forgiveness through Jesus Christ. Once that happens, people have total access to God and a new reality on how to live and relate with God personally.

Common Hindrances to Prayer

Gary DeLashmutt
Galatians 3:19-4:7

Gary DeLashmutt addresses the most common reasons people find it difficult to pray: 1) feeling like an outsider; 2) feeling aversion or lacking the desire to talk to God right now; 3) feeling unworthy of God's presence due to a guilty conscience; and 4) being unwilling to listen to God. With humility and empathy, Gary explains some spiritual implications behind these common hinderances and offers solutions that are Biblical, yet often counterintuitive in the moment.

Introspection and Spiritual Living

Dennis McCallum
Hebrews 12:2

Paul argues that God will search our hearts and bring things to the light as He sees fit. Christians can find themselves in a state of morbid introspection where they think too much about themselves and focus too much on solving their own problems. There is a biblical level of introspection, but often we go above and beyond that in our conceited self focus.

When God's Commands Seem Burdensome

Gary DeLashmutt
1 John 5:1-5

Our relationship with God can be hindered when we try and earn His acceptance through our performance or obedience to His commands. Often, we try and follow His commands by our resources, leaving us alienated and forgetful of His love for us. We should cultivate focus towards His promises and ask for Jesus' help to guide us and empower us. As a result, we can have renewed awareness of God's love and an ability to rest in His grace and lean on our brothers and sisters for help in our weakness.

Why the Gospel (Part 2)

Jim Leffel
Romans 2:17-23

There are three common responses to the moral guilt we have before God. The first is to reject the standard for moral guilt, resulting in hypocrisy. The second option includes self-righteousness that sees guilt as others problems, not our own. The last option is to repent and understand that our moral guilt can be solved through God's grace through Jesus Christ. Repentance through grace allows for genuine healing, true humility, and honest transparency with our shortcomings.

Why the Gospel (Part 1)

Jim Leffel
Romans 1:16-32

All of humanity is intuitively aware of our moral guilt before God and can understand God through what has been made observable. Despite this, humanity has thrown God's direction and pursued gratifying our own agendas and pleasures. God allows for us to pursue our own course of action, but makes it possible to reconcile our relationship with Him through Jesus Christ. The gospel is the logical conclusion when we understand how far we fall short of God and are incapable of resolving the moral guilt we have because of our actions. This teaching includes a movie clip describing the complexity of life.

Jesus Heals a Paralyzed Man

Gary DeLashmutt
John 20:30-31

Jesus made it clear that he was God through his actions, he healed a paralyzed man on the Sabbath. He was communicating to the Pharisees that he as God could work on the Sabbath, and that he had the power to heal broken and sinful people.