All for the Kingdom
Sermon Podcast
Confronting Sin, 2 Corinthians 13:1-4
As Paul concludes his letter, he gives some final warnings and instructions. His final warning can be broken into two parts, confrontation of sin and examining your faith to test if it is genuine. In this sermon, I preach on the first part concerning the confrontation of sin.
Confronting sin and church discipline is something that most Christians know should be happening, but they have not seen a healthy or consistent model of how it happens. And a more honest assessment may be that many Christians have no motivation to faithfully participate in church discipline because they enjoy the lack of accountability in their church.
Understanding this passage and how to confront sin requires understanding three principles of healthy, godly discipline:
Discipline is motivated by love.
Discipline is connected to worth.
Discipline is connected to church fellowship.
Clean and Unclean, 2 Corinthians 6:14-7:1
All relationships require some level of separation. Marriage requires "forsaking all others," citizenship requires "renouncing all other allegiances, and to be a child of God requires forsaking all other masters. Romans 10:9 declares that salvation comes from believing God raised Jesus from the dead and confessing Jesus as Lord. If Jesus is Lord of your life, you have forsaken all other lords and renounced all allegiance and fidelity to any other lord.
2 Corinthians 6:14-7:1 is not a passage that is hard to understand, but it is one that offends the one who seeks to be friends with Christ and the world. It has two commands. One is a prohibition, and the other is a response to the transformation of the gospel. Both commands call the saints of God to live according to the righteousness of God and put away all defilements of the world.
Think on these things, Philippians 4:8-9
With this sermon, I begin a series titled "Back to Basics." I start with a sermon on what we give our minds to. What do you think about? What consumes your mind's attention? You may think these are not important questions, but I think they are. I believe this is the battleground where the war for your very heart and soul is fought.
The first battle line is the battle over your mind. From Philippians 4:8-9, I hope to encourage you to guard what has your attention, curate what has your attention, and recognize that actions follow attention.