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Greater Love Has No Man

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  “Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.” (John 15:13) That single sentence captures the very heartbeat of the Gospel. Love is not merely a feeling. It is not words. It is not sentiment. Love is sacrifice. And nowhere in human history has love ever been demonstrated more clearly than at the cross of Christ. The Bible tells us: “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believes in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” (John 3:16) Think about that: God didn’t just say He loved us — He proved it. He stretched out His arms on a rugged cross and took the punishment we deserved. So when someone says, “What has God ever done for me?” — the answer is simple: He died for you. What Real Love Looks Like 1 Corinthians 13 — often called the “love chapter” — describes what true love actually is: Love is patient. Love is kind. Love is not jealous. Love is not proud. Love is not self-seeking. Love keeps n...

The Christian’s Duty:

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  Many today call themselves Christians simply because they bear the name of Christ. Yet there is a growing belief—even within the church—that loving someone means accepting them exactly as they are without warning them about sin or judgment. People say things like: “Everyone has a right to their beliefs.” “It’s not my place to judge.” “My life should speak louder than my words.” But these statements often become excuses to avoid a responsibility clearly commanded in Scripture. According to the Word of God, true love does not remain silent when someone is headed toward destruction. The Bible speaks directly to this issue:  “Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart: thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour, and not suffer sin upon him.” — Leviticus 19:17 (KJV) Notice the command carefully. God does not say rebuking someone is hatred. In fact, He says the opposite. If we refuse to warn someone about sin, we are allowing that sin to remain upon them. Silence, in this cas...

Practical Instructions on How to Hate Sin

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  “Ye that love the LORD, hate evil.” — Psalm 97:10 (KJV) There are many who profess to love God, yet make peace with the very things that nailed Christ to the cross. Scripture never allows such a contradiction. The same heart that truly loves Christ must also learn to hate sin. This hatred is not a shallow dislike or occasional regret—it is a settled opposition of the soul against all that offends God. The Psalmist declares plainly, “Ye that love the LORD, hate evil” (Psalm 97:10). Where love for God is genuine, hatred for sin must follow. The Puritan writers often spoke of this holy hatred. Joseph Alleine warned that many men are content to be troubled by sin but not resolved to destroy it. Yet Scripture calls us not merely to confess sin but to wage war against it. The Apostle Paul writes, “Mortify therefore your members which are upon the earth” (Colossians 3:5). To mortify sin means to put it to death—to treat it not as a guest to entertain, but as an enemy to destroy. The Chr...

The Implications of “Your Best Life Now”

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One of the most popular messages in modern Christianity teaches that God’s primary goal is to help you live your happiest, most comfortable, and most successful life here and now. It is a message that draws large crowds because it promises fulfillment, affirmation, and earthly blessing . But we must ask a serious question: If your best life is now, what does that mean about the life to come? When we examine Scripture carefully, we find that this idea stands in direct conflict with the central teachings of Jesus Christ. 1. Jesus Did Not Promise Comfort — He Promised a Cross Christ never called people to self-fulfillment. He called them to self-denial. Jesus said: “If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow me.” (Luke 9:23) Notice what He did not say. He did not tell people to esteem themselves, pursue their personal dreams, or protect their comfort. He said they must deny themselves. In the first century, a cross was not symbol...

Whatever happened to the fear of the Lord?

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  Seriously, look around. Even in many churches today, sin isn’t trembled at anymore. It’s normalized, joked about, explained away. People talk as if God is only love but never holy, only merciful but never just. You hear it all the time: “Jesus loves me, so why should I change?”—not realizing the same Bible says the wrath of God abides on those who do not believe (John 3:36), and that the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against ALL ungodliness and unrighteousness of men (Romans 1:18). Not just the openly wicked out there—but ANY place God finds ungodliness, He judges it. Scripture says plainly: “The wicked shall be turned into hell, and all the nations that forget God” (Psalm 9:17). That should shake us. That should wake us up. We have lost what the Bible calls the beginning of wisdom—the fear of the Lord (Proverbs 9:10). Without that fear, there is no real conviction. Without conviction, there is no repentance. The law was meant to expose us, to shut our mouths before a holy...

Is Your Fire Still Burning?

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  The Fire Must Never Go Out In the Old Testament, God gave a command that still speaks with power today. When He established the priesthood and the altar, He did not leave room for casual devotion. In Leviticus 6:12–13, the Lord commanded: “And the fire upon the altar shall be burning in it; it shall not be put out… The fire shall ever be burning upon the altar; it shall never go out.” That wasn’t symbolic language. It was literal. The priests were responsible to tend it day and night. Every morning they added wood. Every day they removed the ashes. The flame was constant. Why? Because the fire represented God’s presence and the continual offering before Him. If the fire went out, the sacrifice stopped. Let that sink in. The fire was not self-sustaining. God lit it (Leviticus 9:24), but the priests had to maintain it. The same is true for us. God ignites the flame. But we are responsible to keep it burning. Faith Is Fed by the Word The Bible tells us plainly:  “So then faith ...

Obedience Is Not Just Belief: A Biblical Refutation of a Dangerous Half-Gospel

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  There is a growing teaching being pushed by many modern preachers that sounds biblical on the surface but collapses under real examination. It goes like this: “To obey the gospel simply means to believe it. Obedience is not part of salvation—only belief is.” That statement is not just incomplete—it is misleading, and if taken to its logical conclusion, it produces a powerless, non-transforming gospel that Jesus Himself never preached. Let’s deal with it head-on. 1. The False Equation: “Obey = Believe (Only)” These teachers lean heavily on passages like: Romans 10:16 2 Thessalonians 1:8–10 And they argue:  “To disobey the gospel is to not believe it—therefore obeying the gospel just means believing it.” That is a category error. Yes—unbelief is disobedience. But that does NOT mean obedience is reduced to belief alone. That’s like saying:  “Not running is laziness—therefore running is just thinking about moving.” It doesn’t follow. 2. What “Obey” Actually Means (Greek Doe...

Why Holiness Still Matters: The Biblical Path to Seeing the Lord

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There is a call that echoes from Genesis to Revelation—a call that has never changed and never will. It is the call of God to His people: holiness. In a generation filled with compromise, distraction, and lukewarm devotion, the Word of God still declares with clarity: “But as he which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation; Because it is written, Be ye holy; for I am holy.” — 1 Peter 1:15–16 Holiness is not a suggestion for the Christian life. It is the very nature of the life God calls His people to live. God Himself is holy, and those who belong to Him are called to reflect that holiness in their lives. Scripture also gives a sober warning that many today prefer to ignore:  “Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord.” — Hebrews 12:14 This truth should cause every believer to examine their heart. Holiness is not merely an outward form of religion or a list of rules. It is the evidence that a life has truly been t...

If God Is So Good, Why Does He Allow Evil?

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Understanding God, Sin, and a Fallen World One of the most common questions people ask is this: “If God is good, why does He allow evil, suffering, and pain?” It’s a valid question. But the answer begins with understanding how God created the world and what happened to it. God Created Everything Perfect When God first created the heavens and the earth, He said it was very good. “And God saw every thing that he had made, and, behold, it was very good.” — Genesis 1:31 In the beginning: There was no death There was no disease There was no murder There was no hatred, violence, or suffering Everything was perfect and complete. The world was exactly as the Creator intended — ordered, whole, and life-sustaining. So when we see evil in the world, we must remember: evil was not part of God’s original plan. It entered the world through rebellion. Sin Corrupted Creation Just like a well-made car left in a junkyard will rust, break down, and eventually be destroyed if it is abused and neglected, G...

The Power of Forgiveness

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One of the most sobering truths Jesus ever taught is this: if we refuse to forgive others, we place ourselves in a position where we cannot expect forgiveness from God. That is not a small matter — it is a direct warning tied to our relationship with the Father Himself. The principle is simple and deeply humbling: God will never ask us to do something He is unwilling to do. He forgives freely, repeatedly, and sacrificially — and He expects His children to reflect that same spirit. This truth is seen clearly when the disciples asked Jesus a very honest question: “Lord, how often shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? Up to seven times?” Peter likely thought he was being generous. But Jesus answered, “I do not say to you up to seven times, but seventy times seven.” The point was not about keeping a literal number — Jesus was teaching that forgiveness is not meant to have a limit. In other words, we are not to keep score. Forgiveness is meant to become a continual posture of ...

Grace That Produces Holiness: Paul’s Teaching in Titus 3:5 and the Enduring Call to God’s Moral Standards

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The Apostle Paul’s words in Titus 3:5 are among the clearest affirmations of salvation by grace in all of Scripture: “Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost” (KJV). In an age when some twist grace into a license for moral laxity—claiming that since we are not saved by works, God’s moral standards no longer bind us—this verse is often misread as a blanket dismissal of righteous living. Yet a careful reading of the text in its biblical context, alongside the unanimous witness of the early Church Fathers and classic Bible commentaries, proves the opposite. Paul is not abolishing God’s moral law or declaring good works irrelevant. He is rejecting any notion of earning salvation through human effort or self-righteousness. True salvation by grace, far from discarding moral standards, regenerates the believer and produces good works as the necessary fruit and proof of genuine fai...

Why We Do Not See Revival Today — And How It Can Return

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  One of the most piercing observations ever made about spiritual decline came from Leonard Ravenhill, who said: “The reason we do not have revival is because we are willing to live without it.” That statement cuts straight to the heart of the issue. The absence of revival is not primarily a mystery — it is a mirror. It reflects the spiritual condition of God’s people. Scripture consistently shows that when believers drift into complacency, carnality, and distraction, the power of God is rarely manifested. Revival has never been accidental; it has always been the result of hearts returning fully to the Lord. Let’s examine why revival is absent — and how it can return. 1. Spiritual Contentment Without God’s Power Many Christians today are satisfied with a form of godliness that lacks spiritual power. They attend services, listen to sermons, and participate in church life, yet rarely hunger for deeper fellowship with God. The Bible warns directly about this condition:  “Having a...

Why There Are So Many Hypocrites in the Church Today

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The Real Cause Most People Don’t Want to Admit One of the most common objections to Christianity today is this: “There are too many hypocrites in the church.” And sadly — this criticism is not entirely wrong. Church scandals, moral compromise, lukewarm believers, and shallow faith have caused many people to stumble. But the real question is not simply why hypocrisy exists. The deeper question is: What is producing it? The answer is not complicated. At its root, the modern church has largely lost two things: 1. The fear of God 2. The true gospel of repentance and transformation Where these disappear, hypocrisy always multiplies. The Church Has Lost the Fear of God Scripture teaches that the fear of God is foundational to righteous living. “The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom.” — Proverbs 9:10 “By the fear of the LORD men depart from evil.” — Proverbs 16:6 But much modern preaching presents God only as tolerant, permissive, and non-judging. He is portrayed as a God who: Never...

Are You a Surface Christian — or a Deep Well Christian?

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  There is a sobering question every believer must eventually face: Do I truly want to know God’s will — or only the parts that don’t cost me anything?[1] There is a profound difference between what we might call a surface Christian and a deep well Christian.[2] A surface Christian wants God — but on comfortable terms. A deep well Christian wants God — no matter the cost.[3] This is not written to condemn anyone. It is meant to invite honest self-examination, something Scripture repeatedly commands:  “Examine yourselves, whether ye be in the faith.” — 2 Corinthians 13:5[4] The Surface Christian: Loving God on Their Own Terms A surface Christian may be sincere. They may attend church, pray, and profess love for Christ.[5] Yet a pattern often appears: They avoid Scriptures that convict their lifestyle They resist truths that challenge traditions They draw invisible lines they refuse to cross[6] In other words, they want God — but they also want control.[7] This struggle is not n...