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John Wasserman Podcast
John Wasserman
378 episodes
2 weeks ago
This powerful teaching challenges us to reconsider our relationship with God's law through the lens of freedom rather than bondage. We're invited into a fascinating exploration of what it truly means to be 'set free' in Christ—not freedom from all boundaries, but freedom to walk in righteousness. The central message revolves around James's concept of 'the perfect law that gives freedom' and Paul's declaration in Galatians 5:1 about standing firm in our liberty. What emerges is a stunning paradox: the law we sometimes view as restrictive is actually our companion, walking beside us like a lamp lighting a treacherous path filled with spiritual landmines. The sermon draws from Psalm 19, which declares the law of the Lord as perfect, refreshing the soul, and making the wise simple. We're reminded that the problem was never with God's law—which is holy, spiritual, and righteous—but with our flesh's inability to keep it. This is where Christ enters: He didn't abolish the law but fulfilled it, dealing with our sinful nature so we could finally walk in the law's true intention. The teaching beautifully unpacks how Jesus, when asked about eternal life in Luke 18, pointed to the commandments, revealing that keeping the law isn't about legalistic adherence but understanding its heart. The freedom Christ offers is the freedom to die to ourselves so we can truly live—forgiving without demanding apology, loving without keeping score, and walking deliberately as our Father walks. This is the law of liberty: love God completely and love our neighbor as ourselves.
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Religion & Spirituality
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This powerful teaching challenges us to reconsider our relationship with God's law through the lens of freedom rather than bondage. We're invited into a fascinating exploration of what it truly means to be 'set free' in Christ—not freedom from all boundaries, but freedom to walk in righteousness. The central message revolves around James's concept of 'the perfect law that gives freedom' and Paul's declaration in Galatians 5:1 about standing firm in our liberty. What emerges is a stunning paradox: the law we sometimes view as restrictive is actually our companion, walking beside us like a lamp lighting a treacherous path filled with spiritual landmines. The sermon draws from Psalm 19, which declares the law of the Lord as perfect, refreshing the soul, and making the wise simple. We're reminded that the problem was never with God's law—which is holy, spiritual, and righteous—but with our flesh's inability to keep it. This is where Christ enters: He didn't abolish the law but fulfilled it, dealing with our sinful nature so we could finally walk in the law's true intention. The teaching beautifully unpacks how Jesus, when asked about eternal life in Luke 18, pointed to the commandments, revealing that keeping the law isn't about legalistic adherence but understanding its heart. The freedom Christ offers is the freedom to die to ourselves so we can truly live—forgiving without demanding apology, loving without keeping score, and walking deliberately as our Father walks. This is the law of liberty: love God completely and love our neighbor as ourselves.
Show more...
Religion & Spirituality
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From Pressure To Power
John Wasserman Podcast
56 minutes 33 seconds
3 months ago
From Pressure To Power
In this powerful message, we're challenged to embrace the process of spiritual growth through life's trials. The central theme revolves around the concept of 'Gethsemane' - our personal moments of pressure and pain that God uses to refine us. Drawing from Jesus' experience in the Garden of Gethsemane (Matthew 26), we're reminded that even Christ faced moments of anguish and struggle. The key insight is that these difficult times aren't just obstacles, but opportunities for transformation. Like olives pressed for oil, we too are 'pressed' to produce the pure, holy oil of character and spiritual power. This message encourages us to 'lay there like an olive and take it,' trusting God's process even when it's painful. It's a call to follow closely in the 'dust of our Rabbi,' Jesus, embracing both the joys and challenges of discipleship. As we face our own Gethsemanes, we're urged to guard against bitterness and impurity, allowing God to produce something beautiful through our struggles.
John Wasserman Podcast
This powerful teaching challenges us to reconsider our relationship with God's law through the lens of freedom rather than bondage. We're invited into a fascinating exploration of what it truly means to be 'set free' in Christ—not freedom from all boundaries, but freedom to walk in righteousness. The central message revolves around James's concept of 'the perfect law that gives freedom' and Paul's declaration in Galatians 5:1 about standing firm in our liberty. What emerges is a stunning paradox: the law we sometimes view as restrictive is actually our companion, walking beside us like a lamp lighting a treacherous path filled with spiritual landmines. The sermon draws from Psalm 19, which declares the law of the Lord as perfect, refreshing the soul, and making the wise simple. We're reminded that the problem was never with God's law—which is holy, spiritual, and righteous—but with our flesh's inability to keep it. This is where Christ enters: He didn't abolish the law but fulfilled it, dealing with our sinful nature so we could finally walk in the law's true intention. The teaching beautifully unpacks how Jesus, when asked about eternal life in Luke 18, pointed to the commandments, revealing that keeping the law isn't about legalistic adherence but understanding its heart. The freedom Christ offers is the freedom to die to ourselves so we can truly live—forgiving without demanding apology, loving without keeping score, and walking deliberately as our Father walks. This is the law of liberty: love God completely and love our neighbor as ourselves.