After a month away from our study in Mark, we’re returning to the middle of chapter 12, where Jesus faces a series of challenges from religious leaders in Jerusalem during his final week. After Jesus entered Jerusalem to shouts of Hosanna and cleansed the temple, a delegation from the Sanhedrin questioned his authority. Pharisees and Herodians attempt to trap him with a question about taxes to Caesar, and Sadducees pose a hypothetical about marriage, hoping to prove there is no resurrection. This Sunday, we’ll examine the final question from a scribe—a legal expert on God’s law—regarding the greatest commandment (Mark 12:28-37). This leads to a discussion that highlights how someone can be remarkably close to God’s kingdom without actually entering it. The main point is that true entry into the kingdom requires more than intellectual agreement with God’s truths or admiration for Jesus; it demands recognizing, trusting, and submitting to Jesus as Lord, the divine Son of God, who alone has kept God’s commandments in our place and, in the new birth, enables us to love God and others.
I. The Foundational Truth of God’s Law (v. 28-31)
II. The Full Agreement Of A Lost Sinner (v. 32-34)
III. The Faith That Enters The Kingdom (v. 35-37)
All content for Sermon Audio is the property of Jason Velotta and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
After a month away from our study in Mark, we’re returning to the middle of chapter 12, where Jesus faces a series of challenges from religious leaders in Jerusalem during his final week. After Jesus entered Jerusalem to shouts of Hosanna and cleansed the temple, a delegation from the Sanhedrin questioned his authority. Pharisees and Herodians attempt to trap him with a question about taxes to Caesar, and Sadducees pose a hypothetical about marriage, hoping to prove there is no resurrection. This Sunday, we’ll examine the final question from a scribe—a legal expert on God’s law—regarding the greatest commandment (Mark 12:28-37). This leads to a discussion that highlights how someone can be remarkably close to God’s kingdom without actually entering it. The main point is that true entry into the kingdom requires more than intellectual agreement with God’s truths or admiration for Jesus; it demands recognizing, trusting, and submitting to Jesus as Lord, the divine Son of God, who alone has kept God’s commandments in our place and, in the new birth, enables us to love God and others.
I. The Foundational Truth of God’s Law (v. 28-31)
II. The Full Agreement Of A Lost Sinner (v. 32-34)
III. The Faith That Enters The Kingdom (v. 35-37)
After a month away from our study in Mark, we’re returning to the middle of chapter 12, where Jesus faces a series of challenges from religious leaders in Jerusalem during his final week. After Jesus entered Jerusalem to shouts of Hosanna and cleansed the temple, a delegation from the Sanhedrin questioned his authority. Pharisees and Herodians attempt to trap him with a question about taxes to Caesar, and Sadducees pose a hypothetical about marriage, hoping to prove there is no resurrection. This Sunday, we’ll examine the final question from a scribe—a legal expert on God’s law—regarding the greatest commandment (Mark 12:28-37). This leads to a discussion that highlights how someone can be remarkably close to God’s kingdom without actually entering it. The main point is that true entry into the kingdom requires more than intellectual agreement with God’s truths or admiration for Jesus; it demands recognizing, trusting, and submitting to Jesus as Lord, the divine Son of God, who alone has kept God’s commandments in our place and, in the new birth, enables us to love God and others.
I. The Foundational Truth of God’s Law (v. 28-31)
II. The Full Agreement Of A Lost Sinner (v. 32-34)
III. The Faith That Enters The Kingdom (v. 35-37)