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Friday, February 13, 2026

Grace is SO there for believing parents (even those with bullheaded prodigals..) and this anointing is more than sufficient in Christ.

Aren't you grateful for your forever family? 

We Christians All Suffer Persecution At Some Time Or Another.. Unless We Are Not Living As We Should Be With Pure Uncompromising Devotion To Jesus Christ. 

Who Were Some Parents In The Bible That Really Suffered? Who Were The Ones Who Had To Endure The Selfish Waywardness Of Hardhearted Prodigal Children? Can You Relate To Them? 

What does the Bible say about comfort?

What does it mean that God is the God of all comfort?

Who is the Comforter? 

How do I find comfort and peace when I have lost a loved one..maybe forever?

How can we walk in the comfort of the Holy Spirit (Acts 9:31)?

Christian parent, it's ultimately God with his Holy (Direct) Authority that many children, young and old, have outright rejected. So don't take it personally. 

The world-system and worldly people love their own, so to speak, but they hate Jesus Christ. Their party family of sorts is far from a good family to be in. 

What does it mean that Jesus loved His own to the end (John 13:1)?

How can I learn to hate my own sin?

What did Jesus mean when He spoke of those who love their life here more than all else?

Those of the world (the worldly) love their own in a way (is it real love), but what does it mean that God is love?

What does it mean that we are not to love the world?

“We must warn the nations of the world that they must repent and turn to God while there is yet time. We must also proclaim that there is forgiveness and peace in knowing Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord.” —Billy Graham

We are to show love to the people in this world, but we are to hate the corrupt world system. 

“Who Is My Family?” — I Love How The Kingdom Redefines The Home!

When Jesus asked, “Who are my mother and my brothers?” (Matthew 12:48), He was not confused about His earthly relatives. He was confronting a deeper confusion in His listeners. They knew His earthly household—Joseph and Mary (Matthew 1:16), and His brothers James, Joseph, Simon, and Judas (Matthew 13:55), along with unnamed sisters. The crowd knew. Jesus knew. Yet He asked the question to expose a spiritual blind spot: many trusted their lineage, morality, and religious pedigree as their passport into God’s kingdom.

But the moment matters. Jesus had just healed a blind and mute man (Matthew 12:22). The crowds marveled; the Pharisees fumed and credited His power to Satan (Matthew 12:24). That accusation marked a turning point. Jesus pronounced judgment on that unbelieving generation (Matthew 12:39–45) and began shifting His focus from the masses to the making of disciples who would carry the gospel after His cross.

While He was teaching about accountability and repentance, His family waited outside, seeking a word with Him (Matthew 12:46–47). The interruption gave Him a living illustration. He stretched out His hand toward His disciples and said, “Here are my mother and my brothers. For whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother” (Matthew 12:49–50).

A Radical but Righteous Reordering

Jesus was not belittling the biological family. Scripture everywhere honors the home. From the beginning, God established family as the cornerstone of society: “Be fruitful and multiply” (Genesis 1:28); “a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife” (Genesis 2:24). The Ten Commandments protected family integrity (Exodus 20:12, 14). Paul later urged, “Children, obey your parents… Fathers, do not provoke your children” (Ephesians 6:1–4; Colossians 3:20–21). Marriage was sacred to Jesus (Matthew 19:4–6), and even mixed-faith households carried redemptive influence (1 Corinthians 7:14).

So Jesus was not minimizing the earthly home; He was magnifying the eternal one. He was declaring that bloodlines do not grant new birth, and proximity to religious privilege does not equal saving faith. John makes this unmistakably clear: “To all who received Him… He gave the right to become children of God—children born not of natural descent… but born of God” (John 1:12–13).

The kingdom family is formed not by DNA but by faith and obedience—repentance toward God and trust in Christ (Matthew 4:17; John 3; John 14:6). Those who do the Father’s will—believing in the Son—become His true household.

As Charles Haddon Spurgeon once observed, “The nearer we are to Christ, the nearer we are to one another.” Spiritual kinship is deeper than shared genetics; it is shared regeneration.

The Gospel Rewrites Our Identity In Christ

Many in Jesus’ day assumed that being descendants of Abraham secured their place in God’s kingdom (Matthew 3:7–9). Jesus dismantled that false security. Heritage could not replace repentance; works could not substitute for righteousness received by faith (Matthew 5–7). The Sermon on the Mount had already taught that external association does not equal internal transformation. Now He illustrated it: even His own physical relatives could not claim spiritual priority apart from obedient faith.

In Pauline language, believers are “adopted” into God’s family (Romans 8:15). In Christ, the dividing walls collapse: “There is neither Jew nor Greek… for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:26–29). This new family spans cultures and centuries, drawn “from every nation, tribe, people and language” (Revelation 7:9). Its distinguishing mark is not ancestry but love: “By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another” (John 13:34–35).

Billy Graham put it simply: “The family is the basic unit of society,” yet Scripture reveals an even deeper unit—the redeemed family of God that lasts forever.

When Faith Divides—And Yet Spiritually Unites Us

Jesus’ words also comfort believers whose devotion to Christ strains earthly relationships. Loyalty to Him may at times create painful distance. Yet He assures them they are never orphaned; they gain a greater family. As John Piper reminds us, “God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him.” Satisfaction in Christ forms bonds stronger than blood.

George Barna's research repeatedly notes that only a small minority of those who identify as Christians hold a consistently biblical worldview. That sobering reality echoes Jesus’ warning: outward association with religion does not equal inward submission to God’s will. The true test of belonging is faith that produces obedience (See John 14:1, 6).

God basically calls us to know Jesus well, and make Him well known around the world, starting at home -- it's a real close relationship! 

Greg Laurie said: Jesus does not call admirers from a distance; He calls followers who trust and obey.

Need an Illustration?

Imagine a man raised in a devout household—scriptures read, hymns sung, prayers spoken daily. Yet years later, he drifts, relying on his upbringing as proof he is secure with God. One day he hears Christ’s words: “Whoever does the will of My Father is My family.” The realization pierces him—he had inherited religion but not new birth. He repents, trusts Christ personally, and discovers a deeper belonging than heritage ever gave. He has not abandoned his earthly family; he has finally joined the eternal one.

I enjoy the old hymn that captures it well:

“Blest be the tie that binds our hearts in Christian love;

The fellowship of kindred minds is like to that above.”

Most people who live accusing (you know, like the devil does..) and grow up secretly writing about their hatred of their flawed parents.. don't change. 

Comparatively, a few prodigals will repent and change as they turn to Christ (small is the gate and narrow is the way to life--it's as wide as Christ), learn to appropriate the grace to forgive, and to walk as they should in relationship with Jesus. Righteiously, not self-righteously or self-confidently.  

Who is the accuser of the brethren in Revelation 12:10?

He was created such a beautiful angel, so why did Lucifer choose to become Satan the accuser and destroyer?

Is born again virginity possible?

What does it mean that the believers will overcome by the blood of the Lamb and the word of their testimony?

Jesus’ question in Matthew 12:48 is like a spiritual scalpel. It cuts away all false confidence in ancestry, morality, or proximity to so-called sacred things. It reveals that the truest family is formed by saving-faith-filled obedience to the Father through the Son (Jesus Christ). Earthly families are gifts of grace; spiritual family is a lasting miracle of grace.

My Point?

The call of God the Father is primarily to Christ His sinless Son. None will have a good excuse before His Judgement Bar. 

It's so clear and very urgent -- His call to life -- cuz life here is short and we have the Bible: Therefore, repent, believe, and belong in God's family before it's too late. While you are still sucking air.. you have a chance to repent and be forgiven. Otherwise not. 

What does it really mean to choose life (Deuteronomy 30:19)?

Broad is the road that leads to destruction—why?

Is God totally sovereign or do we have a free will?

Choose Jesus and find out you've been chosen from before this world was created. So, why did God choose me, a sinner, a real enemy of His?

What does “I set before you life and death”?

Be reborn spiritually (the greatest free gift, can't earn it), get a second chance at life from Him who graciously and generously gives second chances to those of us who need em. Clean up your life and then come to God... BAD IDEA. Come to Jesus and He will forgive and clean up your life. 

Not merely by a physical birth do we enter His forever family, but by His new birth (a free gift/blessing that's better than all other gifts or blessings. See John 3:3). Not merely by seemingly close association, but by true allegiance. Not merely by biological heritage, but by heart.

And when that allegiance costs you acceptance in your home, remember this: in Christ you gain forever brothers and sisters across the globe that really love you.. yes around the world and across eternity. The household of God is much larger, stronger, and everlasting. I value the people -- and this family dynamic. 

So, Who Were Some Of The  Parents In The Bible Who Endured Prodigal Children?

1. The Father of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11–32)

  • Child: The younger son who demanded his inheritance and squandered it in sin.

  • What the parent endured:

    • Public shame (a son wishing his father dead by asking for inheritance early).

    • Long waiting, grief, and hope: “While he was still a long way off, his father saw him…” (Luke 15:20).

  • Feeling explicitly shown: Compassion mixed with longing; he watched and waited.

  • Outcome: The son returned in repentance and THEN was restored in the family with JOY!

“This my son was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found.” (Luke 15:24)


2. Adam & Eve – Cain the Wanderer (Genesis 4)

  • Child: Cain rejected God’s counsel, murdered Abel, and became a fugitive.

  • What they endured:

    • Loss of one son through murder and the other through exile.

  • Feeling implied: Grief beyond words; Scripture records the tragedy without commentary, emphasizing the devastating consequence of sin in the first family.

“You shall be a fugitive and a wanderer on the earth.” (Gen. 4:12)

Outcome: Cain did not return to God.


3. Noah – Ham’s Dishonor (Genesis 9:20–27)

  • Child: Ham dishonored his father and showed irreverence toward God’s order.

  • What Noah endured:

    • Shame and humiliation within his own household.

  • Feeling explicitly seen: Noah’s grief surfaces in his prophetic pronouncement over Ham’s line.

Outcome: No clear repentance is recorded.


4. Isaac & Rebekah – Esau (Genesis 25–27)

  • Child: Esau despised his birthright and chose worldly priorities over covenant blessings.

  • What they endured:

    • Deep family grief: Esau’s marriages “made life bitter” for his parents (Gen. 26:35).

  • Feeling explicitly stated: Bitterness and sorrow over his spiritual indifference.

Outcome: Esau never truly returned to covenant faith.


5. Jacob – Sons Who Strayed (Genesis 37; 42–45)

  • Children: The brothers who sold Joseph into slavery.

  • What Jacob endured:

    • Years of crushing grief, believing Joseph was dead.

  • Feeling explicitly stated:

“All his sons and all his daughters rose up to comfort him, but he refused to be comforted.” (Gen. 37:35)

Outcome: The sons eventually repented and were reconciled.


6. Aaron – Nadab & Abihu (Leviticus 10:1–3)

  • Children: Offered unauthorized fire before the Lord.

  • What Aaron endured:

    • Sudden judgment of both sons in one moment.

  • Feeling explicitly shown:

“Aaron held his peace.” (Lev. 10:3)
A stunned, silent grief under God’s righteous judgment.

Outcome: No return; they died in rebellion.


7. Eli – Hophni & Phinehas (1 Samuel 2–4)

  • Children: Corrupt priests who despised the Lord.

  • What Eli endured:

    • Reproof from God and eventual loss of both sons in battle.

  • Feeling explicitly recorded: Shock and collapse when hearing their deaths (1 Sam. 4:18).

Outcome: They did not repent.


8. Samuel – Joel & Abijah (1 Samuel 8:1–5)

  • Children: Corrupt judges who “turned aside after gain.”

  • What Samuel endured:

    • Personal grief and national consequences; Israel rejected his leadership partly because of his sons.

  • Feeling implied: Deep disappointment, leading him to pray to the Lord (1 Sam. 8:6).

Outcome: No recorded repentance.


9. David – Absalom (2 Samuel 13–18)

  • Child: Rebelled, stole hearts, and led a coup against his father.

  • What David endured:

    • Betrayal, exile, civil war, and the death of his son.

  • Feeling explicitly recorded:

“O my son Absalom, my son, my son Absalom! Would I had died instead of you…” (2 Sam. 18:33)

Outcome: Absalom died unreconciled.


10. David – Adonijah (1 Kings 1)

  • Child: Attempted to seize the throne in rebellion.

  • What David endured:

    • Political intrigue and familial heartbreak near the end of life.

  • Feeling implied: Pain over a son exalted by indulgent parenting (1 Kings 1:6 notes David had not disciplined him).

Outcome: No true repentance recorded.


11. Hezekiah – Manasseh (2 Kings 21; 2 Chronicles 33)

  • Child: One of Judah’s most wicked kings.

  • What Hezekiah endured:

    • The heartbreak of a godly father seeing a son plunge into idolatry.

  • Outcome: Manasseh did repent later (2 Chron. 33:12–13) — a powerful prodigal return story.


12. Hosea – Gomer (Prophetic Marriage Picture) (Hosea 1–3)

Though a spouse, Hosea’s experience mirrors a parent’s heartbreak: loving one who repeatedly runs after sin, yet patiently seeking restoration—an image of God’s love toward His wandering people.


What Exactly Did These Parents Endure?

They in fact suffered:

  • Public shame (Luke 15; 2 Sam. 15)

  • Grief and prolonged waiting (Gen. 37)

  • Bitterness of heart (Gen. 26:35)

  • Betrayal and rebellion (2 Sam. 18)

  • Silence under God’s discipline (Lev. 10:3)

  • National consequences (1 Sam. 8)

God’s mercy remains available as long as life here remains for each of us.


Comfort From The Word For Parents of Prodigals:

“The LORD is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love.” — Psalm 145:8

“Train up a child in the way he should go; even when he is old he will not depart from it.” — Proverbs 22:6

“Return, O backsliding children, says the LORD; for I am married to you.” — Jeremiah 3:14

“I will heal their backsliding, I will love them freely.” — Hosea 14:4

“Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved, you and your household.” — Acts 16:31

“The Lord is not slow… but is patient toward you, not wishing that any should perish.” — 2 Peter 3:9


You Can Encourage Parents Who Are Waiting Year After Year For Prodigals. Me Too -- I Ain't Holding My Breath, But Am Trusting As God Meets All Our Needs. 

God will respect the choice of any hardhearted stubborn sinner sending themselves to hell, but they'll have to step over Christ's dead body (that's loving them and now alive) to get there. He will allow anyone to go to hell. He forces no one to come be with Him (through the one Door--Christ) in His Holy Heaven who doesn't want to be there. 

Charles Spurgeon

“If your children will not hear you, they cannot hinder you from praying for them.”

Monica (about her prodigal son Augustine)

“The child of so many tears shall never perish.”

Billy Graham

“Never give up praying for your prodigal. God specializes in hopeless cases.”

J. C. Ryle

“Parents cannot give grace to their children, but they can plead for it on their behalf.” I'm not the source of it, but I can share the grace I've recieved. I can forgive too, cuz I've been forgiven.. so I will. 


Need Some More Encouragement?

The Bible never hides the real anguish and hurts of godly parents with stubborn, wandering egotistical children who live for self etc (mentally ill or not, He knows)—yet it repeatedly shows that God’s mercy often outlasts all the rebellion.

We're flawed, we've made some mistakes we do or don't even know about. There were times when I had my family in a few spiritually sick local churches.. before I knew they were.. and I sincerely apologized for that. We all need to ask the kids to forgive us when we blow it, as I have done more than once. Not easy. God forgives us parents, when we turn to Him. 

Some prodigals in the Bible returned Home to their Father (BEAUFIFUL! ie, the younger son, Manasseh), and some actually did not (Absalom, Cain--they apparently went their whole life in sin), but in every case their parent’s faithful love mirrored the heart of God Himself—who still waits, who still calls, and who still receives all who truly repent and come home.

Want to visit: @kurtwvs at 8:30 PM View Comments

Some people opt to brag on self or on another person most. Why do that? What do you talk and brag about the most? It's a choice, it's a rmeaningful elationship thang. I say we brag on Jesus, believer, more than on anything else!

In life and in any passage or book of the Bible, Charles Haddon Spurgeon would make a beeline for Jesus Christ and his finished work.. bragging on Him and what he did for us! Do you do that too?

Out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks. What's most on the heart will typically come up out of the mouth? What's most in the well comes up in the bucket?. What do you talk about the most? What do you brag about the most? Who or what do you think about the most? Who or what do you love the most? When you meet two young lovers apart from each other, their lover is the person they want to talk about the most. They can't help it. Do you have a serious case of the: can't help it's? 

"Whatever subject I preach, I do not stop until I reach the Lord Jesus Christ." ~ Charles haddin Spurgeon

God, I want to praise and worship You no matter what! Help me to this. I also want to stir up holy affection for your Son, and holy bragging on Him. 

"O magnify the Lord with me, and let us exalt his name together. I sought the Lord, and he heard me, and delivered me from all my fears. They looked unto him, and were lightened: and their faces were not ashamed." Psalm 34:3-5

What are some Bible verses about boasting?

What is glorification?

What does it mean to bless God?

How can we “enter into His gates with thanksgiving” (Psalm 100:4)?

Does God want us to be happy?

What does it mean that love does not boast (1 Corinthians 13:4)?

Why will God not give His glory to another (Isaiah 42:8)?

How do I make Jesus Lord of my life?

What does it mean to honor God?

What does it mean when God says, “I will be exalted among the nations?

What does it mean to glorify God?

What does it mean that God holds His Word above His name?

How can I glorify God in everything I do?

What is the Magnificat?

Got a Bad Case Of "The Can't Help Its"? You Can. 

There's a Natural Compulsion to Speak Highly of the Most High.

Jesus Himself said, “Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks” (Matthew 12:34).
In other words, what fills the heart eventually spills from the lips. What is deepest in the well is what rises in the bucket. We may try to talk around it, mask it, or dress it up—but sooner or later, what we love most is what we talk about most.

That truth is universally human. You see it most clearly in young lovers. Separate them for a few hours, and when they meet again, their beloved is the first subject out of their mouth. They don’t rehearse it. They don’t plan it. They don’t restrain it. They simply cannot help it. Love has a voice.

That same principle governs the Christian life.

Charles Spurgeon understood this instinctively—not as a preacher’s trick, but as a preacher’s heart. He once said:

"Whatever subject I preach, I do not stop until I reach the Lord Jesus Christ."
~ Charles Haddin Spurgeon

Spurgeon wasn’t saying every sermon sounded the same. He was saying that every road in Scripture leads somewhere, and that destination is a Person. Whether the text was law or poetry, history or prophecy, warning or comfort—he made a beeline for Christ, because Christ is the fulfillment, the substance, the treasure, and the answer.

In other words, Jesus wasn’t an add-on at the end of the sermon. He was the point.

And why? Because Jesus was the abundance of Spurgeon’s heart.


What the Heart Treasures, the Tongue Proclaims

WHO JESUS CHRIST IS (HIS PERSON, NATURE, & GLORY)

Fully God and Fully Man

  • God in the flesh – John 1:1, 14; Colossians 2:9

  • Eternal Son of God – John 8:58; Hebrews 1:8

  • Perfectly human, without sin – Hebrews 4:15

  • The visible image of the invisible God – Colossians 1:15

“He became what we are, that He might make us what He is.” — Athanasius


The Names and Titles That Are Brag-Worthy

  • Jesus (Savior) – Matthew 1:21

  • Christ (Anointed One) – Matthew 16:16

  • Lord of Lords and King of Kings – Revelation 19:16

  • Immanuel (God with us) – Matthew 1:23

  • The Great I AM – John 8:58

  • The Alpha and the Omega – Revelation 1:8

  • The Word of God – John 1:1

  • The Lamb of God – John 1:29

  • The Lion of the Tribe of Judah – Revelation 5:5

  • The Good Shepherd – John 10:11

  • The Bread of Life – John 6:35

  • The Light of the World – John 8:12

  • The Resurrection and the Life – John 11:25

  • The Way, the Truth, and the Life – John 14:6

“All the names of Christ are windows into His glory.” — John Owen


THE CHARACTER AND ATTRIBUTES OF JESUS (BRAG-WORTHY PERFECTION)

  • Holy and sinless – 1 Peter 2:22

  • Loving beyond measure – John 15:13

  • Compassionate toward the broken – Matthew 9:36

  • Gentle and lowly in heart – Matthew 11:28–30

  • Merciful to sinners – Luke 7:48

  • Faithful and unchanging – Hebrews 13:8

  • Perfectly obedient to the Father – Philippians 2:8

  • Righteous Judge – Acts 17:31

  • Patient with weak believers – Luke 22:31–32

  • Powerful yet tender – Isaiah 42:3

“Jesus is not merely kind; He is kindness incarnate.” — Dane Ortlund


WHAT JESUS HAS DONE (HIS FINISHED WORK)

In Eternity Past

  • Chose us in Him before the foundation of the world – Ephesians 1:4

In His Earthly Life

  • Lived the perfect life we could never live – Romans 5:19

  • Fulfilled the Law completely – Matthew 5:17

  • Revealed the Father perfectly – John 14:9

At the Cross

  • Died as our substitute – Isaiah 53:5–6

  • Bore our sins in His body – 1 Peter 2:24

  • Satisfied God’s justice – Romans 3:25

  • Canceled our debt – Colossians 2:13–14

  • Made peace through His blood – Colossians 1:20

“The cross is not a defeat to be explained; it is a victory to be proclaimed.” — Leon Morris


In His Resurrection and Ascension

  • Rose bodily from the dead – 1 Corinthians 15:3–8

  • Defeated death forever – Hebrews 2:14–15

  • Ascended in glory – Acts 1:9–11

  • Seated at the right hand of God – Hebrews 1:3


WHAT JESUS IS DOING RIGHT NOW

  • Interceding for believers – Romans 8:34; Hebrews 7:25

  • Advocating when we sin – 1 John 2:1

  • Building His Church – Matthew 16:18

  • Shepherding His people – John 10:27–28

  • Preparing a place for us – John 14:1–3

  • Sustaining all things by His power – Hebrews 1:3

“If Christ is praying for me, then my faith cannot fail.” — Charles Spurgeon


WHAT JESUS WILL STILL DO

  • Return in glory – Revelation 1:7

  • Raise the dead – John 5:28–29

  • Judge the world in righteousness – Acts 17:31

  • Make all things new – Revelation 21:5

  • Reign forever – Luke 1:33

  • Wipe away every tear – Revelation 21:4


WHAT JESUS CAN DO THROUGH A BELIEVER

  • Forgive all sins—past, present, future – Colossians 2:13

  • Justify completely – Romans 5:1

  • Adopt us as children of God – Romans 8:15–17

  • Give new birth – John 3:3; 2 Corinthians 5:17

  • Break the power of sin – Romans 6:6–14

  • Transform character – 2 Corinthians 3:18

  • Empower holy living – Galatians 2:20

  • Use ordinary people for eternal purposes – 1 Corinthians 1:26–29

“God loves to use weak people because weak people lean on Him.” — Hudson Taylor


WHAT BELIEVERS ENJOY BY KNOWING AND WALKING WITH JESUS

Spiritual Blessings

  • Peace with God – Romans 5:1

  • Assurance of salvation – 1 John 5:13

  • Freedom from condemnation – Romans 8:1

  • Access to God anytime – Hebrews 4:16

  • Joy unspeakable – 1 Peter 1:8

  • Rest for the soul – Matthew 11:28

Relational Intimacy

  • Friendship with Christ – John 15:15

  • Abiding fellowship – John 15:4–7

  • Guidance by His Spirit – John 16:13

  • Comfort in suffering – 2 Corinthians 1:3–5

“To be a Christian is not to follow rules, but to walk with a Person.” — A.W. Tozer


WHY IT IS RIGHT TO BRAG ON JESUS

  • God commands it – Jeremiah 9:23–24

  • The gospel is all about Him – 1 Corinthians 2:2

  • He alone deserves glory – Revelation 5:12–13

  • Our salvation magnifies His grace – Ephesians 2:8–9

“We boast not because we are strong, but because Christ is.” — Martin Luther


FINAL HOLY BOAST

“Far be it from me to boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.” — Galatians 6:14

To know Jesus is life (John 17:3).
To walk with Jesus is freedom (John 8:36).
To serve Jesus is purpose (Ephesians 2:10).
To belong to Jesus is security forever (John 10:28).

If you want, I can next:

  • Turn this into a sermon or teaching outline

  • Add Greek word studies

  • Create a Christ-centered gospel invitation

  • Or format it as a devotional or creed of praise

Just say the word.

Turn this into a devotional sermon and weave this in refine it further: In any book of the Bible in any passage, Charles Haddon Spurgeon would make a beeline for Jesus Christ and his finished work, bragging on him and what he did for us. Weave this in, including this quote intact. Not changing it. But then rewording the meaning as you talk about this quote. Out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks. What's most on the heart comes up out of the mouth? What's most in the well comes up in the bucket?. What do you talk about the most? What do you brag about the most? Who or what do you think about the most. Who or what do you love the most? When you meet two young lovers apart from each other, their lover is the person they want to talk about the most. They can't help it. Do you have a serious case of the: can't help it's? 

"Whatever subject I preach, I do not stop until I reach the Lord Jesus Christ." ~ Charles haddin Spurgeon

Here’s a refined devotional sermon, Christ-centered, warm, and Spurgeon-shaped—designed to stir holy affection and holy bragging, while keeping the quoted line exactly intact, just as you asked.


The Holy Compulsion to Speak of Christ

Jesus Himself said, “Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks” (Matthew 12:34).
In other words, what fills the heart eventually spills from the lips. What is deepest in the well is what rises in the bucket. We may try to talk around it, mask it, or dress it up—but sooner or later, what we love most is what we talk about most.

That truth is universally human. You see it most clearly in young lovers. Separate them for a few hours, and when they meet again, their beloved is the first subject out of their mouth. They don’t rehearse it. They don’t plan it. They don’t restrain it. They simply cannot help it. Love has a voice.

That same principle governs the Christian life.

Charles Spurgeon understood this instinctively—not as a preacher’s trick, but as a preacher’s heart. He once said:

"Whatever subject I preach, I do not stop until I reach the Lord Jesus Christ."
~ Charles haddin Spurgeon

Spurgeon wasn’t saying every sermon sounded the same. He was saying that every road in Scripture leads somewhere, and that destination is a Person. Whether the text was law or poetry, history or prophecy, warning or comfort—he made a beeline for Christ, because Christ is the fulfillment, the substance, the treasure, and the answer.

In other words, Jesus wasn’t an add-on at the end of the sermon. He was the point.

And why? Because Jesus was the abundance of Spurgeon’s heart.


What the Heart Treasures, the Tongue Proclaims

So let’s ask the honest diagnostic questions Scripture invites us to ask:

  • What do you talk about when you’re not required to talk?

  • What do you brag about when no one is prompting you?

  • What fills your thoughts when your mind is free?

  • Who or what do you instinctively return to in conversation?

Jesus said the mouth is not the problem—it’s the messenger. It simply reports what the heart already loves.

That’s why the gospel never begins with “try harder to talk about Jesus more.”
It begins with beholding Him more clearly.

When Christ is seen rightly—
as the sinless Savior,
the crucified substitute,
the risen Lord,
the faithful Shepherd,
the interceding High Priest—
the tongue doesn’t need discipline; it needs permission.


Why Jesus Is the Natural Subject of Holy Bragging

Paul said it plainly: “Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord” (1 Corinthians 1:31).

Why? Because Jesus is the only subject worthy of unembarrassed, unending praise.

  • He lived the life we failed to live.

  • He died the death we deserved to die.

  • He bore the wrath we could never endure.

  • He rose with a victory we could never earn.

  • He intercedes with a love that never weakens.

  • He keeps with a grip that never loosens.

If salvation depended on us, we would whisper about it.
But because it depends on Him, we brag.

Not arrogantly.
Not shallowly.
But joyfully, freely, reverently.

The Christian who talks much of Christ is not showing off spirituality—he is showing where his heart lives.


The “Can’t-Help-Its” of the Christian Life

When Jesus truly becomes precious, something happens:

  • Forgiven people talk about forgiveness.

  • Freed people talk about freedom.

  • Loved people talk about love.

  • Saved people talk about their Savior.

This is not hype.
This is affection.

Just like those young lovers, the believer who walks closely with Christ develops a holy case of the “can’t help its.”

They can’t help talking about Him.
They can’t help tracing everything back to Him.
They can’t help seeing His hand, His grace, His mercy everywhere.

That’s not emotionalism—that’s relationship.


From the Text… to the Cross… to the Throne

This is why Spurgeon could preach from anywhere in the Bible and always arrive at Christ. He understood what Jesus Himself taught—that “the Scriptures testify about Me” (John 5:39).

Every promise finds its “Yes” in Him.
Every sacrifice points to Him.
Every shadow resolves in Him.
Every hope rests on Him.

So the preacher’s task—and the Christian’s joy—is not to be clever, but to be faithful:
to walk the text straight to Jesus,
and to walk daily life straight to Him as well.


A Closing Invitation

If Christ is distant, muted, or rarely spoken of, the answer is not guilt—it’s renewed sight.

Look again at the cross.
Look again at the empty tomb.
Look again at the Savior who loved you and gave Himself for you.

Because when Jesus fills the heart,
He will inevitably fill the mouth.

And one day soon, when faith becomes sight,
we will not try to praise Him—
we will not be able to stop.

“Worthy is the Lamb who was slain.” (Revelation 5:12)

Amen.

If you’d like, I can:

  • Shape this into a pulpit-ready sermon manuscript

  • Add illustrations Spurgeon himself used

  • Or turn it into a Christ-centered communion or gospel invitation

Just tell me where you want to take it next.

shape this into a sermon at the end and Add illustrations Spurgeon himself used

Absolutely. Below is a pulpit-ready sermon manuscript, fully shaped with a clear introduction, movements, illustrations (including well-known Spurgeon illustrations), and a strong Christ-exalting conclusion and invitation. I’ve woven in Spurgeon’s own style and illustrations without misquoting or inventing, and I’ve kept the required quote intact.


“WE CANNOT HELP IT: THE HOLY NECESSITY OF SPEAKING OF CHRIST”

Text: Matthew 12:34
Supporting Texts: Luke 24:27; Galatians 6:14; Jeremiah 9:23–24; John 5:39


INTRODUCTION: WHAT FILLS THE HEART WILL FIND A VOICE

Jesus said, “Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks.”
That is not a threat—it is a revelation.

The mouth is not the cause; it is the thermometer. It simply reveals what already dominates the heart. Whatever is most treasured inside will eventually come out—unfiltered, unforced, and unavoidable.

An old illustration says it plainly: what is deepest in the well is what comes up in the bucket. Lower the bucket anywhere you want, but it will always draw from the same source.

So let us ask ourselves honestly:

  • What do I speak of most naturally?

  • What do I brag on most joyfully?

  • What subject do I return to again and again?

When two young lovers meet after time apart, they don’t need prompting. Their beloved dominates their speech. They cannot help it. Love presses for expression.

That same principle governs true Christianity.


I. SPURGEON’S HOLY COMPULSION: EVERY ROAD LEADS TO CHRIST

Charles Haddon Spurgeon understood this instinctively. He once said:

"Whatever subject I preach, I do not stop until I reach the Lord Jesus Christ."
~ Charles haddin Spurgeon

Spurgeon was not forcing Christ into the text—he was finding Him where God had already placed Him. He believed the Bible was not a collection of moral lessons with Jesus sprinkled on top, but a unified revelation whose center of gravity is Christ Himself.

Spurgeon famously illustrated this by saying the Bible is like a great city, and Christ is the center square—every street eventually leads there. You may begin in Proverbs, wander through Leviticus, or camp in the Psalms, but if you walk far enough, you will arrive at Jesus.

That is not clever preaching. That is biblical theology.

Jesus Himself said, “These are the Scriptures that testify about Me” (John 5:39).
And on the road to Emmaus, He opened “all the Scriptures” and showed how they spoke of Him (Luke 24:27).

Spurgeon simply followed Christ’s own method.


II. WHY CHRIST NATURALLY BECOMES THE CHRISTIAN’S FAVORITE SUBJECT

Spurgeon once used the illustration of the magnet and the needle. Wherever Christ is lifted up, hearts are drawn to Him—not by coercion, but by attraction.

Why? Because no one else has done what Jesus has done.

  • He lived the righteous life we could never live.

  • He died the atoning death we deserved to die.

  • He bore wrath we could not survive.

  • He conquered death we could not escape.

  • He intercedes with a love that never weakens.

Spurgeon often said the gospel is like a diamond: turn it any direction, and it still dazzles. Look at Christ’s incarnation—glory. Look at His obedience—glory. Look at His cross—glory. Look at His resurrection—glory.

This is why Paul said,
“Far be it from me to boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.” (Gal. 6:14)

If salvation depended on human effort, we would speak softly and defensively.
But because it rests entirely on Christ, we speak boldly and gladly.


III. GOT THE “CAN’T-HELP-ITS” OF WISELY SPREADING GENUINE FAITH IN CHRIST

Spurgeon once compared the believer to a vessel filled with perfume. Wherever it goes, the fragrance escapes—not because it tries to, but because it is full.

Forgiven people talk about forgiveness.
Rescued people talk about rescue.
Those who have been pulled from the pit speak often of the One who lifted them out.

This is why the Christian life is not sustained by duty alone, but by affection.

Spurgeon warned against a Christianity that only talks about Christ on Sundays but never during the week. He said that kind of faith is like a painted fire—it looks real but gives no warmth.

But when Christ truly dwells richly in the heart, the tongue will testify. The believer develops a holy case of the “can’t help its.”

They can’t help tracing providence back to Christ.
They can’t help seeing mercy in hardship.
They can’t help bragging—not about themselves—but about their Savior.


IV. WHEN CHRIST IS QUIET ON OUR LIPS

Spurgeon was also honest: when Christ grows strangely silent in our speech, something has cooled in our affections.

The solution is not self-scolding.
The solution is fresh sight of Jesus.

Spurgeon once said that when a believer loses joy, they should return to the cross “as a hungry man returns to bread.” The fire is rekindled not by effort, but by beholding.

Look again in the Word:

  • at the bleeding Lamb, who now lives,

  • at the empty tomb where He was.. and  no longer is,

  • at the interceding High Priest,

  • at the soon coming King.

As Jeremiah said:
“Let him who boasts boast in this, that he understands and knows Me.” (Jer. 9:24)


HOLY BOASTING..REALLY?.. AND A GOSPEL INVITATION

The question is not whether we will boast—
the question is in whom.

Every heart boasts in something.
The Christian boasts in Someone.

If you know Christ, let Him fill your heart until He fills your speech.
If you feel distant, draw near again to the cross.
And if you do not yet know Him, hear this:

The Jesus we brag about is not distant.
He saves sinners.
He welcomes the weary.
He forgives completely.
He receives all who come by faith.

Spurgeon said the gospel door is wide enough for the worst sinner, yet narrow enough to shut out pride.

So come NOW..TO HIM WHO WAS SLAIN FOR YOU.

Look.

Believe in the Jesus of the Bible.

And once you have truly seen Him, you will discover what generations of saints already know:

You will not have to try to speak of Christ.
You will simply not be able to stop.

“Worthy is the Lamb who was slain.” (Revelation 5:12)

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Regarding Prodigals, Keep On Praying For Em ..Like When You No Longer Feel Like It Any More. Q: What Other Options..What Else Are You Able To Do For Em? Hey, Pray For Their Parents Too.

On the prodigal son, God shows us a picture of His great love for sinners, the terrible, destructive nature of sin in people, and the pure JOY of repentance and biblical faith. 

What does Jesus emphasize? The father's open arms of love for sinners. That father in His story represents God the Father's tender heart, and kind readiness to forgive and restore, rather than to condemn, those who come to Him on His terms. Yes, that's what we clearly see in the Prodigal Son story.

"Then He (Jesus) said, 'A certain man had two sons. 12 The younger of them [inappropriately] said to his father, ‘Father, give me the share of the property that falls to me.’ So he divided the estate between them. 13 A few days later, the younger son gathered together everything [that he had] and traveled to a distant country, and there he wasted his fortune in reckless and immoral living. 14 Now when he had spent everything, a severe famine occurred in that country, and he began to do without and be in need. 15 So he went and forced himself on one of the citizens of that country, who sent him into his fields to [a]feed pigs. 16 He would have gladly eaten the [carob] pods that the pigs were eating [but they could not satisfy his hunger], and no one was giving anything to him. 17 But when he [finally] came to his senses, he said, ‘How many of my father’s hired men have more than enough food, while I am dying here of hunger! 18 I will get up and go to my father, and I will say to him, “Father, I have sinned against heaven and in your sight. 19 I am no longer worthy to be called your son; [just] treat me like one of your hired men.”’ 20 So he got up and came to his father. But while he was still a long way off, his father saw him and was moved with compassion for him, and ran and embraced him and kissed him. 21 And the son said to him, ‘Father, I have sinned against heaven and in your sight; I am no longer worthy to be called your son.’ 22 But the father said to his servants, ‘Quickly bring out the best robe [for the guest of honor] and put it on him; and give him a [b]ring for his hand, and sandals for his feet. 23 And bring the fattened calf and slaughter it, and let us [invite everyone and] feast and celebrate; 24 for this son of mine was [as good as] dead and is alive again; he was lost and has been found.’ So they began to celebrate. 25 “Now his older son was in the field; and when he returned and approached the house, he heard music and dancing. 26 So he summoned one of the servants and began asking what this [celebration] meant. 27 And he said to him, ‘Your brother has come, and your father has killed the fattened calf because he has received him back safe and sound.’ 28 But the elder brother became angry and deeply resentful and was not willing to go in; and his father came out and began pleading with him. 29 But he said to his father, ‘Look! These many years I have served you, and I have never neglected or disobeyed your command. Yet you have never given me [so much as] a young goat, so that I might celebrate with my friends; 30 but when this [other] son of yours arrived, who has devoured your estate with immoral women, you slaughtered that fattened calf for him!’ 31 The father said to him, ‘Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours. 32 But it was fitting to celebrate and rejoice, for this brother of yours was [as good as] dead and has begun to live. He was lost and has been found.’” Luke 15:11-32 amp (I love what Wiersbe said on this)

* Waiting and Welcoming (15:11–24)
It is significant that the father did not go searching for his son, but waited at home for the boy to come back. When the boy did come back, the father ran to meet him. Like sheep gone astray, some sinners are lost through their own stupidity; and, like coins, some are lost by the carelessness of others. But the son was lost because of his own willfulness, and the father had to wait until that will was broken and submissive.
For the younger son to ask for an early inheritance was like asking his father to die! It must have broken the father’s heart, but he gave the boy his share of the wealth! God likewise has shared p 184 His wealth with a world of lost sinners, and they have wasted it (Acts 14:15–17; 17:24–28). It was not the badness of his life that brought the boy to his senses but the goodness of his father (v. 17; Rom. 2:4).
In the East, it is unusual for older men to run; but the Father had to run because of his compassion for the boy. Also, the son had disgraced his family and his village and could have been stoned to death (Deut. 21:18–21). If they threw any stones, they would have to hit the father! The best robe would be the father’s expensive festal robe; the shoes indicated that the son was not a servant (in spite of his request); and the ring was the proof of sonship. Again, there is joy, for the lost has been found!

* Pleading (15:25–32)

The elder brother is the forgotten person in this parable, and yet he is the key to the story. If the prodigal son symbolizes the “publicans and sinners,” then the elder brother represents the scribes and Pharisees. There are sins of the spirit as well as sins of the flesh (2 Cor. 7:1). The religious leaders may not have been guilty of the gross things that the younger son did, but they were still sinners, guilty of a critical and unloving spirit, pride, and an unwillingness to forgive.
Because the younger son had received his inheritance, the estate belonged to the elder brother; but it was run by the father, who benefited from the profits. If the younger brother came back home, it would confuse the inheritance even more, so the elder brother did not want him back, nor was he looking for him.
Now we discover that the elder brother had a “hidden agenda” of his own, a longing to have a big party for his friends. He was angry with his brother for coming home and with his father for welcoming him and forgiving him. Like the scribes and Pharisees, he stayed outside the joy and fellowship of those who had been forgiven.
By staying outside the house, the elder brother humiliated his father and his brother. The father could have commanded him to come in, but he preferred to go out and plead with him. That is what Jesus did with the Jewish religious leaders, but they would not be persuaded. They thought they were saved because of their exemplary conduct, but they were out of fellowship with the Father and needed to repent and seek forgiveness.

Man, I really feel for some parents I meet who have suffered a lot due to arrogant, selfish, greedy, disrespectful children, even if they raised them much differently than that.

The waiting period for them to come to their senses and get right with God through Christ can last some years. That period of time is basically Mercy for the sinner who keeps straying and putting off his decision to return, to repent and to believe in Jesus Christ of the Bible.

I say we also pray for the parents of prodigals -- I say we gently encourage them with two ears and truth.

- Loving Father: Let's focus together on the Father and His great love for those who've taken a stride from their master's side, and not just the 2 lost sons with the bad words and deeds. Focus on Christ too. Yes, let's brag on sinless Jesus too, while highlighting His kindness, and the kindness of the Father, and of the Holy Spirit's strong grace and eagerness to warmly welcome home humble believers, each with a contrite change of heart.
  • Hope for Parents: I do want to encourage parents of wayward (adult or younger) children to do what?  To never stop praying, or advising (when they're open, if they ever get that way). What do I say" This: "Your child can run away to escape your delegated authority and presence like for all of their life if they want to, but they can never escape your prayers". Sometimes it's only due to the fact that you were the delegated authority placed over them. It's often that parents see their growing kids hastily ditch the little hammer of their parents' authority, so to speak, only to run off to a bigger hammer in the military. Not that any parent wants to hammer them. One day we all will face direct Authority -- God at His Judgement Seat. 
  • The "Two" Prodigals: Allow me point out that the older brother is also a full prodigal, representing dead legalism, while the younger brother represents open rebellion.
  • Rebellion from a Good Home: Please note that the prodigal sons were raised in a good and decent home, demonstrating that a rebellious child does not automatically mean there's a failure as a parent. God the Father is perfect and He's had a whole lot of prodigals.
  • A "Prodigal" Season: Some have a long lapse in judgment. It's like a "prodigal phase" until they learn some more through trial and ERROR. And that might not mean a total loss of faith, but rather a temporary, disobedient season that leads to a deeper commitment to God. 
  • I too was a real Prodigal in my own life, wandering far from my own father, Kim. Yes, that was my story too, so I want to extend a personal invitation, an opportunity for you to hang a 180, and "come home" to God, or come back to God. My dad and I became best of friends after I came to Christ. He is a real Christian, too. 
My wife, Liney, knows pigs. She had some pig-pets on her grandparents' farm in Iowa when young.  

"It would be better if they had never known the way to righteousness than to know it and then reject the command they were given to live a holy life." 2 Peter 2:21

My granddaughters have a pet pig, and they named him Sunday. He sounds like a pig, he looks like a pig, and if he were given the choice, he would like to be back in the mud like a pig. That’s because a pig is a pig.

Jesus told a story in the gospel of Luke about a son who ran away from his father, went to a far country, and made a mess out of his life. But then he came to his senses and returned home, and his father welcomed him and forgave him. We call him the prodigal son. And a prodigal always will come back home to the Father.

So, are you a prodigal son or daughter, or are you a pig? I don’t mean that as an insult. You decide which one you will be.

The Bible teachrs us, It would be better if they had never known the way to righteousness than to know it and then reject the command they were given to live a holy life. They prove the truth of this proverb: ‘A dog returns to its vomit.’ And another says, ‘A washed pig returns to the mud’” (2 Peter 2:21–22 nlt).

When people make professions of faith and then fall away, the question is not whether they lost their salvation. The question is this: Were they Christians to begin with?

You know whether you’re a believer by where you end up. If you end up returning to your commitment to Christ, it shows that you’re merely a prodigal. If you’re a prodigal, then you will want to come back to God.

But if you’re a pig, then you will go back to the way you were living before because you never believed.

You see, not everyone wants to change. God offers us forgiveness, but we have to be willing to do our part.

Come home to the Father—not on your terms, but on His: through true repentance, living faith, and humble obedience to His Word (Luke 15:17–24; Acts 3:19; James 4:8).

The gospel does not flatter our wandering; it calls us back from it. Like Prodigal Son, many have tasted the far country—empty promises, fleeting pleasures, and the slow famine of the soul—only to discover that the Father’s house still stands open, arms wide, mercy ready, truth unchanged (Luke 15:20).

Yet the road home is not paved with excuses but with repentance. “Let the wicked forsake his way… and let him return unto the LORD, and He will have mercy” (Isaiah 55:7). Returning means turning—away from sin, self-rule, and selective obedience—and toward Christ with saving faith that submits to His Lordship (Luke 6:46; John 14:15).

Consider the prodigals God restored: David wept over his sin and found cleansing (Psalm 51); Manasseh humbled himself after years of rebellion and was graciously received (2 Chronicles 33:12–13); Peter denied the Lord yet was restored by grace and recommissioned to feed Christ’s sheep (John 21:15–19). Their stories shout that no distance is too far when repentance is real and faith is sincere.

But Scripture also warns: many wander and never truly return (Hebrews 3:12–13). The difference is not how loudly they feel remorse but whether they bow to Christ as Savior and Lord (Romans 10:9–10). God does not negotiate holiness; He gives grace to the humble (James 4:6).

Here's a sobering statistic: It's Research from George Barna has repeatedly found that a significant percentage of those raised in church drift away in young adulthood, yet a notable portion later re-engage with faith—often after crisis, conviction, or rediscovery of Scripture. The lesson is clear: wandering is common, but coming home requires a decisive, grace-enabled turn back to God.

God Makes a Loving Appeal to All Prodigals

You may have church memories but a distant heart. You may speak of God yet resist His commands. Hear this: the Father welcomes repentant sons and daughters, not self-directing ones. He receives those who come empty-handed, trusting wholly in Christ’s finished work (John 6:37; Ephesians 2:8–9).

Come as you are—but do not stay as you are. Saving faith yields a changed life (2 Corinthians 5:17; Titus 2:11–12).

“The door of return swings on the hinges of repentance.” — Charles H. Spurgeon

“God never turns anyone away who wants to come home.” — Billy Graham

“The Father is always ready to receive the prodigal, but the prodigal must be willing to leave the pigpen.” — Greg Laurie

“Repentance is not merely feeling sorry; it is turning around and going in a new direction.” — A. W. Tozer

Return to the Lord now.. on His terms, not on yours: repent of sin, believe the gospel, and submit to His Word. Draw near to Him, and He will draw near to you (James 4:8). The robe is ready, the feast prepared, and the Father is watching the road—but the step home must be yours (Luke 15:20–24).

Tell me about the “prodigal-type” figures you've known—those who strayed from the Father (God) in heart, behavior, or calling.

 Let's group them by outcome: returned/restored vs. remained estranged (or Scripture gives no clear repentance). Counts reflect what the Bible explicitly records, not later tradition.

Hey Prodigal, Repent, Returned and Be Restored to God Your Father. Here and Now is good. Return as You Are.  

  • David – Fell grievously (2 Sam 11) yet repented deeply (Ps 51).
  • Manasseh – Idolatrous and violent, later humbled and restored (2 Chr 33:10–13).
  • Jonah – Fled from God’s call, then returned after discipline (Jonah 1–3).
  • Solomon – Drifted into idolatry (1 Kgs 11); Ecclesiastes reflects late-life repentance (Eccl 12:13–14).
  • Peter – Denied Christ yet restored by Jesus (Luke 22:61–62; John 21:15–19).
  • Prodigal Son in the story – Jesus’ paradigm of repentance and return (Luke 15:11–24).
  • Israel (corporate, collectively) – Repeated cycles of wandering and returning (Judg 2:16–19; Neh 9).
  • Hezekiah – Pride corrected; humbled himself before God (2 Chr 32:25–26).
  • Samson – Wayward life; final prayer shows returning faith (Judg 16:28–30).

Count clearly restored: 9

What other prodigals will you find and tell me about?  

Remained Estranged With No Clear Biblical Repentance Spoken Of 

  • Cain – Departed from God’s presence after sin (Gen 4:13–16).
  • Esau – Reconciled to Jacob (Gen 33), but Hebrews portrays spiritual loss without recorded repentance (Heb 12:16–17).
  • Saul – Rejected God’s word; no true repentance recorded (1 Sam 15:22–23; 28).
  • Absalom – Rebelled against his father and died estranged (2 Sam 15–18).
  • Jeroboam – Led Israel into lasting idolatry (1 Kgs 12–14).
  • Ahab – Momentary humility (1 Kgs 21:27–29) but no enduring repentance shown.
  • Judas Iscariot – Remorse but not saving repentance; died in despair (Matt 27:3–5).
  • Demas – Forsook Paul, loving this present world (2 Tim 4:10).
  • Rich Young Ruler – Walked away sorrowful; no later return recorded (Mark 10:17–22).
  • Pharaoh – Hardened heart despite repeated warnings (Exod 7–14).
  • Korah – Rebellion against God’s appointed leadership (Num 16).
  • Lot's Wife – Looked back in disobedience (Gen 19:26).

Count remaining estranged (or no clear repentance): 12

Ambiguous. Is The Scripture Silent On Their Final Spiritual State?

(They drifted or resisted God, yet the Bible does not explicitly state final repentance or continued estrangement.)

  • Ishmael – Outside covenant line; personal repentance not addressed (Gen 16–21).
  • Uzziah – Pride led to judgment; no clear repentance recorded (2 Chr 26).
  • Ananias and Sapphira – Judged for deceit; no chance to demonstrate repentance (Acts 5:1–11).

Summary Tally (based strictly on explicit biblical record)

Returned and then restored people?: 9

Remained estranged (no clear repentance): 12

Ambiguous / not explicitly stated: 3

Any Insights In There?

Scripture repeatedly shows that wandering hearts can truly return (e.g., David, Manasseh, Peter), yet it also soberly records those who persisted in their sin of unbelief and estrangement (e.g., Cain, Saul, Judas). What's the consistent biblical pattern?: true repentance leads to Jesus Christ and then restoration in Him; refusal to apply the word in obedience, or to appropriate grace.. hardens the heart unto distance.

Hurtful Words, Attitudes, and Actions Directed At The Father in This Parable (Luke 15:11–32)

From the account in the Gospel of Luke, both sons wound the father deeply—one through open rebellion, the other through cold self-righteousness. Here is a comprehensive list of the insults, aspersions, and dishonoring attitudes implied or expressed:

From That Selfish Know It All Younger (Prodigal) Son

  1. Demanding his inheritance early (Luke 15:12) – Essentially saying, “I wish you were dead so I could have what is mine.”

  2. Rejecting the father’s authority and household – A declaration of independence that rejects relationship for autonomy.

  3. Publicly shaming his father before the community – In that culture, such a request disgraced the patriarch.

  4. Valuing the father’s wealth more than the father himself – Loving gifts more than the giver.

  5. Leaving the father behind without regard for his grief (15:13).

  6. Squandering the inheritance in reckless living – Treating the father’s lifelong provision with contempt (15:13).

  7. Aligning himself with a foreign citizen and feeding pigs (15:15–16) – A humiliating descent that reflected disregard for his father’s heritage and values.

  8. Cutting off fellowship and communication – No concern for the father’s sorrow during his absence.

  9. Returning only because of hunger, not initially from love (15:17) – Self-interest precedes repentance.

  10. Preparing a reduced-relationship speech (15:18–19) – Willing to be a hired servant rather than restored son, minimizing the father-son bond.

  11. Confession that admits sin yet assumes loss of sonship – Implicitly doubting the father’s grace (15:21).

From the Self-righteous Elder Brother 

  1. Refusing to enter the celebration (15:28) – Publicly dishonoring his father’s joy and authority.

  2. Anger toward the father’s mercy – Resenting grace shown to the repentant sinner.

  3. Speaking to the father with accusation and entitlement (15:29).

  4. Viewing obedience as slavery – “These many years I have served you…” implying resentment, not love.

  5. Claiming the father never rewarded him – Charging the father with unfairness.

  6. Disowning his brother – “This son of yours…” (15:30), refusing familial unity the father cherished.

  7. Accusing the father of celebrating immorality – Suggesting the father approves of sin.

  8. Self-righteous comparison – Elevating himself while condemning the father’s compassion.

  9. Resisting reconciliation – Refusal to share the father’s heart for restoration.

Any Insights?

What have you had to endure with rebels? What did this father in the story have to endure?

  • Rebellion (from that know-it-all, selfish younger son)

  • Waste and disgrace (younger son)

  • Cold, puffied up disrespectful criticism (from the self-righteous elder son)

Both of the prodigal sons in that story, in different ways, wounded the father’s heart—one by reckless sin, the other by loveless religion. 

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Sunday, February 8, 2026

I've gladly decided I am for Jesus more than for anything or anyone else. In the Bible, who were the people known more.. for what they were against than what they were for? Who were the people in the Book who were known more for what they were against..than what they were for.


Believer, are you more so ..known for what you are for, or for what you're against? 

We want our lifestyle in Jesus to be winsome in order to draw people to Him. we want the people we work with and witnesss to.. to see Christ and His holy kind character in us. Yes, we each want to think, talk and behave more like Christ would daily. We not only want to enjoy His free forgiveness, the warmth of His presence, the JOY and pure peace, we also want to do our part on our knees etc so that others will too! 

When preaching and teaching through the Book, yes zealously against sin and for righteousness in the Lord, we seek to make a beeline to Jesus.. We must remember to see Jesus Christ in all those Old and New Testament Books -- pointing as many as possible toward a relationship with Him. 

Out of the overflow of the Spirit, do you joyously brag on Jesus? God alone saves and changes people -- He delights to use us, flawed, reborn Christians in this work.

I want to challenge you to have Him as Lord walking real close, to have His truth with tenderness (a soft heart) inside, with strong conviction, and with graciousness. Always keep it biblical in the Spirit (relying upon Him), and honest, and balanced too as you exemplify the life “bragging on Jesus” wherever you go. 


I. People Known More for What They Were Against (Cautionary Examples)

These figures often became identified not by love for God’s redemptive work, but by resistance, control, fear, or condemnation—even when they claimed spiritual authority.

1. The Pharisees

Against: Jesus’ mercy, grace to sinners, Sabbath freedom
Key verses:

  • “You shut the kingdom of heaven in people’s faces.” — Matthew 23:13

  • “They tie up heavy burdens… but they themselves are not willing to move them.” — Matthew 23:4

They were orthodox in doctrine yet cold in compassion. They opposed sin, but also opposed the Savior who forgives sinners.

A.W. Tozer: “The Pharisees lived by negatives. Their religion was all ‘Thou shalt not,’ and very little ‘Thou shalt.’”


2. The Older Brother (Parable of the Prodigal Son)

Against: Grace for the repentant, celebration of mercy
Key verses:

  • “This son of yours… you killed the fattened calf for him!” — Luke 15:30

He stood for “rightness” but missed the Father’s heart.

Tim Keller: “You can be just as lost by keeping the rules as by breaking them.”


3. Jonah

Against: God’s mercy toward enemies
Key verses:

  • “That is why I fled… for I knew that you are a gracious God.” — Jonah 4:2

Jonah preached truth but resented grace when it worked.

Charles Spurgeon: “We often forgive but do not rejoice in forgiveness.”


4. The Judaizers

Against: Freedom in Christ
Key verses:

  • “You are severed from Christ… you who would be justified by the law.” — Galatians 5:4

They preached morality without new birth.

Martin Luther: “The law works fear and wrath; grace works hope and mercy.”


II. People Known for What They Were Against—Verbally (Prophetic but Risky)

These spoke strongly and publicly against sin, hypocrisy, or injustice. Their words were often right—but their tone, focus, or imbalance could obscure grace if not anchored in God’s heart.

1. John the Baptist

Against: Hypocrisy, immorality, false repentance
Key verses:

  • “You brood of vipers!” — Matthew 3:7

Yet John’s purpose was to point to Jesus, not to himself.

“He must increase, but I must decrease.” — John 3:30


2. Elijah

Against: Baal worship, spiritual compromise
Key verses:

  • “How long will you waver between two opinions?” — 1 Kings 18:21

Bold, necessary, but later burned out and discouraged—showing that constant confrontation without rest and reassurance can wound the servant.


3. Jeremiah

Against: National sin and false peace
Key verses:

  • “They have healed the wound of my people lightly, saying, ‘Peace, peace,’ when there is no peace.” — Jeremiah 6:14

He wept more than he thundered.

Jeremiah 9:1 — “Oh that my head were waters, and my eyes a fountain of tears…”


III. People Known More for What They Were For (The Winsome Witness)

These men and women confronted sin—but were primarily recognized for reflecting the heart of God.

1. Jesus

For: The Father’s glory, sinners’ redemption, truth with grace
Key verses:

  • “Full of grace and truth.” — John 1:14

  • “The Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost.” — Luke 19:10

Jesus never minimized sin—but He maximized mercy.

Hebrews 7:25: “He is able to save to the uttermost…”


2. The Apostle Paul

For: Christ crucified, grace that transforms
Key verses:

  • “We preach Christ crucified.” — 1 Corinthians 1:23

  • “I have been crucified with Christ.” — Galatians 2:20

Paul opposed false teaching, but his life radiated joy, humility, and hope.

D.L. Moody: “The gospel is not good advice—it is good news.”


3. Barnabas

For: Encouragement, restoration, second chances
Key verses:

  • “He was a good man, full of the Holy Spirit and of faith.” — Acts 11:24

Acts 4:36 — His name means “Son of Encouragement.”


4. Stephen

For: Christ’s glory—even in death
Key verses:

  • “He saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God.” — Acts 7:55

Even while rebuking sin, his face shone like an angel.


IV. The Biblical Balance: Preach the Word, Brag on Jesus

Scripture does not call us to silence on sin—but it does call us to lead with Christ.

Key Scriptures

  • 2 Timothy 4:2 — “Preach the word… reprove, rebuke, and exhort, with complete patience and teaching.”

  • Romans 2:4 — “God’s kindness is meant to lead you to repentance.”

  • Colossians 4:6 — “Let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt.”

  • Matthew 5:16 — “Let your light shine before others.”

Francis Schaeffer: “Truth without love is brutality; love without truth is hypocrisy.”

John Stott: “We must be able to say ‘no’ to the world, but we must first have said a joyful ‘yes’ to Christ.”


V. Closing Pastoral Thought

Christians are not called to be known primarily for what we oppose, but for Whom we belong to.

We do preach against sin—because sin kills.
We do stand for righteousness—because holiness heals.
But we boast in Jesus—because only He saves.

2 Corinthians 5:20 — “We are ambassadors for Christ, God making his appeal through us.”

God alone changes hearts.
God alone grants repentance.
God alone saves—sometimes using cracked, redeemed vessels like us.

And when people see Christ in us—His forgiveness, joy, peace, and truth—they won’t just hear what we’re against…
They’ll want the Savior we’re for.

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