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The Lost Sheep and Repentance

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What Luke 15 Actually Teaches About the Parable of the Lost Sheep Some passages of Scripture slowly become slogans. Luke 15 is one of them. Over time, the parable of the lost sheep has been reshaped into a story primarily about divine pursuit — Jesus chasing us through forests of rebellion, relentlessly leaving the ninety-nine to find the one. Songs celebrate it. Sermons center on it. Entire ministries build their identity around the image. But when we allow Jesus to interpret His own parable, something unexpected emerges. The story is not ultimately about pursuit.  It is about repentance . The Context We Often Miss Luke 15 begins with a complaint. “This man receives sinners and eats with them.” (Luke 15:2) The Pharisees are scandalized. Jesus is welcoming the wrong people — sharing meals with those they consider morally and spiritually unclean. In response, Jesus tells three parables in succession: The Lost Sheep The Lost Coin The Lost Son And after the first story, He explains it...

Faithful Presence in a Political World (Politics and the Gospel Series Part 5)

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  A Necessary Clarification Throughout this series, we have explored the tension that arises when Christianity becomes closely tied to political power or cultural identity. We have seen how easily the Church, the State, and the Kingdom of God can be confused — and how that confusion can reshape faith itself. But an important clarification must be made before moving forward. Christians are not called to withdrawal from society. Nor are believers called to apathy toward justice, governance, or the well-being of their communities. Following Jesus has never meant disengaging from the world. The question has never been  whether  Christians should live within political societies, but  how  they should do so without losing sight of the Gospel’s true mission. Faithfulness does not require retreat. It requires clarity. Proper Political Engagement Scripture assumes believers will live as active members of society. Christians may participate responsibly in civic life in ma...

The Church and Power: A Recurring Temptation (Politics and the Gospel Series Part 4)

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Opening Statement By this point in the series, we have seen how confusion between the Church, the State, and the Kingdom of God can gradually reshape how faith is understood. When Christianity becomes closely tied to cultural identity or societal influence, discipleship can quietly give way to religiosity. It would be easy to assume this struggle belongs uniquely to our time. Yet history tells a different story. The tension between faith and power did not begin in our generation. In fact, it has appeared again and again throughout the life of the church. What we are witnessing today is less a new crisis than a familiar temptation — one Christians have faced for centuries. Understanding that history helps us move from reaction to wisdom. A Repeating Historical Pattern In the early centuries of Christianity, believers lived as a minority community without political influence. Their faith spread not through institutional power but through witness, sacrifice, and devotion. Christianity gre...

When Christianity Becomes Culture (Politics and the Gospel Series Part 3)

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Opening Observation In the previous post, we explored the biblical distinction between the Church, the State, and the Kingdom of God. Scripture presents each as having a different role and purpose, yet confusion arises when those categories begin to merge. When that confusion persists long enough, something deeper begins to change — not just how Christians engage society, but how faith itself is understood. Christian identity slowly shifts. Instead of being rooted primarily in conversion — a personal turning toward Christ marked by repentance and new life — Christianity begins to function as belonging. Faith becomes something connected to heritage, culture, or shared values rather than a transformed heart. The question is no longer,  “Have I been made new in Christ?”  but subtly becomes,  “Do I identify with Christian ideals?” This shift is often gradual, almost invisible at first. Yet its effects are profound. Cultural Christianity Explained Cultural Christianity emerges...

Two Kingdoms, One Confusion (Politics and the Gospel Series Part 2)

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In the first post, we explored a feeling many believers quietly recognize but struggle to explain — a sense of unease when faith begins to sound indistinguishable from political ambition or cultural struggle. That discomfort was not framed as cynicism or disengagement, but as a possible form of spiritual discernment: a signal that something important may be out of alignment. But feelings alone cannot guide us. If something truly is off, we need clarity — not merely emotional reactions, but biblical understanding. The question beneath that unease is deeper than politics itself: What happens when we confuse God’s kingdom with human systems? To answer that, we need to understand how Scripture distinguishes between three realities that are often blended together: the Church, the State, and the Kingdom of God. The Biblical Idea of the Kingdom of God When Jesus began His ministry, His central message was remarkably simple: “The kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news.”...

The Uneasy Feeling: When Faith Starts to Feel Political (Politics and the Gospel Series Part 1)

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  The Honest Reaction Lately, I’ve noticed a reaction in myself that I can’t easily ignore. A kind of internal resistance, a quiet but persistent feeling of  ugh  whenever I encounter certain expressions of Christianity that seem tightly intertwined with politics, cultural battles, or movements for influence. It leaves me unsettled. Part of me wonders if I’m overreacting. After all, Christians have always lived within political systems. Faith inevitably shapes how we think about society, justice, and public life. So why does some of this feel different? Why does it sometimes feel heavy, strained, or even spiritually uncomfortable? If you’ve felt something similar, you may have asked the same question: Is this discernment… or just cynicism? Before rushing to conclusions, it’s worth pausing long enough to acknowledge the feeling itself — not as judgment, but as observation. Sometimes discomfort is not a sign of hostility. Sometimes it is a sign that we sense something impor...

When the Gospel Stops Being Central (Gospel Series Epilogue)

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An Epilogue on Why the Church Must Never Move Beyond the Cross After walking through the message of the gospel — repentance, the reality of sin, the cross of Christ, new life, and reconciliation with God — one question naturally remains: If the gospel is so clear in Scripture, why does the church so often drift away from it? History shows that the greatest danger to Christianity is rarely open rejection of the gospel. More often, the danger is replacement. The message is not denied outright; it is slowly moved from the center. Other good things take its place, and over time the foundation becomes blurred. The gospel does not usually disappear through hostility. It disappears through distraction. The Gospel Is the Forgiveness of Sins The good news of Christianity is not complicated or endlessly flexible. Scripture presents it with remarkable clarity: sinful people can be forgiven by a holy God through the finished work of Jesus Christ. The apostle Paul described this message as being “o...