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When a wealthy, moral, spiritually serious young man runs up to Jesus and asks how to inherit eternal life, Jesus answers with a surprising question of his own: “Why do you call me good?” In this episode on Mark 10:17–31 (with help from Matthew 19–20), we explore what happens when our best efforts, our most impressive religious record, and even our generosity collide with the reality that “no one is good except God alone”—and why that collision is actually the doorway into grace.
In this week’s episode, we explore:
After listening, you’ll be invited to lay down the quiet pressure to be “good enough” for God and instead face Jesus’ question, “Why do you call me good?”, with new honesty and hope. You’ll come away with a clearer sense of how wealth, success, and even spiritual discipline can insulate us from our need—and how the gospel frees us to see salvation as entirely God’s work from start to finish. And you’ll be encouraged to practice the disciplines of the Christian life not as a way to earn God’s favor, but as grateful participation in the grace he has already poured out in Christ.
Series: Questions Jesus Asked
By Krisan Marotta4.9
2424 ratings
When a wealthy, moral, spiritually serious young man runs up to Jesus and asks how to inherit eternal life, Jesus answers with a surprising question of his own: “Why do you call me good?” In this episode on Mark 10:17–31 (with help from Matthew 19–20), we explore what happens when our best efforts, our most impressive religious record, and even our generosity collide with the reality that “no one is good except God alone”—and why that collision is actually the doorway into grace.
In this week’s episode, we explore:
After listening, you’ll be invited to lay down the quiet pressure to be “good enough” for God and instead face Jesus’ question, “Why do you call me good?”, with new honesty and hope. You’ll come away with a clearer sense of how wealth, success, and even spiritual discipline can insulate us from our need—and how the gospel frees us to see salvation as entirely God’s work from start to finish. And you’ll be encouraged to practice the disciplines of the Christian life not as a way to earn God’s favor, but as grateful participation in the grace he has already poured out in Christ.
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