
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Summary
As a new year begins, Dr. Michael Easley reminds us how quickly we forget what matters most. Drawing from Philippians 4:8–9, he explains why repetition is not a weakness of the Christian life but a safeguard for spiritual growth. Paul’s instruction to “write the same things again” reflects a reality we all share—we need continual reminders of truth.
Dr. Easley shows that spiritual maturity begins with disciplined thinking. Paul calls believers to dwell intentionally on what is true, honorable, right, pure, lovely, and commendable. These virtues are not abstract ideals but categories that shape how we see the world and respond to it. What we allow into our minds eventually forms our character.
But right thinking alone is not enough. Paul pairs dwelling with doing. Believers are called to practice what they have learned, received, heard, and seen. Learning is complete only when truth moves from information to understanding and finally to obedient action.
This sermon challenges listeners to stop dwelling on past sins, future fears, or sinful desires, and instead focus intentionally on godly things. The promise is clear: when we think rightly and live faithfully, we experience not only the peace of God but the presence of the God of peace.
Takeaways
Repetition of biblical truth is essential because spiritual growth depends on continual reminders.
What we choose to dwell on shapes our thoughts, actions, character, and destiny.
Paul’s list in Philippians 4:8 calls believers to focus intentionally on godly categories, not isolated moments.
Learning is complete only when truth moves from information to understanding and then to action.
Dwelling on sin, fear, or immorality robs believers of peace and spiritual clarity.
When believers think rightly and practice faithfully, they experience both God’s peace and God’s presence.
To read the book of Philippians, click here.
Click here for other Michael Easley Sermons.
By Michael Easley4.5
3232 ratings
Summary
As a new year begins, Dr. Michael Easley reminds us how quickly we forget what matters most. Drawing from Philippians 4:8–9, he explains why repetition is not a weakness of the Christian life but a safeguard for spiritual growth. Paul’s instruction to “write the same things again” reflects a reality we all share—we need continual reminders of truth.
Dr. Easley shows that spiritual maturity begins with disciplined thinking. Paul calls believers to dwell intentionally on what is true, honorable, right, pure, lovely, and commendable. These virtues are not abstract ideals but categories that shape how we see the world and respond to it. What we allow into our minds eventually forms our character.
But right thinking alone is not enough. Paul pairs dwelling with doing. Believers are called to practice what they have learned, received, heard, and seen. Learning is complete only when truth moves from information to understanding and finally to obedient action.
This sermon challenges listeners to stop dwelling on past sins, future fears, or sinful desires, and instead focus intentionally on godly things. The promise is clear: when we think rightly and live faithfully, we experience not only the peace of God but the presence of the God of peace.
Takeaways
Repetition of biblical truth is essential because spiritual growth depends on continual reminders.
What we choose to dwell on shapes our thoughts, actions, character, and destiny.
Paul’s list in Philippians 4:8 calls believers to focus intentionally on godly categories, not isolated moments.
Learning is complete only when truth moves from information to understanding and then to action.
Dwelling on sin, fear, or immorality robs believers of peace and spiritual clarity.
When believers think rightly and practice faithfully, they experience both God’s peace and God’s presence.
To read the book of Philippians, click here.
Click here for other Michael Easley Sermons.

16,062 Listeners

356 Listeners

8,586 Listeners

1,379 Listeners

41,184 Listeners

7,123 Listeners

197 Listeners

2,616 Listeners

5,367 Listeners

36,569 Listeners

66,870 Listeners

83 Listeners

26,661 Listeners

69 Listeners

273 Listeners