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Mark 3:1–6 reveals the danger of believing we’re spiritually “fine.” While weakness often draws us to depend on God, our strengths can quietly create blind spots that push us away from Him. Through the contrast between a desperate man in need of healing and the confident Pharisees, this message shows that true transformation comes from humility and honesty, not self-sufficiency. The man was healed because he admitted his need, while the Pharisees remained unchanged because they refused to see theirs. The biggest danger isn’t weakness—it’s the illusion that we don’t need God.
By Cornerstone Gadsden5
11 ratings
Mark 3:1–6 reveals the danger of believing we’re spiritually “fine.” While weakness often draws us to depend on God, our strengths can quietly create blind spots that push us away from Him. Through the contrast between a desperate man in need of healing and the confident Pharisees, this message shows that true transformation comes from humility and honesty, not self-sufficiency. The man was healed because he admitted his need, while the Pharisees remained unchanged because they refused to see theirs. The biggest danger isn’t weakness—it’s the illusion that we don’t need God.