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When the gospel starts changing lives, it does more than inspire, it disrupts.
In Acts 19:21–41, a city erupts into chaos, not because of bad theology, but because Jesus threatens what people trust most. Money. Security. Identity. Reputation.
In this message, “Jesus and the Idols We Defend,” we’ll see why idols always demand protection, why emotional outrage often replaces reason, and why wherever the gospel advances, something false gets exposed.
The question is not whether we have idols. The question is what happens when Jesus touches them.
Whenever Jesus threatens our idols, we will either surrender or riot.
By Brian RhodusWhen the gospel starts changing lives, it does more than inspire, it disrupts.
In Acts 19:21–41, a city erupts into chaos, not because of bad theology, but because Jesus threatens what people trust most. Money. Security. Identity. Reputation.
In this message, “Jesus and the Idols We Defend,” we’ll see why idols always demand protection, why emotional outrage often replaces reason, and why wherever the gospel advances, something false gets exposed.
The question is not whether we have idols. The question is what happens when Jesus touches them.
Whenever Jesus threatens our idols, we will either surrender or riot.