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Let There Be Love — Part 2: Breaking Up the Fallow Ground
Description:
Preaching from Ephesians 3, Pastor Eric emphasizes that the love of Christ is not merely something to study intellectually, but something to know personally and experientially. He shows how disordered loves, hardened hearts, hidden sin, and spiritual drift can cloud our vision of God’s love and keep us from walking in joyful fellowship with Him. Even churchgoing believers can become “prodigals in the pew,” outwardly present but inwardly distant.
Using Jeremiah 3, 1 John 4, Psalm 27, and the parable of the Prodigal Son, Pastor Eric calls the church to repentance, renewed affection for Christ, and a fresh experience of the Father’s love. This message is both gospel invitation and pastoral exhortation: come back to the Father, break up the fallow ground, and learn again to behold the beauty of the Lord.
Key Scriptures:
Highlights:
Why love for God must begin with a right understanding of God’s love for us
The danger of disordered loves and counterfeit substitutes for God
How sin and spiritual drift harden the heart, even in churchgoing Christians
“The prodigal in the pew”: outwardly present, inwardly far from God
Why shame and guilt should lead us back to Jesus, not away from Him
The difference between positional cleansing in Christ and daily relational cleansing
Breaking up the fallow ground through repentance and renewed sensitivity to God
Beholding the beauty of the Lord as the path to reordered affection
The Prodigal Son as a picture of the Father’s pursuing, restoring love
Ring, robe, and sandals: the Father restores identity before performance
Next Steps:
By Emmanuel Hooksett5
1111 ratings
Let There Be Love — Part 2: Breaking Up the Fallow Ground
Description:
Preaching from Ephesians 3, Pastor Eric emphasizes that the love of Christ is not merely something to study intellectually, but something to know personally and experientially. He shows how disordered loves, hardened hearts, hidden sin, and spiritual drift can cloud our vision of God’s love and keep us from walking in joyful fellowship with Him. Even churchgoing believers can become “prodigals in the pew,” outwardly present but inwardly distant.
Using Jeremiah 3, 1 John 4, Psalm 27, and the parable of the Prodigal Son, Pastor Eric calls the church to repentance, renewed affection for Christ, and a fresh experience of the Father’s love. This message is both gospel invitation and pastoral exhortation: come back to the Father, break up the fallow ground, and learn again to behold the beauty of the Lord.
Key Scriptures:
Highlights:
Why love for God must begin with a right understanding of God’s love for us
The danger of disordered loves and counterfeit substitutes for God
How sin and spiritual drift harden the heart, even in churchgoing Christians
“The prodigal in the pew”: outwardly present, inwardly far from God
Why shame and guilt should lead us back to Jesus, not away from Him
The difference between positional cleansing in Christ and daily relational cleansing
Breaking up the fallow ground through repentance and renewed sensitivity to God
Beholding the beauty of the Lord as the path to reordered affection
The Prodigal Son as a picture of the Father’s pursuing, restoring love
Ring, robe, and sandals: the Father restores identity before performance
Next Steps: