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Hungry now or hungry for something that lasts? We walk through Luke 6 and watch Jesus reframe the Sabbath, confront hollow rule-keeping, choose the Twelve after an all-night prayer, and preach a sermon that flips our values from “now” to “forever.” From the grain fields to the synagogue, the thread is mercy: God designed rest for worship, healing, and care, not as a burden. The David parallel and Deuteronomy’s provision show how necessity and compassion fit within God’s wisdom, challenging us to major on what gives life.
We then sit with the weight of leadership as Jesus prays through the night before naming His apostles, even Judas. That choice reveals a sober view of calling and timing, and it pushes us to treat our decisions with the same spiritual seriousness. When the blessings and woes land, the contrast isn’t rich versus poor; it’s where our hope lives. Are we chasing comfort now at the cost of the soul, or investing in the kingdom that endures? Love for enemies, uncalculating generosity, and refusing hypocritical judgment all become signs of a heart anchored in the Father’s mercy.
Finally, we face the question that exposes our foundation: why call Jesus “Lord” and not do what He says? The wise builder hears and does; the foolish hears and shrugs. We explore how authority under Christ brings protection and provision, why our culture’s suspicion of authority can blind us to blessing, and how real obedience outlasts the storm. Along the way, we offer concrete steps: confess judgmental habits, resist people-pleasing, and adopt Jesus’ pattern of prayer before major decisions.
If this conversation helps you build on rock, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. Your words help others find the show and stand firm when the rain comes.
Text us at 737-231-0605 with any questions.
By Pastor Plek5
99 ratings
Send us a text
Hungry now or hungry for something that lasts? We walk through Luke 6 and watch Jesus reframe the Sabbath, confront hollow rule-keeping, choose the Twelve after an all-night prayer, and preach a sermon that flips our values from “now” to “forever.” From the grain fields to the synagogue, the thread is mercy: God designed rest for worship, healing, and care, not as a burden. The David parallel and Deuteronomy’s provision show how necessity and compassion fit within God’s wisdom, challenging us to major on what gives life.
We then sit with the weight of leadership as Jesus prays through the night before naming His apostles, even Judas. That choice reveals a sober view of calling and timing, and it pushes us to treat our decisions with the same spiritual seriousness. When the blessings and woes land, the contrast isn’t rich versus poor; it’s where our hope lives. Are we chasing comfort now at the cost of the soul, or investing in the kingdom that endures? Love for enemies, uncalculating generosity, and refusing hypocritical judgment all become signs of a heart anchored in the Father’s mercy.
Finally, we face the question that exposes our foundation: why call Jesus “Lord” and not do what He says? The wise builder hears and does; the foolish hears and shrugs. We explore how authority under Christ brings protection and provision, why our culture’s suspicion of authority can blind us to blessing, and how real obedience outlasts the storm. Along the way, we offer concrete steps: confess judgmental habits, resist people-pleasing, and adopt Jesus’ pattern of prayer before major decisions.
If this conversation helps you build on rock, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. Your words help others find the show and stand firm when the rain comes.
Text us at 737-231-0605 with any questions.

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