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"No stop sign, speed limit; nobody gonna slow me down!" It's hard to read Matthew 7:13-14 and not think of AC/DC shrieking happily about being on the "Highway to Hell;" but as both Jesus and John Wesley warn, that road leads to a literal and figurative dead end. In this Discourse, Wesley contrasts the "inseparable properties" of the wide way that leads to destruction and the narrow way that leads to life. It's an essential part of the Sermon on the Mount and one that challenges us to ask ourselves, "What road am I on?"
Read Upon Our Lord's Sermon on the Mount: Discourse, the Eleventh
Send your questions and comments to host Bob Kaylor at [email protected] and follow him on Twitter and Instagram @revbkaylor. Leave a review on Apple Podcasts and share this journey through Wesley's sermons with others!
By Bob Kaylor4.9
1919 ratings
"No stop sign, speed limit; nobody gonna slow me down!" It's hard to read Matthew 7:13-14 and not think of AC/DC shrieking happily about being on the "Highway to Hell;" but as both Jesus and John Wesley warn, that road leads to a literal and figurative dead end. In this Discourse, Wesley contrasts the "inseparable properties" of the wide way that leads to destruction and the narrow way that leads to life. It's an essential part of the Sermon on the Mount and one that challenges us to ask ourselves, "What road am I on?"
Read Upon Our Lord's Sermon on the Mount: Discourse, the Eleventh
Send your questions and comments to host Bob Kaylor at [email protected] and follow him on Twitter and Instagram @revbkaylor. Leave a review on Apple Podcasts and share this journey through Wesley's sermons with others!