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Many believers are stagnate in their Christian growth, because they do not understand the constitution of their natures. Evil always seems as if it is something extrinsic to us over which we have no control. According to Scripture, this is not so. The reality is that evil or sin has access to us because  it is intrinsic to our natures. Yet, our intrinsic inclination towards evil can be overcome, if we are willing to thoroughly understand and engage our sinful proclivities, while reclining the full wait of our existence upon Christ. 
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"Jesus Came Down" (John 5:22)

As human beings, we tend to have a higher estimation of ourselves than we ought, because our default position is a context of sin, by which we stand in antithesis or opposition to our Creator. Thusly, Salvation primarily concerns how we relate to the Creator, which subjugates our relationship to the things that he has created. To relate rightly, we must come down, as He has come down, in complete subjection to both the Father and the Son.

 

"The Dysfunction Of Christian Identity" (1 Corinthians 1:11-13)

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"The Sovereignty of God and the Perseverance of the Saints" (John 6:39)

The two most important realities in Salvation are the Sovereignty of God and the Perseverance of the Saints. And yet, many who name the name of Christ want nothing to do with the Sovereignty of God — unaware of the absolute that if God has not sovereignly chosen you, you will not persevere.

East Newport Church Zoom Q&A

"Is Anxiety Sin: Part 1"

 

"An Exposistion Of Christian Slavery" (Romans 6:20-23)

Within the context of postmodernity and our Euro-Western Culture, we enjoy a hyperbolized sense of our own autonomy. In point of fact, the Psalmist says in Psalm 24: "The Earth is the LORD's and the fullness thereof, the world and those who dwell therein." Therefore, everything belongs to God. And as Christians, we are slaves of righteousness and consequently the enslaved possessions of God.

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