Loving God with Your Strength
In our final sermon series, HUMAN, Pastor Tyler confronts us with an uncomfortable truth: we are all susceptible to deception, and our greatest enemy isn't the people around us but the spiritual forces working to steal our strength. Drawing from Ephesians 6:10-20, we're reminded that our struggle isn't against flesh and blood, but against rulers, authorities, and spiritual forces in the heavenly realms. The sermon challenges us to examine where we might be deceived—not by obvious lies, but by subtle distortions that feel true to our itching ears. Like sheep that fixate on a single blade of grass and wander away, we can become so focused on what we want to be true that we miss what actually is true. The call here is radical: true strength isn't found in self-sufficiency or invulnerability, but in weakness surrendered to Christ. When we try to love God by our own strength, we burn out and become disillusioned. But when we admit our need, confess our deceptions, and put on the full armor of God—truth, righteousness, the gospel of peace, faith, salvation, and the Word—we discover that Christ's power is made perfect in our weakness. This isn't solitary Christianity; we need each other to battle deception. The 59 'one another' commands in the New Testament aren't suggestions—they're lifelines that keep us grounded in truth and protected from the schemes of the enemy.
