Épisodes

  • Ch 14- Specific OT Ceremonial Laws (Diet, Tithes)
    Dec 3 2025
    Chaplin Jonathan discusses the final instructions given by Moses to the Israelites before their departure from the land, emphasizing the importance of following God's laws and customs, including dietary restrictions and the role of the Levites and priests. The conversation highlights the conditional nature of these instructions, emphasizing the need for obedience to maintain the covenant.
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    23 min
  • Danger: Drifting from God's Word
    Nov 30 2025
    The sermon centers on the urgent call to steadfastly heed the surpassing salvation revealed in Christ, contrasting the veiled revelations of the Old Testament with the clear, definitive revelation of God in His Son. It emphasizes that Christ, as the eternal Son and express image of God, has completed the work of redemption—purging sins, securing salvation, and upholding all creation—making the gospel not merely a future hope but a present deliverance from sin's power and consequences. The author warns against spiritual drift, illustrating how even small compromises with former patterns of life can lead to a dangerous return to legalistic bondage, especially under the weight of the law's unyielding penalties. Yet, because Christ has paid the penalty for sin and the gospel is confirmed by divine signs, miracles, and the Holy Spirit's gifts, believers are called to persevere with heightened attention, lest they neglect this incomparable salvation. The message is both a pastoral exhortation and a solemn warning: to remain faithful to Christ is to stay on course, anchored in the finished work of grace, not the shifting sands of human tradition or religious performance.
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    44 min
  • Q: Want to Walk Closer to the Lord?
    Nov 30 2025
    The sermon centers on the urgent call to draw closer to God through intentional spiritual disciplines, grounded in humility, desire, and worship. It emphasizes that true intimacy with the Lord requires recalibrating one's life by surrendering pride, actively desiring communication through consistent prayer and Bible reading, and submitting all decisions to Scripture rather than personal preference. The preacher underscores that spiritual maturity is not passive but demands deliberate effort—making time for prayer, studying God's Word with curiosity and depth, and engaging in worship with genuine passion, even when uncomfortable. Drawing from Psalms, James, and Romans, the message affirms that God's unchanging nature provides a stable foundation amid life's uncertainties, and that the church's purpose is to reflect heaven's worship by living faithfully in the present, anticipating the ultimate fulfillment of God's promises. This Message was preached at MacClenny Primitive Baptist Church in MacClenny, FL.
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    40 min
  • Humbly Serving in the Church Romans 12:3-8
    Nov 23 2025
    The sermon centers on Romans 12:1–8, calling believers to present their lives as living sacrifices in response to God's mercies, emphasizing a transformed life marked by humility, unity, and purposeful service within the body of Christ. It unpacks the metaphor of the church as a single body with diverse members, each possessing unique gifts and roles not for personal glory but for mutual edification and the fulfillment of God's will. Key themes include the rejection of pride, the importance of selfless service, and the necessity of using one's God-given talents—whether in ministry, teaching, exhortation, giving, ruling, or showing mercy—with sincerity, diligence, and cheerfulness. The message underscores that every believer has a vital, often unseen, role in advancing God's kingdom, and true spiritual maturity is found in recognizing that all gifts come from God and are to be used faithfully, not for recognition, but for His honor and the good of others.
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    49 min
  • Ch 13- Deuteronomy - Conspiracy to commit Idolatry
    Nov 19 2025
    Deuteronomy 13 presents a rigorous theological framework for confronting idolatry in all its forms, emphasizing that God's exclusive claim on worship demands absolute loyalty. The passage outlines three escalating levels of judgment: the false prophet whose sign is genuine but whose message leads away from God, the close family member or friend who secretly entices to idolatry, and a city that has fully embraced idolatry after failing to address earlier attempts to entice.
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    18 min
  • Ch 17 Deuteronomy - Sacrifices, Idolatry and Kings
    Nov 19 2025
    This passage from Deuteronomy 17 presents a theological framework for worship, justice, and leadership within God's nation of Israel. It begins with the imperative that sacrifices must be unblemished, symbolizing the perfection of Christ, the ultimate Lamb of God, and warning against offering anything less as a form of spiritual hypocrisy. The text then addresses the severe consequences of idolatry, whether individual, familial, or communal, emphasizing that such acts are abominations that must be eradicated through a just and public process requiring multiple witnesses and communal accountability. This judicial order underscores the seriousness of sin and the need for obedience to God's authority, with the ultimate goal of preserving holiness and deterring future rebellion. The passage further establishes a hierarchy of authority, directing disputes to God-appointed judges and priests, and demanding absolute submission to their rulings as divine mandates, lest one incur divine judgment. Finally, it outlines the qualifications for kingship—chosen by God, from among the people, restricted from accumulating power, wealth, or foreign alliances, and required to personally copy and meditate on the law daily to cultivate humility, obedience, and lasting rule, pointing forward to the ultimate King, Jesus Christ, who fulfills all these patterns in perfect righteousness.
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    33 min
  • Conforming vs. Transforming: You're a Sapling Not A Dead Stick - Romans 12:2
    Nov 16 2025
    Romans 12:2 "And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God" The sermon centers on the believer's response to God's sovereign mercy, calling for a life of continual surrender and transformation rooted in Romans 12:1–2. It emphasizes that true worship is a living sacrifice of the whole self—mind, body, and spirit—offered in gratitude for salvation, not as a means to earn it. The core exhortation is to reject conformity to the world's values, which are shaped by sin, pride, and peer pressure, and instead embrace a daily renewal of the mind by the Holy Spirit, enabling discernment of God's good, acceptable, and perfect will. This discernment involves three layers: first, ensuring actions are morally good; second, examining motives and methods to ensure they are pleasing to God; and third, committing to perseverance and completeness in obedience, even when it demands sacrifice or discomfort. The message is both convicting and hopeful, urging believers to abandon self-reliance and cultural mimicry, and instead grow in Christlikeness through humility, Scripture, prayer, and faithful endurance, recognizing that their identity and purpose are found in Christ alone. This message is the 19th message of a series working verse by verse through the Letter to the Romans. Elder Jonathan Moseley is the Pastor at Fair Haven Primitive Baptist Church in Tifton. Fair Haven Primitive Baptist Church is located just about a mile outside of Tifton, GA and it is on the right as you travel East on Highway 82 towards Brookfield.
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    48 min
  • To the Priest in the Pew - Romans 12:1
    Nov 9 2025
    The sermon centers on Romans 12:1, calling believers to present their bodies as living sacrifices—holy and acceptable to God—out of gratitude for the mercies revealed in God's redemptive plan throughout Romans 1–11. It emphasizes that this act of worship is not a burdensome obligation but a logical, reasonable response to divine grace, rooted in the believer's new identity as a priest in Christ, empowered by the Holy Spirit to serve God directly. The application unfolds through spiritual sacrifices: continual praise and thanksgiving, selfless acts of mercy and generosity, faithful prayer, and the courageous proclamation of the gospel, all of which reflect a life transformed by Christ's atonement. Elder Moseley underscores that this service is not about earning favor but about living out the reality of salvation in daily obedience, love, and humility, with the ultimate aim of glorifying God in every sphere of life, from family and work to community and evangelism.
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    1 h et 4 min