5/9/26

Conflict resolution God's way (Matt 18:15, Col 3:12-14)

“If another believer sins against you, go privately and point out the offense. If the other person listens and confesses it, you have won that person back. Matt 18:15

Since God chose you to be the holy people he loves, you must clothe yourselves with tenderhearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience. Make allowance for each other’s faults, and forgive anyone who offends you. Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others. Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds us all together in perfect harmony. Col 3:12-14

The Matthew 18:15 passage is the structural backbone for almost the entire framework it's worth anchoring the whole discussion there. The Colossians 3:12–14 cluster covers the posture (humility, gentleness, patience, forgiveness, love) all in one tight unit, making it very useful for teaching the character required before any of the steps can work. 

Conflict is inevitable in a fallen world, but God uses it to reveal and develop spiritual maturity

  • James 1:2–4 — trials produce steadfastness and maturity
  • Romans 5:3–5 — suffering produces character and hope
  • Proverbs 27:17 — iron sharpens iron; conflict as sanctifying friction

Pray for solutions that honor God and all involved

  • Philippians 4:6–7 — present everything to God in prayer; the peace of God guards hearts
  • James 1:5 — ask God for wisdom when you lack it
  • 1 Timothy 2:1–2 — pray for all people; God desires peaceful, godly lives

Assume everyone has right motives

  • 1 Corinthians 13:7 — love believes the best, hopes the best
  • Philippians 2:3 — count others more significant than yourself
  • Romans 15:7 — accept one another as Christ accepted you

Address issues quickly, graciously, humbly, and face-to-face

  • Matthew 18:15 — go directly to the person, alone, first
  • Ephesians 4:26–27 — do not let the sun go down on your anger
  • Galatians 6:1 — restore gently, watching yourself
  • Proverbs 15:1 — a soft answer turns away wrath

Include only those involved

  • Matthew 18:15–17 — the full escalation process begins with just the two parties
  • Proverbs 11:13 — a gossip betrays confidence; a trustworthy person keeps a matter private
  • Proverbs 17:9 — whoever covers an offense promotes love; repeating it separates friends

Strive to protect unity

  • Ephesians 4:3 — make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit
  • Colossians 3:13–14 — bear with one another; love binds everything in perfect harmony
  • John 17:20–23 — Jesus' own prayer for the unity of his people
  • Psalm 133:1 — how good and pleasant when brothers dwell in unity

The scope of Christ's grace enables us to forgive freely

  • Colossians 3:13 — forgive as the Lord forgave you
  • Ephesians 4:32 — be kind, tenderhearted, forgiving one another as God in Christ forgave you
  • Matthew 18:21–35 — the parable of the unmerciful servant; our forgiveness flows from being forgiven an unpayable debt
  • Luke 7:47 — the one forgiven much loves much
  • 2 Corinthians 5:18–19 — God reconciled us to himself and gave us the ministry of reconciliation


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5/8/26

Coming to Jesus: a lifelong habit

Read Matthew 11:20, 24,25-30 notice what Jesus does with his anger, how prayer transforms his perspective and invites us into childlike clarity "I'm with my dad."

The Big Idea

Jesus says "Come to me." Hebrews says "Come boldly." Both mean the same thing: the door is always open. You are always welcome. God does not turn people away. The only question is whether you have made coming to him a habit of your life. (Matthew 11:28-30; Hebrews 4:16)

The Yoke

Jesus does not take away your load. He changes what you carry it with. A yoke is still work, but his yoke fits right. The tired, striving life wears you out. The life with Jesus holds you up. Weakness is not a problem to fix before you come to him. Weakness is exactly when the yoke fits best. (Matthew 11:29-30; 2 Corinthians 12:9; Isaiah 55:2)

You can come to God any time, not only in a crisis. Every honest moment of need is the right time. (Hebrews 4:15-16)

Five Habits to Build

  1. Come first, not last. Most people pray only when everything else has failed. Build the habit of going to God first. Start each day by saying: "I am not carrying this alone." (Philippians 4:6; Jeremiah 6:16)
  2. Carry the right yoke. Jesus gives you one yoke: his call on your life, his pace, his priorities. We add extra weight on our own, trying to win approval or keep up with others. Every season, ask: what am I carrying that he never asked me to carry?  (Ephesians 2:8-10; Galatians 6:2)
  3. Come boldly, not perfectly. Do not wait until you feel good enough to pray. Come weak. Come messy. The tax collector came dirty and went home clean. The Pharisee came clean and went home empty. Confidence at the throne comes from who he is, not who you are. (Luke 18:13; James 4:6; Hebrews 10:19-22)
  4. Keep learning from Jesus. He is not only your Savior. He is your Teacher. Spend time in the Gospels. Watch how he moves. Who he stops for. How he prays. Let his habits slowly shape yours. (Matthew 11:29; Hebrews 12:15)
  5. Cast your worries early. Do not wait until you break down. Bring your worries to God at the first sign they are piling up. Ask. Seek. Knock. Keep doing all three. This is not a one-time prayer. It is an ongoing conversation. (1 Peter 5:7; Matthew 7:7-8)

The Integrated Picture

Jesus said "Come to me" from a hillside in Galilee. Hebrews said "Come boldly" from the theology of the cross. Same door. Different words. A soul shaped by both will be humble in posture, rested in striving, and bold in need. That is not just a season of the Christian life. That is the whole thing.

Discussion Questions

1. Jesus says his yoke is easy and his burden is light. What is one load you are carrying right now that he may never have asked you to carry?

2. Which of the five habits is hardest for you right now: coming first, carrying the right yoke, coming boldly, learning from Jesus, or casting early? What makes it hard?

3. Think about a time you waited too long to bring something to God. What held you back? What changed when you finally did?

4. The tax collector came to God weak and went home clean. The Pharisee came looking good and went home empty. Where do you see yourself in that story?

5. What would it look like, in a very practical way, to make coming to Jesus a daily habit rather than a last resort?


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Cross-Cultural Ministry

Know Your Group's Lived Experience

Before teaching, ask yourself what pain people carry -- suffering, poverty, persecution, minority status, or feeling like an outsider. These aren't abstract; they shape how people hear God's Word.

Supporting verses:

  • Romans 12:15 -- "Rejoice with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn."
  • Hebrews 13:3 -- "Remember those who are in prison, as though in prison with them, and those who are mistreated, since you also are in the body."
  • James 2:5 -- "Has not God chosen those who are poor in the world to be rich in faith?"

Communicate with Cultural Humility

We naturally see others through our own lens. That blind spot can damage relationships and block discipleship. Eight practical strategies help bridge those gaps: summarize often, seek understanding over debate, speak clearly, be warm and open, invite rather than assume participation, ask good questions, match your tone, and align your words with your body language.

Supporting verses:

  • Proverbs 18:13 "If one gives an answer before he hears, it is his folly and shame."
  • James 1:19 "Be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger."
  • Colossians 4:6 "Let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how you ought to answer each person."
  • 1 Corinthians 9:22 "I have become all things to all people, that by all means I might save some."

Build Gospel Unity Around God's Word

A multicultural group is not a problem to manage, it is a picture of the gospel. The Word unifies what culture divides. Our goal is to give people space to grow in Scripture and to celebrate both the unity and diversity of Christ's body.

Supporting verses:

  • Galatians 3:28 "There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus."
  • Ephesians 2:14 "For he himself is our peace, who has made us both one and has broken down the dividing wall of hostility."
  • Revelation 7:9 "A great multitude that no one could number, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne."
  • Psalm 133:1 "How good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell in unity!"

The Spirit Makes It Work

Cultural strategy alone falls short. It is the Spirit who opens hearts, and the Word that transforms them -- in every language, background, and life story.

Supporting verses:

  • Isaiah 55:11 -- God's Word will not return empty; it accomplishes his purpose.
  • 1 Corinthians 2:4-5 -- Paul's message came "in demonstration of the Spirit and of power, so that your faith might not rest in human wisdom."
  • John 17:21 -- Jesus prayed "that they may all be one... so that the world may believe that you have sent me."
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5/7/26

Lifelong habit of coming to Jesus boldly, receiving revelation from God (Matthew 11:28–30, Hebrews 4:16)

...Jesus began to denounce the towns where he had done so many of his miracles, because they hadn’t repented of their sins and turned to God... “And you people of Capernaum, will you be honored in heaven? No, you will go down to the place of the dead. For if the miracles I did for you had been done in wicked Sodom, it would still be here today. I tell you, even Sodom will be better off on judgment day than you.”

At that time Jesus prayed this prayer: “O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, thank you for hiding these things from those who think themselves wise and clever, and for revealing them to the childlike. Yes, Father, it pleased you to do it this way!

“My Father has entrusted everything to me. No one truly knows the Son except the Father, and no one truly knows the Father except the Son and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal him.”

Then Jesus said, “Come to me, all of you who are weary and carry heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you. Let me teach you, because I am humble and gentle at heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy to bear, and the burden I give you is light.” - Matthew 11:20–30

This year's big message for me was to adjust myself to the yoke of Christ. This is done through hearing the word from Christ, to learn from Him. When he was frustrated with the reality of his day it drove him to prayer, seeing people from a heavenly perspective, from an eternal perspective. Jesus taught his disciples to prayer "forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us." As we come boldly to the throne of grace, receiving the living Word of God that changes us (Hebrews 4), it culminates in Hebrews 12:15. "Let no bitter root grow up", warning against harboring resentment, anger, or unforgiveness, which can take root in the heart, steal peace, and defile relationships. It emphasizes actively cultivating God’s grace and peace rather than letting past hurts poison one's spiritual life.

Christ’s yoke reshapes the heart through the Spirit, not self-regulation (Matthew 11:29-30)

The yoke is where healing becomes obedience, and obedience becomes joy. Yet I find myself drifting and breaking the habit of coming to Jesus with my heavy burdens, I forget the lessons he taught me and need others to help me find my way back. "Ask for the old, godly way, and walk in it. Travel its path, and you will find rest for your souls." Jer 6:16

Leaders unyoked to God, ruin generations by greed and dishonesty (Jeremiah 5:1-6:21, Matthew 11:28-30)

A) God sees our dishonest heart attitude (Jer 5:1-19)

B) Warning for God's People who rejected God's way (Jer 5:20-6:21)

  • Stop, decide path of godly and find rest for your souls, all nations, fruit of schemes, rejecting God's word is disaster. Sacrifices are not pleasing to God. 

Promise of restoration, freedom and adoption (Matthew 11:28-30, Exodus 6:6-7)

"Jesus, where are we going?" Matthew 11:29-30

  • The yoke changes, not the weight. Jesus doesn't remove burdens, He replaces a crushing yoke with one He carries alongside you. Religious performance piles on load; relationship with Christ redistributes it.
  • Rest is learned, not escaped into. The rest Jesus offers comes through learning from Him, not stepping away from life. Sabbath, ancient paths, ongoing formation, rest is the fruit of walking rightly, not stopping.
  • Humility is the entry point. Christ is gentle and humble in heart. Men who find no rest are often too proud to admit exhaustion. Weakness isn't disqualifying, it's where Christ's power actually lands (2 Cor. 12:9).
  • Misplaced labor hollows you out. Ambition, approval, and achievement make heavy yokes because they never deliver what they promise. Isaiah 55:2 frames this precisely: a restless life is a worship problem before it is a schedule problem.
  • Burden-bearing is a shared practice. Galatians 6:2 makes this communal. Rest isn't only found alone with God, it's experienced with men who know what you're actually carrying and show up anyway.

The Big Idea

Two invitations. One posture. Jesus says come to me. The writer of Hebrews says come boldly. Both assume you will come. Both promise you will not be turned away.

The question is not whether God is available. The question is whether you have made coming to him a habit of life.

Three Interlocking Themes

1. Access Is Already Open

The veil is torn. The throne is approachable. Jesus is not a distant high priest who sympathizes theoretically. He was tempted in every way (Heb 4:15). He knows weariness from the inside.

This means the invitation in Matthew 11 is not a one-time altar call. It is an open door that never closes. Access is not earned by spiritual readiness. It is given because of who he is.

Cross-thread: Hebrews 10:19–22 echoes this. The confidence to enter is grounded in the blood of Jesus, not the cleanliness of your conscience.

2. Rest Is Not Absence of Load, It Is the Right Yoke

Jesus does not say put down your burdens. He says take my yoke. A yoke is still work. But his yoke is fitted. His burden is proportioned. The rest he gives is not passive, it is the deep steadiness of a soul moving at the right pace with the right master.

The contrast is not burden vs. no burden. It is crushing yoke vs. gentle yoke. The striving life exhausts. The yielded life sustains.

Cross-thread: 2 Corinthians 12:9, "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is perfected in weakness." Weakness is not disqualifying. It is the condition in which the yoke fits best.

3. Mercy and Grace Are Daily Provisions, Not Emergency Supplies

Hebrews 4:16 is often read as a crisis text, go to God when you're in trouble. But "time of need" is eukairia, the right moment, the opportune time. Every moment of honest need qualifies.

This reframes prayer. Mercy is for the morning before anything goes wrong. Grace is for the ordinary Tuesday. Both are available now, not only when you've run out of other options.

Cross-thread: Psalm 103:8–12, God is not measuring out grace reluctantly. He is "abounding in loving devotion." James 4:6 adds the condition: he gives more grace to the humble.

Lifelong Habits

These habits are not techniques. They are practiced orientations, ways of training the soul over years to move naturally toward what Jesus invites.


Habit 1: Come First, Not Last

The pattern most people fall into: pray when all else fails.

The habit to build: make approach to God the first move, not the fallback.

Philippians 4:6 frames this: "in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving." Not after everything. In everything. The soul that has practiced coming first does not panic in crisis because it is already in the posture of dependence.

Practice: Begin each day with a conscious, brief act of approach. Not a performance. Just: "I am coming to you. I am not carrying this alone."


Habit 2: Carry the Yoke, Not the Crowd

The pattern most people fall into: accumulating obligations, expectations, and identities until the weight becomes unbearable.

The habit to build: regularly ask whose yoke is this?

Jesus' yoke is singular. It is his call on your life, his pace, his priorities. The anxiety Jesus addresses in Matthew 11 often comes from carrying yokes that were never meant for you: approval, status, unresolved comparison.

Practice: Periodic simplification. Every season, ask: what am I carrying that he never asked me to carry? What have I added to his yoke that doesn't belong there?

God saved you by his grace when you believed. And you can’t take credit for this; it is a gift from God. Salvation is not a reward for the good things we have done, so none of us can boast about it. For we are God’s masterpiece. He has created us anew in Christ Jesus, so we can do the good things he planned for us long ago. Eph 2:8-10


Habit 3: Approach with Boldness, Not Performance

The pattern most people fall into: approaching God when they feel spiritually worthy, withdrawing when they don't.

The habit to build: boldness rooted in who he is, not who you are.

The tax collector in Luke 18:13 did not approach because he was ready. He approached because he was desperate and honest. Jesus said he went home justified. The Pharisee, who had the credentials, went home empty.

Confidence at the throne is not confidence in your spiritual record. It is confidence in his mercy.

Practice: Name your weakness before you name your request. The posture of humility unlocks more grace (James 4:6), not less. Key Aspects of James 4:6:

  • More Grace: God provides additional grace to overcome, even in challenging situations.
  • The Proud vs. Humble: God actively resists (opposes) those who are arrogant, but extends favor (grace) to those who are humble.
  • Context of Humility: This verse is a cornerstone of the passage (James 4:6-10), which instructs believers to submit to God, resist the devil, and draw near to Him


Habit 4: Learn Continuously from Jesus

The pattern most people fall into: treating Jesus as Savior but not as Teacher.

The habit to build: sustained learning at his feet.

"Learn from me," Jesus says in Matthew 11:29. This is not a one-time transfer of information. It is a lifelong apprenticeship. He is gentle and humble in heart, and that character is what his yoke is slowly shaping in the learner.

Practice: Regular, unhurried time in the Gospels. Not only reading about Jesus. Watching how he moves, what he notices, who he stops for, how he prays. The habits of his life become the curriculum.


Habit 5: Cast Before You Crack

The pattern most people fall into: waiting until anxiety becomes crisis before bringing burdens to God.

The habit to build: early and ongoing casting.

1 Peter 5:7 — "Cast all your anxiety on him, because he cares for you." This is not a one-time release. The Greek suggests a continuous action. Keep casting. Keep off-loading.

Matthew 7:7–8 reinforces the habit: ask, seek, knock — all three verbs are present-tense, continuous. This is the rhythm of a life lived in ongoing conversation with God, not occasional petition.

Practice: At the first sign of burden accumulation, bring it. Don't wait for the weight to become unbearable. The throne is accessible now.


The Integrated Picture

Matthew 11:28–30Hebrews 4:16
Come to meApproach the throne
I will give you restReceive mercy and grace
Take my yokeIn your time of need
Learn from meWith confidence

These passages are not separate invitations. They are the same door, described twice. One from the lips of Jesus in Galilee. One from the theology of the cross looking backward and forward.

A soul shaped by both will be: approachable in spirit, humble in posture, rested in striving, and bold in need.

That is not a season of the Christian life. It is the whole thing.

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5/6/26

Stillness is the discipline underneath all others (Psalm 46:10)

"Be still and know that I am God" Psalm 46:10 

This week we finished BSF Exile and Return. I was enjoying the year in a word "Freedom." A big part of that is God, make my heart Yours again: obedience, integrity, and character. The Leader’s Inner Life

  • Leaders lose their way when they lose their private life with God.
  • Daily intimacy is the antidote to fear, comparison, pride, and exhaustion.
  • Spiritual disciplines protect the soul and align the heart to Christ.

Here are targeted references for each point, with enough variety to choose from:


Leaders lose their way when they lose their private life with God.

  • 1 Samuel 13:8–14 — Saul acts without waiting on God; Samuel declares the kingdom will not continue. Loss of private obedience precedes public collapse.
  • 2 Chronicles 26:16 — Uzziah's heart was "lifted up to his destruction" after his strength grew. Success without private humility breeds the fall.
  • Psalm 51:10–12 — David's prayer after collapse: restore the inner joy of salvation. The crisis was first interior before it was public.
  • John 15:4–5 — "Abide in me... apart from me you can do nothing." Fruitful leadership is contingent on hidden connection.

Daily intimacy is the antidote to fear, comparison, pride, and exhaustion.

  • Isaiah 40:31 — Those who wait on the Lord renew their strength. Exhaustion is answered by intimacy, not strategy.
  • Psalm 27:1, 4 — "The Lord is my light and my salvation—whom shall I fear?" One thing David seeks: to dwell in God's presence. Intimacy displaces fear.
  • Galatians 1:10 — "Am I seeking the approval of man or of God?" The cure for comparison is having an audience of One.
  • Proverbs 4:23 — "Guard your heart with all diligence, for from it flow the springs of life." Daily vigilance over the inner life is leadership's first work.
  • Matthew 11:28–30 — Jesus invites the weary to come to him. Rest is relational, not recreational.

Spiritual disciplines protect the soul and align the heart to Christ.

  • Luke 5:16 — Jesus himself "withdrew to desolate places and prayed." Disciplines were Jesus's own pattern, not just a prescription for others.
  • Psalm 119:9, 11 — "How can a young man keep his way pure? By guarding it according to your word... I have stored up your word in my heart." The Word as protective discipline.
  • 1 Timothy 4:7–8 — "Train yourself for godliness... godliness is of value in every way." Paul frames spiritual disciplines as training (askeo), a deliberate, repeated practice.
  • Romans 12:2 — "Be transformed by the renewal of your mind." Alignment to Christ is a disciplined, ongoing renovation of the inner person.
  • Hebrews 12:11 — "No discipline seems pleasant at the time... it produces a harvest of righteousness." The fruit of disciplines is a protected, aligned soul.
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