Bootstrap
Brandan Kraft

Hear the Whole Matter

Brandan Kraft 8 min read
196 Articles 22 Sermons
1 Comment
Brandan Kraft
Brandan Kraft 8 min read
196 articles 22 sermons

Brandan Kraft argues against the practice of isolating single phrases from theological teaching to condemn fellow believers, using Proverbs 18:13 ("He that answereth a matter before he heareth it, it is folly and shame unto him") as his central text. Though firmly committed to the Doctrines of Grace and particular redemption, Kraft contends that building linguistic "fences" so restrictive that they prevent using Scripture's own broad gospel language—such as "Christ died for sinners" (Romans 5:8) or "the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world" (John 1:29)—represents a departure from biblical wisdom and reflects the Pharisaic pattern of prioritizing hedges over the law itself. Kraft calls for charitable, generous listening that considers the whole of a person's teaching rather than weaponizing theological precision against brothers in Christ.

Outline

The Problem: Isolating Words from Context

  • The Pattern of Nitpicking: Single phrases extracted from their full message context and used to build accusations of doctrinal compromise
  • Personal Confession: The author acknowledges this was once his own practice and pattern within sovereign grace circles
  • The Specific Example: Using "sinners" without immediately qualifying "His people" or "the elect" was grounds for correction regarding particular redemption

The Pharisaical Pattern: Building Fences Around Fences

  • Ancient Jewish Practice: The principle of building protective hedges around the Torah to prevent breaking the original law
  • The Corruption: Fences became more important than what they protected; when Jesus healed on the Sabbath, the Pharisees missed the joy of healing for concern about boundary-breaking
  • Modern Parallel: This same pattern appears in certain sovereign grace circles where precision becomes a weapon rather than a safeguard

Scripture's Own Broad Language

  • Biblical Usage: Paul, John the Baptist, and other biblical writers use seemingly universalist language without constant qualifiers
  • Romans 5:8 - "Christ died for us...sinners"
  • John 1:29 - "Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world"
  • 1 Timothy 1:15 - "Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners"
  • Proper Context: These verses are understood within the framework of sovereign grace because believers "hear the whole matter" rather than isolating individual phrases
  • God's Trust: The Holy Spirit inspired these phrases without defensive qualifiers, trusting God's people to understand the full counsel of Scripture

Biblical Wisdom on Hearing the Whole Matter

  • Ecclesiastes 12:13: "Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter" — Solomon's call to comprehensive understanding before judgment
  • Proverbs 18:13: "He that answereth a matter before he heareth it, it is folly and shame unto him" — responding before hearing the full context is both foolish and shameful
  • Ecclesiastes 10:8: The serpent bites those who break hedges — acknowledging legitimate boundaries matter, but distinction exists between maintaining necessary hedges and policing others' language

The Difference Between Precision and Weaponization

  • What Matters: Doctrinal precision and careful truth-telling are important responsibilities
  • What Corrupts: Demanding that everyone build their hedge in exactly the same place; weaponizing precision against fellow believers to categorize and dismiss them
  • The Author's Stance: He affirms particular redemption naturally throughout his teaching, not hiding or being ambiguous about sovereign grace, but refuses to speak with such caution that he ceases sounding human

Generous Listening: Grace as the Foundation

  • Grace Produces Charity: Those who understand their own salvation came through Christ's work, not their theological precision, should be the most patient listeners
  • God's Patience Model: The author reflects on God's patience with his own imprecise theology in early faith, correcting and growing him gradually rather than condemning him for wrong words
  • Rejoicing in Christ's Proclamation: Paul's example in Philippians 1:18 — rejoicing when Christ is preached even by those with impure motives; surely believers can extend grace to those with imprecise phrasing
  • The Standard: Consider the whole of someone's teaching; if they preach Christ, cling to sovereign grace, and rest in His finished work, give the benefit of the doubt on specific word choices

---

Key Quotes

“He that answereth a matter before he heareth it, it is folly and shame unto him.” — Proverbs 18:13

“The Bible itself uses what we might call broad gospel language...God Himself was not concerned about guarding every sentence with a qualifier. He expected His people to hear the whole matter.”

“If the grace of God has truly humbled you, if you really understand that you were saved not because of your theological precision but because of Christ's finished work on your behalf, then you ought to be the most patient, the most charitable, the most willing-to-hear-the-whole-matter kind of person in any room.”

“We're not the guardians of everyone else's vocabulary. We're beggars who found bread. Let's act like it.”

“If Paul could rejoice when Christ was preached even by people with impure motives, surely we can extend a little grace to a fellow believer who used the word 'sinners' instead of 'His elect' in one sentence of a forty-minute podcast.”

---

Scripture References

| Reference | Context |

|-----------|---------|

| Proverbs 18:13 | Foundation text: responding to a matter before hearing it is folly and shame |

| Ecclesiastes 12:13 | "Hear the conclusion of the whole matter" — call to comprehensive understanding |

| Ecclesiastes 10:8 | On breaking hedges and consequences; distinguishes between legitimate boundaries and overreach |

| Romans 5:8 | "Christ died for us...sinners" — example of Scripture's broad gospel language |

| John 1:29 | "Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world" — seemingly universalist phrasing understood in sovereign grace context |

| 1 Timothy 1:15 | "Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners" — biblical usage without immediate qualifiers |

| Philippians 1:18 | Paul rejoicing that Christ is preached, even by those with questionable motives |

---

Doctrinal Themes

  • Particular Redemption: Christ's death for His people specifically, intentionally, and effectually
  • Doctrinal Precision vs. Weaponization: The distinction between maintaining careful theology and using precision to condemn fellow believers
  • The Perspicuity of Scripture: Trust that God's people will understand Scripture's full counsel when hearing the whole matter, not just isolated phrases
  • Sovereign Grace and TULIP: The author's affirmation of Reformed doctrine as naturally flowing from his theology
  • Grace as Transformative: Grace should produce patient, generous listeners rather than suspicious critics
  • The Primacy of Christ: Christ and Him crucified should be the focus; rejoicing in His proclamation takes precedence over policing language
  • The Pharisaical Tendency: The danger of creating protective boundaries that become ends in themselves, obscuring the original purpose
What does the Bible say about particular redemption?

The Bible affirms that Christ's atoning work was specifically for His elect, as shown in passages like Romans 5:8 and 1 Timothy 1:15.

Particular redemption is a core tenet of sovereign grace theology, asserting that Christ died with the intention of saving a specific group—His elect. Romans 5:8 highlights God's love for sinners, stating that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us, pointing to the reality that this encompasses those chosen by God. 1 Timothy 1:15 reinforces this, suggesting that Christ came into the world to save sinners, referring specifically to those whom God had appointed for salvation. These passages, when understood within the broader context of Scripture, affirm that while God's grace is vast, it is intentionally directed toward His chosen people, leaving room for us to appreciate the precision of God’s plan without falling into universalism.

Romans 5:8, 1 Timothy 1:15

How do we know the doctrine of grace is true?

The doctrine of grace is supported by numerous scriptural affirmations, emphasizing salvation as a gift of God and not based on human effort.

The truth of the doctrine of grace is rooted in Scripture, which repeatedly emphasizes that salvation is solely by God's initiative and unmerited favor. Ephesians 2:8-9 states that we are saved by grace through faith, not of ourselves, so no one can boast, underscoring that it is God's grace that draws us to Him. This concept is further illustrated in Romans 9, which speaks to God's sovereignty in election. The doctrine of grace finds its foundation in the character of God Himself, who is merciful and compassionate, choosing to extend His favor to unworthy sinners. As believers affirm these biblical truths and experience the transformative impact of grace in their lives, they find confidence in the reality of this essential doctrine.

Ephesians 2:8-9, Romans 9

Why is it important for Christians to embrace doctrinal precision?

Doctrinal precision is vital to ensure clarity in the Gospel and guard against misunderstandings that can lead to theological errors.

Embracing doctrinal precision is crucial for Christians, as it allows us to communicate the truth of the Gospel clearly and effectively. The apostle Paul admonishes us in 1 Timothy 6:20 to guard what has been entrusted to us, indicating that sound doctrine is a stewardship we must take seriously. While grace invites us to be generous listeners, it also calls us to uphold the truth, ensuring that the language we use reflects the full counsel of Scripture. Accurate representation of foundational doctrines, such as those contained within TULIP (Total Depravity, Unconditional Election, Limited Atonement, Irresistible Grace, and Perseverance of the Saints), prevents misinterpretations that could undermine the essence of salvation. Hence, while we strive for precision, we need to balance it with grace, understanding that we are all in process and growing in our understanding of God's word.

1 Timothy 6:20

He that answereth a matter before he heareth it, it is folly and shame unto him. - Proverbs 18:13

   I get messages from time to time after a podcast episode goes out. Most of them are encouraging. Some of them are thoughtful questions from believers who are wrestling with something I said, and I welcome those. But every now and then I get a message from someone who has taken a single phrase, sometimes a single sentence, isolated it from everything else I said, and built an entire indictment on it.

   It happened recently. I put out an episode about the simplicity of the Gospel, how the good news of Christ is not a theology exam you have to pass, how we come to God with empty hands and cling to a finished work. And in the course of that message, I used some language that was, shall we say, not precise enough for one particular listener. I said something about Christ fulfilling the penalty of the law for sinners, and I used the word "sinners" without immediately qualifying it with "His people" or "the elect." And that was enough. That single word choice became the basis for a correction. The implication was that I had compromised the doctrine of particular redemption. That I was speaking like a universalist.

   Now folks, I want to be careful here, because I don't want to be unkind to anyone. I'm not going to name names or quote anyone directly. This isn't about one person. It's about a pattern I've observed over many years in sovereign grace circles, and it's a pattern I've been guilty of myself. So I'm not standing over here pointing fingers from some position of moral superiority. I've been the nitpicker. I've been the one dissecting other men's words looking for the flaw, the slip, the imprecise phrase that would allow me to categorize them and dismiss them. I know what that impulse feels like from the inside.

   But I've also grown weary of it. And I think Scripture has something to say about it.

The Pharisees and Their Fences

   There's a concept in ancient Jewish tradition that I think is deeply relevant to what happens in theological circles today. The rabbis had a principle: build a fence around the Torah. The idea was that if the Law said one thing, you should add additional rules around it to make absolutely sure nobody even got close to breaking the original commandment. If the Law said don't work on the Sabbath, the fence would define exactly how many steps you could take, how much weight you could carry, what activities counted as work and what didn't. The fence existed to protect the law.

   It sounds noble on the surface. But you know what happened? The fences became more important than the law itself. People got so consumed with maintaining the hedges that they forgot what the hedges were supposed to be protecting. And when Jesus showed up and healed a man on the Sabbath, they didn't rejoice that a crippled man could walk. They were furious that someone had broken through their fence.

   I see the same thing happening in certain corners of the sovereign grace world, and I say that as someone who holds firmly to the Doctrines of Grace.  I believe in particular redemption. I believe Christ died for His people, specifically, intentionally, effectually. I believe every point of what we call TULIP, and I preach it regularly. But I refuse to build a fence around my language so high that I can't even use the phrases Scripture itself uses.

   And that's really what struck me about the exchange I had. Because here's the thing. The Bible itself uses what we might call broad gospel language. Paul writes in Romans 5:8, "But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us." John the Baptist declared in John 1:29, "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world." Paul told Timothy, "This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners; of whom I am chief" (1 Tim 1:15).

   Now, are those statements universalist? Of course not. We know from the whole counsel of Scripture that "the world" in John's Gospel doesn't mean every individual without exception. We know that "sinners" in Paul's letter to Timothy refers to those whom Christ actually came to save. We understand these passages within the framework of sovereign grace because we've heard the whole of what Scripture teaches. But the phrases themselves, taken in isolation, could be twisted by someone who wanted to twist them. And yet the Holy Spirit saw fit to inspire those very words. God Himself was not concerned about guarding every sentence with a qualifier. He expected His people to hear the whole matter.

Hear the Whole Matter

   Solomon had something to say about this. Ecclesiastes 12:13 says, "Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God, and keep his commandments: for this is the whole duty of man." There's wisdom in that phrase, "the whole matter." Solomon didn't say, "Hear a fragment and render judgment." He didn't say, "Take one sentence out of a man's teaching and build your case." He said hear the whole.

   Proverbs 18:13 puts it even more bluntly. "He that answereth a matter before he heareth it, it is folly and shame unto him." If you respond to a man's teaching before you've actually heard what he's teaching, before you've taken in the full context and the full scope of what he's saying, that's not discernment. That's folly. And Scripture calls it shameful.

   I think about Ecclesiastes 10:8 as well, which says, "He that diggeth a pit shall fall into it; and whoso breaketh an hedge, a serpent shall bite him." Now, some hedges have a purpose. Some boundaries matter. Doctrinal precision matters. I'm not suggesting we should be sloppy with the truth or careless with our words. But there's a difference between maintaining a hedge and demanding that everyone else build their hedge in exactly the same place you've built yours. There's a difference between caring about truth and weaponizing precision against fellow believers.

   If you listen to anything I've ever taught, you will hear me affirm particular redemption. You will hear me speak of God's elect, of Christ's finished work for His people, of sovereign grace from beginning to end. That's not something I hide. It's not something I'm ambiguous about. It flows naturally from me because it's what I believe in my bones. But I also refuse to speak in a way that's so hedged, so carefully fenced, that it no longer sounds like a human being talking. I'm not writing a theological confession every time I open my mouth. I'm having a conversation. I'm preaching Christ. And I trust that the people listening, if they listen to the whole of what I'm saying, will hear clearly where I stand.

Generous Listening

   I think grace should make us generous listeners. If the grace of God has truly humbled you, if you really understand that you were saved not because of your theological precision but because of Christ's finished work on your behalf, then you ought to be the most patient, the most charitable, the most willing-to-hear-the-whole-matter kind of person in any room. Grace doesn't produce suspicious critics. It produces people who extend the same patience to others that God has extended to them.

   I think about how many times God was patient with me when my theology was a mess. When I was young in the faith and saying all sorts of things that were imprecise, incomplete, even flat-out wrong in places. God didn't cast me off because I used the wrong word in a sentence. He was patient. He taught me. He grew me slowly over decades. And He's still growing me. I don't have it all figured out, and I never will this side of glory.

   So when someone preaches Christ and Him crucified, when someone points sinners to the cross, when someone affirms that salvation is all of grace and none of works, maybe the first response shouldn't be to scan their language for the one phrase that wasn't careful enough. Maybe the first response should be to rejoice that Christ is being proclaimed.

   Paul himself said something about this in Philippians 1:18. "What then? notwithstanding, every way, whether in pretence or in truth, Christ is preached; and I therein do rejoice, yea, and will rejoice." If Paul could rejoice when Christ was preached even by people with impure motives, surely we can extend a little grace to a fellow believer who used the word "sinners" instead of "His elect" in one sentence of a forty-minute podcast.

   I'm not asking anyone to lower their doctrinal standards. I'm asking them to raise their standard of love. Listen to the whole matter. Consider the whole of a man's teaching before you render your verdict. And if you find that the man preaches Christ, clings to sovereign grace, and rests in the finished work of the cross, maybe give him the benefit of the doubt on the phrasing.

   We're not the guardians of everyone else's vocabulary. We're beggars who found bread. Let's act like it.

   Grace and Peace! - B.

Comments 1

0 / 2000 characters
Comments are moderated before appearing.
David Alvord Feb 9, 2026 at 5:32 PM

Hear the whole matter.
It is one thing to evaluate the intent of a brother's message based on his WHOLE understanding of the doctrines of grace. But when we share the gospel it is best to condense the WHOLE matter into succinct, accurate, propositions of truth. Especially because the current evangelical environment has redefined the gospel entirely and it needs correction.

Brandan Kraft Feb 9, 2026 at 6:33 PM

Thank you for your comment David.

Joshua

Joshua

Shall we play a game? Ask me about articles, sermons, or theology from our library. I can also help you navigate the site.