In his sermon titled "Bad Lips and Hearts," Don Bell addresses the importance of genuine worship over mere adherence to tradition, as illustrated in Mark 7:1-13. He argues that the Pharisees and scribes honored God with their lips but neglected true heart devotion, leading to vain worship (Mark 7:6-7). Bell highlights that their man-made traditions superseded God's commandments, specifically referencing Isaiah 29:13 to emphasize that external rituals cannot replace a sincere heart towards God. He underscores the doctrinal significance of this passage by asserting that true worship must stem from a heart transformed by grace, as Reformed theology emphasizes the necessity of heart change through divine intervention and total depravity. The sermon serves as a reminder for believers to evaluate their worship practices and seek a genuine relationship with Christ, highlighting the transformative power of grace in contrast to legalistic traditions.
“If Christ died to take away your sin, then you ain't got it. It's gone. When he takes away sin, it's gone forever. Never to be remembered against you again.”
“Your worship...in vain do they worship Me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men.”
“Hypocrisy is acting. They don't believe, here's what they're acting not, and here they are, they don't believe they're sinners.”
“The only thing we're to believe comes out of this book...not what I tell you to do, not what some church tells you to do, not what some preacher tells you to do.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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