Brandan Kraft addresses the doctrine of Christian liberty and the proper limits of ecclesiastical authority through a personal testimony of church discipline, arguing that individual conscience before God supersedes institutional control while maintaining the biblical call to respect church leadership. Drawing primarily on Galatians 5:1 and Acts 5:29, Kraft contends that the gospel itself is fundamentally about freedom from law and performance-based requirements, and that church leaders who attempt to enforce extra-biblical conformity (exemplified in his case by mandatory tithing doctrine) effectively nullify the liberating power of Christ's finished work. The sermon distinguishes sharply between legitimate shepherding—which guides through example and trusts the Holy Spirit's work—and illegitimate controlling, which demands conformity to institutional systems and suppresses individual Spirit-led conviction. Kraft's practical significance lies in validating the experiences of "wounded sheep" who have been rejected for conscientious disagreement with church teaching, while simultaneously warning against antinomian rebellion and calling church leaders to examine whether their authority functions as protection or domination.
“My conscience belongs to God and not to church leaders. Every single one of us stands alone before the Lord in our conscience. Ultimately, it is the Holy Spirit who guides us and leads us into all truth and understanding.”
“Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage. Christ has made us free, not partially free, not free except for this list of rules, but free, truly free.”
“When someone tries to put you back under a law, when they try to add requirements, when they try to control your conscience, well, they are attacking the gospel itself... because the gospel is all about freedom. And anything that takes away from that freedom is another gospel.”
“It is better to walk alone with God than in a crowd without Him. It is better to have God's approval than man's acceptance. And it is better to have peace in your conscience than peace with controlling men.”
The Bible teaches that church authority should guide, not control, believers' consciences.
Hebrews 13:17, Acts 5:29
The New Testament affirms that we are not under the law but are saved by grace through faith in Christ.
Galatians 5:1, Ephesians 2:8-9
Following your conscience aligns you with God's will and helps maintain integrity in your faith.
Romans 14:5, Galatians 5:1
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
Brandan Kraft is a computer programmer from the Missouri Ozarks who has been writing about the sovereign grace of God since 1997. He started with a website called bornagain.net, built it into PristineGrace.org, and has published over two hundred articles, nearly sixty songs, and a growing catalog of podcasts from his living room in Ashland, Kentucky. All without permission from anyone.
He holds no seminary degree, no denominational endorsement, and no theological credentials. He has been writing software for the same employer since 1998. He thinks in systems and believes that the sharpest doctrine should produce the widest arms.
His systematic theology, A Thought in the Mind of God, derives every position from one sentence and applies it across every domain - from ontology to eschatology, from the nature of the human mind to the nature of heaven and hell. It is available at pristinegrace.org/mind.
Brandan lives in Ashland, Kentucky with his wife Angie and their son Cole. He plays trombone in the Marshall University Tri-State Brass Band and changes a diaper twice a day on a cat named OJ who was once paralyzed and whom nobody else wanted.
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Brother Brandan, my mother and I were ostracized from our local “baptist” church for not taking the c19vax. We believe Jesus had delivered us from all sicknesses in His Glory. We know Pharmakiea has corrupted all modern medicine as we know it. Call me xxx-xxx-xxxx.
Thank you for commenting Michael, it was nice chatting with you today! - b.