Brandan Kraft addresses the widespread evangelical tendency to reduce God's infinite character and scriptural truth to finite, systematized categories—what he calls "putting God in a box." The sermon argues that while theological systems, confessions, and creeds serve helpful organizational purposes, they become spiritually problematic when Christians elevate these human constructs to the level of Scripture itself or imagine their systematic frameworks have exhausted divine truth. Kraft illustrates this through multiple examples: treating the five points of Calvinism (TULIP) as the totality of gospel truth, fixating on peripheral doctrines like eschatology, or using doctrinal conformity as the sole criterion for evaluating other believers' legitimacy. Drawing on Job 11:7-8 and Romans 11:33, Kraft establishes that God's nature transcends human comprehension—His wisdom is unsearchable, His judgments unfathomable, His thoughts infinitely higher than ours. The practical significance is twofold: it calls believers to humble, ongoing study of Scripture as their ultimate authority rather than relying on secondary sources, and it demands a gracious posture toward other Christians, rejecting the sectarian impulse to exclude those who don't conform to one's particular theological system. Ultimately, Kraft redirects focus from propositional formulas to the person of Christ and the gospel itself, which no box can contain.
“We build our own boxes. We create our systems. We make our formulas and then we live inside them. We crawl into our box and close the lid and lock it shut. Then we feel comfortable and secure. But here is the problem. God does not fit in our boxes. He never has, and He never will. Every time we try to pin Him down, He breaks loose.”
“Truth is found in Scripture, and it is not in our systems. It is not in our confessions. It is not in our creeds. It is not in our formulas. It is not in what our pastor says either, or our favorite preacher. It is found in the Scriptures.”
“The moment we begin to think we have arrived, the moment we think we have it all figured out, we stop growing, we stop learning, and we put ourselves in a box.”
“The gospel is not a formula. The gospel is a person. The gospel is Christ... Christ died for sinners, and He bore their sins in His body on the tree, and He satisfied God's justice, and He paid the penalty, and He rose from the dead, and everyone who looks to Him for rest is saved.”
The Bible teaches that God's ways and thoughts are infinitely beyond our comprehension, as highlighted in Job 11:7-8 and Romans 11:33.
Job 11:7-8, Romans 11:33
The doctrines of grace are rooted in Scripture and reflect the biblical truths of God's sovereignty and salvation as found in key passages.
Ephesians 1:4-5, Romans 3:23
Humility allows us to recognize our limitations in grasping God and helps foster a deeper relationship with Him.
1 Corinthians 8:2
Putting God in a box refers to limiting our understanding of Him to simplified formulas or doctrines, which undermines His infinite nature.
Job 11:7-8, Romans 11:33
Studying Scripture is crucial for understanding God's truth and ensuring our beliefs align with His word.
2 Timothy 2:15
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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