Brandan Kraft addresses the peril of doctrinal knowledge becoming a substitute for personal dependence on Christ, a subtle yet dangerous spiritual condition he identifies through Jesus's confrontation of the Pharisees in John 5:39-40. The sermon argues that intellectual assent to Scripture and theological precision, while not inherently problematic, can calcify into false assurance when knowledge replaces trust in Christ's finished work as the foundation of salvation and spiritual rest. Kraft supports this argument through careful exegesis of John 5:39-40, where Jesus rebukes religious leaders not for studying Scripture but for refusing to come to Him personally, and Matthew 7:22-23, where Jesus rejects those with impressive religious credentials but no relationship with Him. The preacher grounds assurance instead in Pauline passages emphasizing justification by grace alone (Romans 3:24; 5:1; 8:1, 35), arguing that true spiritual maturity manifests not in increased confidence in one's understanding but in deepened, continual dependence on Christ's righteousness. This distinction carries profound practical significance: it protects believers from the exhausting pursuit of theological mastery as security, redirects assurance away from intellectual performance toward relational union with Christ, and reframes Christian growth as movement toward greater humility and dependence rather than greater knowledge and control.
“I wasn't always resting. I was managing. And I've written before about how easy it is to confuse structure with substance, especially with spiritual things in church life and whatnot. You can be surrounded by good theology, faithful language, and serious people, and still feel strangely restless on the inside.”
“The danger zone for me is where I nod my head and assume I'm safe because I understand it. That one still gets me because there were seasons where I honestly thought, well, I can clearly see this. I can agree with it. I can explain it. So I must be standing on solid ground. And only later did I realize I was standing on agreement at times, but not on Christ.”
“Real assurance is usually quieter. It's usually quiet. Real assurance tends to rest. It doesn't need to announce itself. It doesn't need to enlist its accomplishments. It doesn't need to justify its presence. It simply clings to Christ and says, if I'm accepted, it's because of Him.”
“Your knowledge will not save you, but Christ will...You don't have to clean yourself up. You don't have to sharpen your understanding or get your footing perfect before you come to Christ. You come as you are. And you keep coming, tired, unsure, distracted, even frustrated. He doesn't get worn out by that.”
The Bible warns that knowledge alone cannot save; true salvation comes from a relationship with Christ.
John 5:39-40, Matthew 7:22-23, Ephesians 2:8-9
Scripture testifies that salvation is found solely in Christ, who completed the work necessary for our redemption.
Romans 3:24, Matthew 1:21, Galatians 6:14
Resting in Christ signifies dependence on Him for salvation, freeing us from the burdens of self-reliance.
Romans 8:1, Hebrews 4:9-11, John 10:27-28
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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