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Weekend Service for January 18

Scripture Readings: Luke 6:46-49

Becoming is a process shaped by what a person repeatedly sows. What is practiced day by day determines the fruit that will be harvested; habits do not make one perfect but make one permanent. Spiritual formation requires intentional, persistent choices—small acts of devotion, prayer, scripture reading, fasting, solitude, and service—that over time shape character. The reality of planting and harvesting is neither punitive nor magical: it is sober cause-and-effect. When a life is regularly planted with things of the flesh, decay and death follow; when it is regularly planted with the Spirit, everlasting life and Christlike fruit emerge.

Formation happens inside a community. Christians are not lone artisans but members of a body that gently restores, bears burdens, and teaches one another, all while watching their own hearts to avoid the same temptations. God’s grace can open unexpected doors—preparing and equipping for opportunities when readiness meets mercy—but readiness itself is cultivated through practice. The pastor’s stories from band and learning guitar show that skill and spiritual maturity both require practice, wise formation, and the willingness to suffer short-term discomfort (calluses) for long-term growth.

Purpose anchors the daily grind. Belief in a God who creates and redeems gives a direction that reframes ordinary days; vocation becomes participation in God’s story rather than pursuit of self-affirmation. The shape of discipleship is ordinary and patient: not dramatic jumps but steady steps—repeated choices aligned with Christ that build resilience for the inevitable trials. Practical guidance centers on regular habits: Scripture engagement, prayer that seeks God’s face rather than streaks of performance, fasting, simplifying life, solitude, worship beyond Sunday, and consistent service.

The pressing question is practical and urgent: what is being planted today? If patterns remain unchanged, the harvest will be a continuation of current fruit. But if one intentionally replants life with spiritual disciplines and community accountability, then the harvest will shift toward Christlike character. Becoming more like Christ is the clear aim; the method is persistent, communal, and grace-infused practice over time.

[00:00] Welcome

[00:18] What You Repeatedly Sow

[01:22] Band, Practice, and Growth

[06:20] Practice Makes Permanent

[08:10] Reading Galatians 6:1-10

[10:45] Planting Determines Harvest

[14:50] Small Repeated Choices Matter

[22:41] Spiritual Disciplines to Practice

[27:42] Examine What You’re Sowing

[29:22] Closing Prayer and Charge