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The sermon, drawn from the narrative of Micah and the Levite in Judges 17–18, exposes the pervasive danger of utilitarian religion—where faith is reduced to a transactional exchange for personal benefit, whether in the form of security, recognition, or comfort. It critiques both liberal and fundamentalist Christianity for subtly embracing humanism, the philosophy that the ultimate end of life is human happiness, thereby distorting the gospel into a means to an end rather than a response to God’s glory. The central message is that true Christian faith is not about securing personal salvation or prosperity, but about surrendering to God’s sovereign purpose, where repentance arises not from fear of hell, but from a recognition of God’s worthiness, and where service is motivated by worship, not reward. The preacher calls for a radical reorientation: from serving God for ten shekels and a shirt to offering oneself as a living sacrifice for the glory of Christ, exemplified in the Moravian missionaries who gave their lives so that others might hear the gospel. Ultimately, the sermon challenges every believer to ask not what they will gain from God, but what God will gain from them.
#parisreidhead #tenshekels #sermon