Invisible Chains: The Gospel That Will Not Let You Stay Comfortable

In the quiet depths of Galatians 4 lies a phrase that should unsettle every complacent soul: στοιχεῖα τοῦ κόσμου stoicheia tou kosmou—the elemental spirits of the universe.

Not the benign stuff of ancient physics—earth, air, fire, water.

No.

Paul speaks of spiritual forces, cosmic powers that once enslaved the entire human race. Invisible tyrants ruling through pride, as Leviathan reigns over the sons of pride (Job 41:34), and through the spirit now at work in the sons of disobedience (Ephesians 2:2). Before Christ, humanity groaned under their dominion—destiny dictated, sin enforced, rebellion shaped by unseen hands.

Paul compounds the bondage. For Israel, heirs by divine promise, there was another captor: the Law as pedagogue, guardian, custodian. Confined like children under strict overseers, disciplined and prepared, yet slaves all the same (Galatians 4:1–2). Institutional chains atop cosmic ones. Heirs in name, but powerless in practice.

Then the fullness of time arrived.

God sent His Son—born of woman, born under Law—to redeem from both. From the Law’s custody. From the elemental powers’ grip. To adopt as sons, placing the Spirit in our hearts to cry “Abba, Father” (Galatians 4:4–7).

Total liberation.

Cosmic redemption.

Personal adoption.

Inheritance unlocked.

But Scripture refuses to leave the story in history.

It turns the mirror on us.

Even after new birth, it is possible to remain a child in Christ—carnal, sustained on milk, unable to digest solid food, riddled with envy, strife, and divisions (1 Corinthians 3:1–3). Spiritual immaturity leaves one exposed, still echoing those ancient influences, still vulnerable to worldly and cosmic pressures.

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The analogy cuts deep: just as the heir-child was under guardians, the immature believer lives under fleshly constraints.

A servant does not abide in the house forever.

Only the Son does (John 8:35).

Pause here.

The divide is stark—and eternal in consequence.

The child-servant remains temporary, bound, immature—no full voice, no complete inheritance.

The mature son is permanent, freed, led by the Spirit—an heir of God through Christ, crying “Abba” with confidence (Galatians 4:7).

Sonship is both instant gift and lifelong becoming. By faith, we are declared sons (Galatians 3:26). Yet God grants power to become sons (John 1:12)—a deliberate growth, an active transformation.

We must put off the old self, corrupted by deceitful desires, and put on the new self, created in God’s likeness, in righteousness and holiness (Ephesians 4:22–24). We must walk in newness of life (Romans 6:4).

Fail this, and one clings to old patterns, remaining a servant-child—vulnerable, barren.

Consider the land soaked by frequent rain—grace poured out abundantly—yet producing only thorns and thistles.

It is worthless.

Near to being cursed.

Its end to be burned (Hebrews 6:7–8).

Consider the branch attached to the vine yet bearing no fruit—cut away, withered, gathered, thrown into fire (John 15).

The sap dries.

Vitality ebbs.

Fruit fails.

Even a believer’s works may burn, though the soul is saved—yet as one escaping through flames (1 Corinthians 3:15).

Saved, yes—but emptied of reward, stripped of usefulness in the Father’s house.

There is no neutral territory.

No harmless stagnation.

What is not cultivated is overtaken by weeds.

What is not abided in withers.

The warnings do not soften; they intensify.

Israel was redeemed from Egypt, passed through the sea as baptized, fed with spiritual food from heaven—yet most were overthrown in the wilderness.

God was not pleased (1 Corinthians 10:1–5).

Redeemed—yet destroyed.

These things stand as examples, warnings for us.

The one who thinks he stands must take heed lest he fall (1 Corinthians 10:11–12).

How shall we escape if we neglect so great a salvation (Hebrews 2:3)?

Drift begins innocently—carelessness, ease, taking grace for granted.

But we must pay closer attention, or we drift away.

Willful sin after receiving knowledge of the truth leaves no further sacrifice—only a fearful expectation of judgment (Hebrews 10:26–27).

We are not of those who draw back to perdition, but of those who believe to the saving of the soul (Hebrews 10:39)—yet drawing back remains possible.

Apostasy is no mere weakness; it is deliberate abandonment, hardening the heart, trampling the Son of God, regarding His blood as common (Hebrews 10:29).

It would have been better never to have known the way of righteousness than, having known it, to turn back (2 Peter 2:21).

If anyone does not love the Lord Jesus Christ, let him be anathema—Maranatha (1 Corinthians 16:22).

Those who despised Moses’ law died without mercy.

How much sorer punishment awaits those who reject Christ’s greater revelation—no respect of persons with God (Hebrews 10:28–29; Romans 2:8–11).

The natural branches were broken off for unbelief.

We stand only by faith.

Do not be arrogant, but fear—for if God did not spare them, He will not spare us (Romans 11:20–21).

Knowing the terror of the Lord, we persuade others (2 Corinthians 5:11).

We work out our salvation with fear and trembling (Philippians 2:12).

We pass our sojourn here in fear (1 Peter 1:17).

The flesh is deceitful above all things.

It whispers “peace, peace” where there is no peace.

Ease leads to forgetfulness, forgetfulness to pride, pride to destruction.

These truths were once the heartbeat of Christian preaching—the fear of God, the necessity of perseverance, judgment according to works, holiness as indispensable. The early fathers thundered them. The Reformers revived them. Revivalists and Puritans lived them.

Then a softer gospel crept in—prosperity, therapy, self-affirmation, success as sign of favor. Warnings could not coexist; they pierced comfort, exposed presumption. So they were quietly buried, reframed, neutralized—to keep the message attractive.

To resurrect them today feels strange, even terrifying. Few ears are open. The polished voices preach another way.

Yet the burden endures—a fire shut up in the bones, Christ’s own weight carried in union with Him. Others bear it too, scattered across the world, often unseen, often rejected.

And at the core of this severe gospel lies the mercy that alone makes it endurable.

I once could not have spoken this without flinching—my conscience still recoils at the telling, fearing it sounds like boasting to a heart long steeped in unworthiness.

I never believed I was good enough for God.

Never thought He could love someone like me.

Never imagined inheriting the divine life promised to saints.

The old self was my only reality—shameful, naked, scarred by years of failure. It felt permanent, familiar, true.

The new self seemed a fantasy. Foreign. Unreachable. Fraudulent, even.

But the Spirit was patient beyond imagining. Through many people, across many long years of resistance, He convinced me—gently, persistently—that grace truly reaches the unlovable. That even I could live as the saints do. That I must learn to see myself not through natural eyes, but through God’s.

Only then did Christ take full form within me. Divine nature swallowing shame. Holiness covering nakedness. Power made perfect in my weakness.

Now it is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me. The change is not theory—it is appropriated, inhabited, alive. Preaching flows not from distant knowledge, but from this miracle experienced firsthand.

From enslavement beneath invisible powers to the freedom of mature sonship.

From double bondage to eternal inheritance.

From unbelief in love to wonder at mercy’s boundless reach.

This gospel is severe—because superficial faith cannot save.

It is merciful—because it saves to the uttermost.

It demands everything—perseverance, mortification, fear and trembling.

It gives everything—adoption, inheritance, Christ Himself.

Today’s gospel often promises ease where Scripture demands endurance. Comfort where Paul speaks terror. Affirmation where Hebrews warns of fire.

This one will not let you stay comfortable.

And if it could reach one who once stood convinced he was forever unlovable,

it can reach you.

Will you let it?

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Before you move on, you may find it helpful to reflect on the ideas above.

🔍 Reflection Quiz (from this article):

Check how well you’ve grasped the key ideas:

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To the SAINTS Who Are FAITHFUL in Christ Jesus: Identity, Preservation, and the SOILS of the Heart

Paul opens his letter to the Ephesians with a greeting that is far richer than most English translations reveal:

“Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God, To the saints who are [in Ephesus] and faithful in Christ Jesus…”

(Ephesians 1:1)

In Greek, it reads:

“τοῖς ἁγίοις τοῖς οὖσιν καὶ πιστοῖς ἐν Χριστῷ Ἰησοῦ”

(tois hagiois tois ousin kai pistois en Christo Iesou)

This is no mere formal address. It is a profound declaration of identity, a quiet theological foundation that anchors everything that follows in the letter.

1. Saints: Set Apart by God, Not Achievement

“ἁγίοις” (hagiois) means “saints” or “holy ones.”

It does not refer to morally flawless people who have “arrived.” The root ἅγιος means “set apart, consecrated, belonging to God”. In the Old Testament, this word described vessels, days, land, and priests—things claimed by God for Himself.

Paul calls ordinary believers “saints” before he ever addresses their conduct. Sainthood is identity before behavior. It is who they “are” because they belong to God—not because they have earned a status.

Stability of Being

The phrase “τοῖς οὖσιν”tois ousin (“the ones who are being”) is often smoothed over in translation, but it carries weight. It is a present participle emphasizing ongoing existence and standing—almost ontological.

Paul is saying: “To those who “truly are” saints.”

Not those who strive to become saints, but those whose being is now rooted in God.

Faithful: Present, Relational Allegiance

“καὶ πιστοῖς” (kai pistois) is the phrase that opens the deepest riches.

The Greek πιστός can mean both “faithful” and “believing”—English forces a choice, but Greek holds both. It is adjectival and present-tense: describing, not demanding.

This is not “saints who manage to stay faithful by effort.”

It is “saints characterized by faith—marked by relational loyalty and trust toward Christ.”

Crucially, both qualities—sainthood and faithfulness—flow from the same source: “ἐν Χριστῷ Ἰησοῦ”en Christō Iēsou (“in Christ Jesus”). Union with Christ is the anchor. Their identity and their allegiance exist because they are “in Him”, not because they generated them.

Paul’s logic is clear:

In Christ → therefore saints → therefore faithful.

Not the reverse.

2. The Challenge of Apostasy: Not Mere Positionalism

Some who once seemed to believe later abandon Christ (John 6:66; 1 John 2:19; Hebrews 10:39). This reality prevents us from reading πιστοῖς as an empty label given to anyone who once assented.

Yet Paul is not naive. He addresses the church in the present tense: “those who “are” faithful in Christ Jesus.” The description fits those presently marked by allegiance. If someone later departs, the description no longer applies—not because they lost a status, but because the reality has been revealed over time.

Faithfulness here is evidence, not the cause. It is located “in Christ”, produced and sustained by union with Him. Perseverance is the mark of authentic faith, but its source is divine grace.

3. Divine Preservation: The Hidden Root

Scripture holds this in holy tension:

– “The Lord knows those who are His” (2 Timothy 2:19).

– “No one will snatch them out of My hand” (John 10:28).

– “I lose nothing of all that He has given Me” (John 6:39).

The same people can be described from two angles:

From human history → they “remained” faithful.

From divine action → they were “kept”.

Preserving grace produces persevering faith. Warnings are real, but they are means God uses to keep His own. The elect hear and cling; the false drift away.

Even in Ephesians, Paul soon speaks of believers being “sealed with the Holy Spirit… the guarantee (ἀρραβών) of our inheritance” (1:13–14)—a down payment that cannot be withdrawn.

4. The Soils of the Heart: Jesus’ Parable Illuminates Paul’s Greeting

Jesus’ Parable of the Sower (Matthew 13) provides the perfect lens for understanding the difference between fleeting response and lasting faithfulness.

The Wayside → Seed snatched away immediately. No response.

Rocky Ground → Sudden sprouting after a drizzle of conviction—joyful reception, but no root. When heat (trials, persecution) comes, the plant withers quickly.

Thorny Ground → Seed grows for a time, but thorns—cares of this world, deceitfulness of riches, pleasures of life—creep in and choke the life. No fruit to maturity.

Good Soil → Deep, receptive, rooted. The Word takes hold, withstands heat and thorns, and bears lasting fruit.

These images map directly onto Ephesians 1:1:

– Shallow or thorny responses reveal a lack of true rooting in Christ. Enthusiasm appears, but trials or distractions expose the absence of genuine union.

– The “faithful in Christ Jesus” (πιστοῖς ἐν Χριστῷ – pistois en Christō) are the good soil—rooted by the Spirit, preserved through heat and thorns, producing fruit because Christ keeps them.

5. The Wise Farmer

The sower scatters seed generously, even on poor soil. Yet only the good soil receives cultivation and yields a harvest. A farmer does not waste ongoing care on rocks or weeds; he tends what can bear fruit.

So it is with God. He sows the Word broadly, but His preserving, nurturing work is directed toward those who are truly His—the good soil, the saints who are faithful in Christ Jesus. This is not neglect; it is wise, sovereign care.

Conclusion: Grace from Beginning to End

Ephesians does not begin with “walk worthy.”

It begins with who you already are in Christ: saints, truly being, marked by faithfulness—because you are in Him.

Identity precedes obedience.

Union precedes fruit.

Preservation ensures perseverance.

The good soil does not make itself good.

The faithful do not preserve themselves.

Christ, the Sower and Keeper, does.

And those whom He keeps remain faithful to the end—not by their grip, but by His.

Before you move on, you may find it helpful to reflect on the ideas above.

🔍 Reflection Quiz (from this article):

Check how well you’ve grasped the key ideas:

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Be Reconciled to God: Paul’s Anguished Warning and the Path to Mature Sonship

The church in Corinth was the most spiritually gifted congregation in the New Testament. Paul reminds them:

“You have been enriched in every way—in all your speaking and in all your knowledge… you do not lack any spiritual gift” (1 Corinthians 1:5–7).

Tongues, prophecy, miracles, bold preaching, deep insight—they had it all. If any church looked alive, thriving, and Spirit-blessed, it was Corinth.

Yet the same apostle who planted this church looked at it with tears in his eyes and terror in his heart. He feared that many of them—perhaps most—were on a fast track to hell.

He begged them as an ambassador of Christ: “Be reconciled to God” (2 Corinthians 5:20).

He commanded them:

“Examine yourselves to see whether you are in the faith; test yourselves… unless, of course, you fail the test” (2 Corinthians 13:5).

Reprobates. Counterfeits. Disqualified.

Paul was staring at a church overflowing with spiritual experiences and saying, in effect: “Some of you may not belong to Jesus at all.”

The Great Exchange—and the Great Danger

Everything hinges on the glorious truth of 2 Corinthians 5:21:

“God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.”

Christ took our sin. We receive His righteousness—the greatest exchange in history.

But notice the little word “might.” That purpose was still hanging in the balance for many Corinthians because their lives were riddled with blatant sexual immorality, factions, pride, drunkenness at the Lord’s Table, and tolerance of false teaching. Gifts abounded. Grace? Paul wasn’t sure.

A Father in Travail

Paul writes as a spiritual father in agony:

“I am jealous for you with a godly jealousy… I am afraid that your minds may somehow be led astray from your sincere and pure devotion to Christ” (2 Corinthians 11:2–3).

“My dear children, for whom I am again in the pains of childbirth until Christ is formed in you” (Galatians 4:19).

He knew that spiritual gifts, powerful experiences, and even miraculous signs are no proof of salvation. Judas worked miracles. Saul prophesied.

Love, repentance, humility, holiness—these are the evidences that Christ is truly in you.

The Ongoing Call: Restricted Affections

Most often, “Be reconciled to God” is heard as a call to the lost. But Paul is addressing believers—those who have already received salvation. He is pleading with them to live fully in the reconciliation already won, not merely to possess it in theory.

Immediately after this plea, he diagnoses the problem: “You are not restricted by us, but you are restricted in your own affections… Widen your hearts also” (2 Corinthians 6:12–13).

The tragedy is not lack of teaching or gifting—it is narrowed hearts, misplaced desires, and divided loyalty. Believers can be anointed and orthodox yet closed to the full virtues of God because of unequal yoking with darkness, worldly alliances, and tolerated idols of the heart (2 Corinthians 6:14–16).

Justification is the doorway into new life, not the full inheritance. Reconciliation is believers continually aligning their hearts and affections with God. Without this ongoing participation, even the justified remain stagnant—spiritual babes rather than mature sons.

From Entry to Sonship: Milk to Meat

Like an heir who is still a child and differs nothing from a servant (Galatians 4:1), many Spirit-filled believers remain carnal and divisive (1 Corinthians 3:1–3). Sin’s legal power is broken, but voluntary submission to unrighteousness keeps them servants in practice.

Hebrews 5:12–14 warns that those who partake only of milk are unskilled in the word of righteousness and lack discernment. Solid food belongs to the mature, who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern good and evil.

True sonship requires:

– Yielding bodily members to righteousness

– Submitting to Spirit-led holiness

– Partaking in the divine nature

– Walking as children of light (Ephesians 5:8)

– Giving no place to the devil

This is not sinless perfection—it is Spirit-empowered transformation into mature sons who carry authority and experience the fullness of their inheritance.

Paul uses history as a sobering warning: Israel was redeemed, baptized in the sea, fed with manna—yet most fell in the wilderness (1 Corinthians 10:1–12). “These things happened as warnings for us… So, if you think you are standing firm, be careful that you don’t fall!”

The Narrow Path and the Faithful Remnant

Yet amidst widespread compromise, Scripture always highlights a faithful remnant—grieved within, aware of their weakness apart from Christ, trusting the Spirit rather than the flesh. These hidden ones watch, pray, and persevere, living close to Jesus even when the broader church is distracted or lukewarm.

They embody the narrow path—unseen, patient, and prepared.

Jesus’ question still pierces: “When the Son of Man returns, will He find faith on the earth?” (Luke 18:8).

A Trumpet Blast and Merciful Summons Today

We live in a church age intoxicated with gifts, experiences, and success—conferences overflow, worship is electric, testimonies dramatic. Yet many remain gifted but stagnant, forgiven yet indulgent, Spirit-filled yet lukewarm.

Paul’s question echoes across the centuries: “Do you not know that Jesus Christ is in you—unless indeed you are reprobates?”

Rich in gifts, poor in grace—this was Corinth’s peril. It may be ours.

But the Spirit’s grief is matched by mercy:

“Now is the acceptable time; now is the day of salvation” (2 Corinthians 6:2).

The Lord is longsuffering, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance (2 Peter 3:9).

The summons to reconciliation is still active, still urgent, still merciful. Examination, repentance, widened hearts, and renewed obedience are invitations to restoration and maturity—not condemnation.

Hear the apostle’s heart-wrenching cry.

Examine yourself.

Be reconciled to God.

Widen your heart.

Grow into mature sonship.

Cling to Christ with everything you have.

Because love warns—and mercy calls.

Now is the acceptable time.

Now is the day of salvation.

 

 

The Narrow Gate: Why Most Churchgoers Will Not Inherit the Kingdom

Look around your church this Sunday.
Look at the worship team, the elders, the smiling faces in the seats, the people posting Scripture memes and “Jesus is King” captions.

Now hear the words of the King Himself:

“Enter by the narrow gate. For the gate is wide and the way is easy that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. For the gate is narrow and the way is hard that leads to life, and those who find it are few.” (Matthew 7:13–14)

Jesus did not say “some.” He did not say “a troubling minority.”
He said most.

And He was talking about the very people who thought they were on their way to heaven.

It’s evident that many who profess to know God in Christ do not even in the remotest way resemble the Spirit of Christ. They lack the divine imprint. They possess a different spirit and a different wisdom — earthly, sensual, devilish — and from within them flows muddy water and bitter fruit (James 3:15–17). They sing about the blood of Jesus while stabbing brothers in the back. They preach grace while living in greed, lust, and pride. They are tares dressed up as wheat, goats wearing sheep’s clothing.

And one day Jesus will look them in the eye and say, “I never knew you; depart from Me, you workers of lawlessness” (Matthew 7:23).

“And Such Were Some of You”… Or Were You?

Paul wrote to a church full of people who thought they were safe:

“Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: neither the sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor men who practice homosexuality, nor thieves, nor the greedy, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God.

And such were some of you.
But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God.” (1 Corinthians 6:9–11)

Notice the past tense: were.
True conversion is not a prayer you prayed once. It is a radical, irreversible transformation. You do not just get a new label — you get a new heart, a new spirit, a new Master. The old man dies. The new man lives.

Yet look again at the average church.

Where is the evidence of this washing? Where is the sanctification?          Where is the fear of God?

  • People shack up and call it “love.”
  • Greed is called “blessing.”
  • Gossip and slander are called “prayer requests.”
  • Hatred for a brother is called “discernment ministry.”
  • Pornography is winked at while the preacher yells about politics.

John could not be clearer:

“Whoever says ‘I know Him’ but does not keep His commandments is a liar, and the truth is not in him”    (1 John 2:4).

“Everyone who hates his brother is a murderer, and you know that no murderer has eternal life abiding in him” (1 John 3:15).

If you hate a brother or sister in Christ — if bitterness and unforgiveness live in your heart — John says you do not have eternal life. Period.

The Terrifying Marks of False Profession

False Professor (Never Truly Born Again)

True Child of God (Imperfect but Real)

No real grief over sin — only damage control when caught

Ongoing brokenness and hatred of sin

Fruit is consistently bitter: division, pride, sensuality, greed

Fruit of the Spirit grows: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness…

Loves the praise of men more than the praise of God

Loves God and loves the brethren, even when it costs

Can quote Scripture while living in rebellion

Trembles at God’s word and obeys, even imperfectly

Eventually falls away or hardens under trial

Perseveres through fire because God keeps His own

Paul told Titus:

“They profess to know God, but they deny Him by their works. They are detestable, disobedient, unfit for any good work” (Titus 1:16).

That is not a description of a “carnal Christian.” That is a description of a lost person play-acting faith.

Do Not Be Deceived

The most dangerous lie in the church today is this:
“You can live however you want and still go to heaven because you prayed a prayer in 1997.”

That is a demonic lie straight from the pit.

Grace is not a license to sin. Grace is the power that kills sin.

If your life does not look increasingly like Jesus — if there is no war against the flesh, no growing love for holiness, no supernatural affection for God’s people — then the Bible says you have every reason to fall on your face and cry out for mercy while mercy can still be found.

The Good News for Today

The narrow gate is still open.
The blood of Jesus still cleanses the worst sinner who truly repents.

The same Paul who wrote the terrifying list also wrote:
“And such were some of you. But you were washed…”

Today — right now — if you hear His voice, do not harden your heart.
Run to Christ.

Confess every sin.
Forsake every idol.
Plead for the new birth that only the Spirit can give.

Because one day the door will close.
And most who thought they were inside will find themselves on the outside, forever.

The narrow gate is narrower than you think.
Make sure you have entered it — truly entered it — while there is still time.

“Examine yourselves, to see whether you are in the faith. Test yourselves.” (2 Corinthians 13:5)

The King is coming.
Be ready.
Be real.
Be found in Him.

Maranatha. 🔥