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Is there anything you're waiting for before you can fully rest in Jesus Christ?
This sermon explores the nature of faith and doubt through the story of John the Baptist's questioning of Jesus' identity, illustrating that even the most faithful human—John, the prophetic forerunner—can wrestle with uncertainty, especially amid suffering and unmet expectations. The central message affirms that genuine faith is not the absence of doubt, but the decision to lean into Christ despite it, trusting in His past faithfulness as evidence of His future reliability. Jesus responds to John's doubt not with condemnation, but with a powerful testimony of His works—blind seeing, the dead raised, the poor hearing good news—demonstrating that His kingdom is defined by spiritual and redemptive power, not political conquest. The sermon distinguishes between destructive doubt, which seeks to reject God, and constructive doubt, which leads to deeper trust, emphasizing that salvation is not earned by human righteousness but received through faith in Christ alone, who fulfilled the law, bore the penalty of sin, and offers adoption into God's eternal kingdom. Ultimately, the passage comforts believers by affirming that no one is too broken, too doubtful, or too unworthy to be included in God's grace, for even the least in the kingdom surpass the greatest of mere humans in divine honor.
