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Discover how the words you speak daily either open or lock the door to everything God has already provided through the redemptive work of Christ.
In this powerful third installment of his Redemption series, the pastor builds on two foundational truths established in previous sessions: that redemption is a continual process spanning past, present, and future, and that the blood of Jesus accomplished what the law could never do by freeing believers from condemnation. Drawing from Romans 8, Titus 2, 1 Corinthians 15, Matthew 12, James 3, and Proverbs 18, the message zeroes in on one of the most practical yet overlooked keys to walking in redemption: the words we speak. Using the vivid imagery of a ship’s rudder, a horse’s bit, and hurricane-resistant glass, the pastor illustrates how the tongue, though small, steers the entire course of a life. He unpacks Jesus’ sobering declaration in Matthew 12:37 that every person is justified or condemned by their own words, and connects this directly to why so many believers still experience guilt, shame, and condemnation despite being born again. The sermon closes with a corporate declaration, inviting listeners to repent for idle and negative words and to begin speaking life, healing, victory, and abundance in alignment with what God has already provided through the redemptive work of Christ.
Romans 8:23, Romans 8:1, Romans 7:12, 1 Corinthians 15:56-58, 2 Corinthians 5:21, Titus 2:11-14, Psalm 107:1-2, Matthew 12:33-37, James 3:2-13, Proverbs 18:21
Many believers treat redemption as a past event sealed at salvation and a future hope secured at glorification, but neglect the present dimension entirely. The pastor draws from Romans 8:23 and Titus 2:11-14 to show that the same grace that saved us is actively teaching us how to live soberly, righteously, and godly right now. Redemption is not passive. It demands that believers labor to enter into the rest Christ finished, working with God each day to allow the mind and body to catch up with what the reborn spirit already possesses in full.
Romans 8:1 declares there is no condemnation for those in Christ, yet many born-again believers still wake up feeling condemned. The pastor explains this is because the spirit is immediately perfected at new birth while the mind and body are still in process. Condemnation enters through thought patterns and verbal habits formed before or outside of the revelation of grace. It acts as a barrier to receiving healing, provision, and blessing. Recognizing that condemnation is a lie directed at the mind, not a verdict from God, is the beginning of dismantling its power.
Using Romans 7:12 and 1 Corinthians 15:56-58, the sermon draws a sharp contrast between what the law could diagnose and what it could never cure. The law is holy and righteous, but its weakness was always the flesh of the one trying to keep it. The law could only remind people of sin, producing guilt as a constant companion. Jesus came as the last Adam, fulfilled every demand of the law perfectly, and then credited his righteousness as a free gift to those who believe, destroying the cycle of perform-fail-condemn that held humanity in bondage.
Proverbs 18:21 states plainly that death and life are in the power of the tongue. The pastor points out that God has sovereignly placed this power into the believer’s own mouth, not withheld it in heaven. Just as God created the world through spoken words, and just as humans are made in His image and likeness, our words carry genuine creative and destructive weight. Speaking blessing, healing, victory, and abundance is not wishful thinking but an act of alignment with what God has already provided. Consistently speaking life reorients the course of a believer’s entire existence.
James 3 compares the tongue to the small rudder of a massive ship and the tiny spark that ignites a forest fire. No matter how large or fierce the external circumstances, the direction of a life is ultimately set by what comes out of the mouth. The pastor is honest that no one tames the tongue through sheer willpower, but invites believers to pray as David did in Psalm 141, asking God to put a watch over the mouth. Over time, this discipline strengthens the believer the way stress-tested hurricane glass becomes capable of withstanding a two-by-four fired at over one hundred miles per hour.
The closing exhortation calls every believer to move from a passive acknowledgment of redemption to an active, daily declaration of it. Psalm 107:2 commands the redeemed to say so, not merely feel so. Starting each morning by declaring that this is the day the Lord has made, that healing is yours, that victory is yours, and that divine connections are coming is not arrogance but obedience. It is partnering with God to unlock what condemnation has kept vaulted. Each justified word spoken in faith becomes a seed that produces the fruit of a redeemed, abundant, and purposeful life.
Redemption has three dimensions: we were redeemed by the blood of Jesus at salvation, we are being redeemed daily as our minds are renewed, and we will be fully redeemed at the glorification of our bodies as described in Romans 8:23. Eternal life begins now and grows as believers work together with God each day.
Romans 8:1 declares there is no condemnation for those in Christ, yet guilt and shame in the mind create a barrier to faith and receiving. Just as Adam hid from God after the fall, condemnation causes believers to pull back from the blessings already provided, functioning like a locked vault over healing, provision, and purpose.
In Matthew 12:36-37 Jesus warns that every idle word will be accounted for on the day of judgment. An idle word is one that is not moving you forward toward the goodness God has provided, much like a car engine revving in neutral. Words that reinforce condemnation, defeat, or unbelief are idle because they produce no fruit of the kingdom.
Romans 7:12 calls the law holy and righteous, but 1 Corinthians 15:56 explains that the strength of sin is the law because the weakness was never in the law itself but in human inability to keep it perfectly. The law could only remind people of sin. Jesus came, kept the law perfectly, and gave his righteousness as a free gift so that all condemnation would be destroyed once for all.
Proverbs 18:21 states that death and life are in the power of the tongue and those who love it will eat its fruit. God has placed the creative and destructive power of words into each person’s own mouth. Believers who consistently speak life, healing, and blessing align themselves with what God has already provided and begin to experience those realities.
James 3:2-12 uses three vivid illustrations: a small bit controls a horse, a small rudder steers a massive ship, and a small spark ignites an entire forest. The tongue is described as a world of iniquity capable of defiling the whole body, yet no human can tame it alone. This points believers to dependence on God to guard their speech as the primary means of steering their lives.
Guilt can be a healthy signal that prompts repentance and is experienced by Christians and non-Christians alike. Condemnation, however, is a tormenting, ongoing verdict that says you are permanently unacceptable to God, which Romans 8:1 completely abolishes for those in Christ. Jesus took condemnation upon himself at the cross so that believers could live in freedom rather than constant spiritual paralysis.
The sermon recommends starting each day with declarations aligned with Scripture, such as confessing that this is the day the Lord has made, that healing and victory are yours, and that divine connections are coming. Asking God to put a watch over your mouth as David did in Psalm 141, and refusing to let circumstances dictate what you say, gradually builds the strength and consistency needed to walk fully in redemption.