How are you at “speaking the truth”? How clear and plain do you make the truth when you are talking with an unbelieving coworker or a relative that has walked away from the faith?
I think we have all experienced the temptation to soften up our message or water down the truth a bit, attempting to make it more palatable and the conversation more comfortable. However, when we water down the content of the message, won’t we find that we’ve watered down the power of the message as well?
Because of that temptation, the following quote from Richard Sibbes really convicted me. I appreciated Sibbes comments so much that I wrote them next to the text of Peter’s powerful sermon in Acts 2.
Sibbes explains:
“Truth feareth nothing so much as concealment, and desireth nothing so much as clearly to be laid open to the view of all; when it is most naked, it is most lovely and powerful.”
I thought Acts 2 to be a good margin location as the two together remind me that, as I preach, I must proclaim the truth clearly, boldly, and in all its naked beauty, believing that God the Spirit will use the naked truth to bring souls to the Savior. But the practice of “truth exposing” shouldn’t just be isolated to a sermon or a teaching time, it should be my habit whatever the conversation and whatever the context. I don’t know about you, but my fallen lips (and the mind that fuels them) need this reminder!

Where does true worship come from? I don’t mean good singing or a really great Sunday service, but true humility before God; that place where I am viewing both myself and God correctly?
What does the Cross of Jesus do in our lives? What does it mean to be “crucified with Christ” (Galatians 2:20)? What does it mean to be a “new creature”? I wrote this powerful quote from the wise doctor,
One of the things we men are especially good at is compartmentalizing. Like the bowels of a ship or the chambers in a submarine, we can often close off one aspect of life from another and not allow ”crisis spill over.” We become good at separating our job ”world” from our family “world” and often those ”worlds” from other aspects of life. This can be both a good thing and a bad thing. 


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