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Openai/68212884-5940-8007-ae13-ab8952298d9e
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===== Tone and Spiritual Authority: ===== The Sermons carry a tone that is deeply personal, direct, and convicting—in many instances echoing the Sermon on the Mount but with even more introspective calls to inner humility and divine love. The voice in these sermons carries the authority of Christ Himself, speaking as the living God to His children. Moral and Inner Reformation: Each sermon promotes the inner purification of the soul, the abandonment of hypocrisy and self-righteousness, and a path of living love in daily life. It often goes beyond doctrinal issues and enters the realm of the living relationship with God, reflecting Jesus' rebukes of religious formalism (Matthew 23) and teachings on the new heart (Matthew 5–7). Criticism of Ecclesiastical Formalism: Just as Jesus rebuked the Pharisees, the Lord in these sermons laments the corruption of modern churches, their focus on rituals, worldly power, or misrepresentation of His teachings. This critique is spiritual, not denominational—it is a universal call for Christianity to return to its essence: the living Christ within.
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