Biblical words matter.
We sow, God saves.
Christianity is a counterculture.
Run the race as if it matters.
Introduction
These commentaries are the result of my personal experience and study. They reflect my perspective on Christian doctrine—the narrative that shapes a believer’s faith—and how that narrative influences our ability to walk in the footsteps of Jesus Christ. Today, Christianity often seems disconnected from the broader cultural conversation—reduced, in many ways, to an inconvenient subculture that increasingly grapples with spiritual diversity and social identity. This growing irrelevance raises a pressing question: why has the Church drifted so far from meaningful engagement with society? What concerns me most is how rarely this issue is addressed. Leadership from the pulpit is more focused on the organisation of the institution itself—an oversight that, in my view, has a direct and damaging effect on the health of the Church.
About Me
My earliest experiences were shaped, but not led, by a Christian view of life—a position that continued for 40 years before I made a personal decision to accept Jesus Christ as my Lord and Saviour. In 2001, I was part of a leadership team that welcomed a new Pastor to our Church. Not long after, we were confronted with a series of theological and relational challenges that ultimately split the congregation in two. It took three subsequent Pastors and many years for the Church to heal from this division. I still recall the sadness, anger, and disillusionment that followed—the sense of confusion—the lingering weight of unanswered questions. Through that experience, I realised two things—that I knew very little about why I believed; and second, that whatever I did know wasn’t truly my own.
My Latest Commentary
Leaven in Heaven - Part 2
If we step back and view each parable as a part of a larger prophetic narrative, the notion that they present a utopian vision of the Church collapses. The metaphors of the mustard seed, the weeds, the leaven, and the birds all dismantle that claim. At best, placing a positive gloss on these parables demonstrates a shallow understanding of eschatology and an even weaker grasp of ecclesiology.
To repeat the theme of my introduction in Part 1: the Kingdom of Heaven parables are NOT, in the first instance, an allegory about God building the Church. Neither are they a collection of moral tales that highlight human righteousness in the world or in the Church. While the Parable of the Sower recounts how people respond to the Word of God, the subsequent parables shift into a personification of the Kingdom as an aberration—a Church infiltrated by the false gospel of the evil one, puffed up with pride, through sin (leaven) deliberately hidden within the architecture of the institution.
There are truths embedded in the Kingdom parables, and many interpret these as representing past, present, and future growth of the Church—from small beginnings to a global phenomenon. When taken individually, I can see how this view is constructed, but if we step back and view each parable as part of a larger prophetic narrative, the notion that it represents a utopian vision of the Church collapses. The metaphors of the mustard seed, the weeds, the leaven, and the birds all dismantle that claim. At best, placing a positive spin on these parables demonstrates a shallow interpretation of eschatology and an even weaker view of ecclesiology. History and present reality do not reveal the Church as a spiritual paradise. Rather, these parables contain a prophetic warning, that lays out how deception infiltrates the Kingdom community. By overlooking the Jewishness of the “birds of the air,” the deliberate introduction of “leaven,” the demonic origin of the “weeds,” and the “abhorrence the mustard seed becomes,” we risk descending into ambivalence about the evil that lurks within.
The Kingdom of Heaven
The phrase “Kingdom of Heaven” does not refer specifically to the Church. The Body of Christ is the culmination of the Kingdom story, but the story itself is about God’s grace extended to the world—the realm of His reign and presence within creation.
The Kingdom of Heaven can be used interchangeably with “Kingdom of God,” though it may carry different emphases depending on context. Conceptually, it refers to the sphere of God’s authority and influence, but not to the exclusion of a physical location. Matthew uses “Heaven” instead of “God” out of sensitivity to Jewish reverence for the use of God’s name. John, however, applies the term to realities of the afterlife.
Matthew portrays Jesus as the embodiment of the Kingdom of Heaven on earth and as the One building a Kingdom through the Spirit. John suggests that the Kingdom is present wherever God and Christ are. Revelation 11:15 declares: “The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of His Messiah.” Here, the Kingdom is defined as both the world and the spiritual authority ruling it.
Thus, the Kingdom can be understood as positional, spiritual, physical, or future. Jesus demonstrated the Kingdom in His presence and ministry—“for indeed, the Kingdom of God is in your midst” (Luke 17:21)—and foreshadowed its consummation at His return. The phrase also allows for simultaneity: the Kingdom can exist in multiple dimensions at once. Whatever the “new heavens and new earth” may be, their defining quality is the presence of the Father, the Son, and the Spirit.
Parables as Prophecy
These parables unveil the conflict between good and evil, a story born of God’s love for humanity, and culminating in the final harvest—when believers are gathered together with Christ for the Wedding banquet. The “birth pains” within the Kingdom parables foreshadow the Christian journey, the race Paul describes—identified in struggle, persecution and resistance. The Church remains vulnerable to counterfeit teaching and demonic infiltration. Evil presents itself as righteousness, distorts truth, fosters division, and promotes a false gospel of tolerance, without repentance, and a false love, without judgment.
The prophetic dimension of the parables is too often neglected. The Parable of the Sower portrays a continuum: from the reception of the Word to the final judgment. The seven churches of Revelation expand on this narrative, exposing the spiritual condition of all churches—and all believers—through time. Each manifests, to greater or lesser degrees, the very “abhorrence” warned of in the Kingdom parables. Revelation’s letters are a sober assessment and a present warning.
The Parable of the Weeds
The good seed is described in Matt 13:38 as the Sons of the Kingdom, which I acknowledge theologically as believers; however, in light of the subtle differences between the Parable of the Weeds and the Parable of the Sower, I pondered the idea that the seed in the Parable of the Sower was more generic, it didn’t have the word “good” preceding it and thus not necessarily a metophor for believers—but the ideal—and it fell on the righteous and the unrighteous. The Seed here might represent the Gospel message we all receive, and the actions of the recipients expose what we do with it. The parables together reveal both the present and future state of the world and the Church under the New Covenant. God is raising a body of true believers, while Satan cultivates a counterfeit religious body—impostors within the Church and the world. Impostors that are always learning but never understanding, swayed by worldly ideologies, man-made structures (Tower of Babel), and the spirit of this age. This is the Judas-spirit within all religious structures. The trajectory is clear: wars and rumours of wars, the calling home of believers, the tribulation, chaos, and finally the return of Christ and His reign. The spiritual decline anticipated in these parables is echoed in the Laodicean church (Rev. 3:14). The Kingdom parables expose not only Israel’s religious corruption in Jesus’ day, but also the recurring danger for the Church across time. Indeed, the corruption of religious institutions is most evident in the medieval and Reformation periods.
Judgement on Unbelief
In Matthew 12, the Pharisees accuse Jesus of casting out demons by Satan’s power. In this blasphemy, they commit the unpardonable sin: attributing the Holy Spirit’s work to the devil. Jesus declares such rejection unforgivable.
In response to their demand for a sign (12:38–45), Jesus condemns them as an evil and adulterous generation, granting them no sign but Jonah’s. Jesus announced judgment upon the cities of Chorazin, Bethsaida, and Capernaum—places where He performed many miracles. Yet, they refused to repent, and on the day of judgment, their punishment will be less tolerable than the pagan cities of Tyre, Sidon and Sodom. The sins of these towns are rising in many progressive, liberal, ideologically driven Churches, and the Spirit behind this rebellion will continue to sow a false gospel until the time of the end.
A Vacant Heart
Jesus confronts the Pharisees and Teachers about the Law, he provides the Church with a cautionary warning that's echoed throughout the parables and open to manifesting in the Church as the spirit of unbelief, especially in those NOT Born-again, "when Satan is cast out of a man and his heart is made clean, but remains unoccupied by the Holy Spirit, Satan returns to make that man worse than he was at first." Matthew 10 through 12 conveys a progressive revelation of the good and bad seed, and how Satan snatches away the Gospel message, but for those who respond, God has given Jesus authority to make God known to them.
The Mustard Seed and the Birds
The mustard seed is often presented as a positive image of Church growth. But in reality, the plant is a garden shrub, not a great tree. For it to become a towering structure is unnatural, even grotesque—a picture of abnormal, corrupted growth. Its unruly size symbolises distortion, not blessing. The “birds of the air” nesting in its branches represent demonic influence, just as in the Parable of the Weeds. Far from being a symbol of refuge, it is a warning of infiltration.
Signs of the Weeds
Drawing believers back into legalism—rules and institutionalism.
Overemphasis on denominational traditions.
Suppressing or rejecting the Spirit’s work.
Neglect of Scripture’s authority and power.
Fixation on religious structure over spiritual reality (the Judas spirit).
Counterfeit love—shaped by worldly narratives of victimhood. False love without judgment
Liberal interpretations of Scripture under “diversity, equity, and inclusion.” Tolerance without repentance.
Adoption of worldly systems and values within the Church.
Hatred of Israel and the rise of all forms of anti-Semitism, even in the church.
Legalism that denies Christ’s finished work.
Gnosticism that denies Christ’s humanity.
Idolatry that denies Christ’s lordship.
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- 6 Apr 2026 Is the Church Teaching a Corrupt Gospel? - Part 3
- 6 Apr 2026 Is the Church Teaching a Corrupt Gospel? - Part 2
- 6 Apr 2026 Is the Church Teaching a Corrupt Gospel? - Part 1
- 23 Feb 2026 The Revelation - Part 2: Who are the 24 Elders
- 19 Feb 2026 The Revelation - Part 1: The Seven Golden Lampstands
- 29 Sept 2025 Leaven in Heaven - Part 2
- 29 Jul 2025 Leaven in Heaven - Part 1
- 16 Apr 2025 The Church is not a Bicultural Experiment
- 26 Mar 2025 Marginalization of the Prophetic
- 16 Dec 2024 The Last Supper - Retrospection or Reunion?
- 16 Sept 2024 The Semantic Drift of Worship
- 11 Aug 2024 Run to Win the Prize
- 12 Jul 2024 Continuous Atonement
- 26 Jun 2024 So You Have a Haunted House
- 7 Feb 2024 The Sermon
- 30 Aug 2023 In the Absence of Persecution
- 24 Jun 2023 Are We Born Sinners?
- 9 May 2023 Did the Cross Separate Jesus from God?
- 7 Feb 2023 Pastors/Teachers, Are They the Same?
- 17 Nov 2022 The Dark Road to Personal Pleasure
- 29 Jul 2022 The Persecuted Apostle
- 4 Dec 2021 Crowd Hypnosis and the Church
- 15 Oct 2021 Victims of Social Engineering
- 7 Aug 2021 White Middle-Class, Middle-Aged Males - The Beatitudes
- 7 May 2021 Calvinism - A Soteriological Heresy
- 1 Apr 2021 Can Christians Lose Their Salvation? - Part 2
- 27 Aug 2020 Can Christians Lose Their Salvation? - Part 1
- 17 Jul 2020 Are We Totally Determined?
- 17 Mar 2020 Submission and Covering
- 13 Jan 2020 Godlessness
- 18 Apr 2019 The Rise of Socialism
- 4 Mar 2018 Jesus Must Go
- 18 Sept 2017 Death Spiral for the Anglican Church
- 14 Sept 2017 The Image of Evil
- 4 Sept 2017 False Prophets
- 1 Jun 2017 Who Owns the West Bank? - Part 2
- 19 May 2017 Who Owns the West Bank? - Part 1
- 18 Feb 2017 United in the Spirit
- 13 Dec 2016 What Are Our Rights?
- 31 Jul 2016 What Baptism did you receive?
- 5 Jul 2016 The Love of Money
- 5 Nov 2015 Signs of the Times
- 19 Jul 2015 Simply Apologetics
- 24 Feb 2015 Religious Systems of Authority
- 1 Feb 2015 Degrees of Sin - Part 2
- 19 Jan 2015 Degrees of Sin - Part 1
- 11 Dec 2014 The Cry for Peace
- 13 Sept 2014 Speaking in Tongues - Part 2
- 7 Sept 2014 Speaking in Tongues - Part 1
- 4 Nov 2013 The Unsaid Truth
- 2 Sept 2013 Saved by the Church
- 6 Aug 2013 Unified Disagreement
- 25 May 2013 Have the Promises of Wealth Come True?
- 23 Apr 2013 Negotiating a Christian Marriage - Part 5: Headship
- 23 Mar 2013 Negotiating a Christian Marriage - Part 4: Relationship Not Ruling Authority
- 2 Mar 2013 Negotiating a Christian Marriage - Part 3: Wives, Submit to Your Husbands
- 16 Oct 2012 Negotiating a Christian Marriage - Part 2: Husbands, Submit to Your Wives
- 18 Sept 2012 Negotiating a Christian Marriage - Part 1
- 6 Aug 2012 Progressive Healing
- 10 Jun 2012 Tithing - Part 2
- 16 May 2012 Tithing - Part 1
- 17 Apr 2012 The Popularity Myth
- 22 Mar 2012 Freedom and Grace
- 23 Aug 2011 What is Biblical Authority?
- 23 Aug 2011 What About Accountability?
- 23 Aug 2011 Conflict is not a Bad Word
- 23 Aug 2011 When the Church Loses It's Way
- 23 Aug 2011 Anointing With Oil