Learning to Say the Right Words Part 1 (Titus 2:11-14)
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A wilderness story can wake you up. The image of a man who planned every mile of his journey but forgot to plan his way home sets the tone for a conversation about grace as both a guide for life and an exit strategy for death. We open Titus 2 and discover that grace is not only a doctrine to affirm—it is a teacher who meets us where we are, repeats the lesson as often as needed, and forms our habits day by day.
We unpack how grace trains us to say no to the patterns that once owned us and yes to practices that make us whole. Saying no is not dour moralism; it’s the freedom to disown what corrodes our joy. At the same time, grace calls us into sensible living marked by self-control and sound judgment, righteousness anchored to God’s standard rather than shifting personal values, and godliness that turns routine into worship. You don’t graduate from temptation, and you don’t age out of formation; grace keeps teaching while you keep walking.
Along the way, we challenge the cultural script that replaces every no with now and swaps virtues for marketable values. The text points us to a steadier path—habit, devotion, and a mind renewed by truth. Whether you’re new to faith or long on the road, this is a clear map: refuse what dims the soul, practice what reflects Christ, and remember that salvation appears for all kinds of people. Grace prepares you to live well today and to leave well when the time comes.
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