Receiving God's Correction with Godly Grief | Drew Gessner | 5/24/2026
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Sermon Summary: This sermon explores the Apostle Paul's second letter to the Corinthians, focusing on how believers should receive correction from God. The central message emphasizes that God's correction comes from a place of fatherly love, not condemnation. Drew introduces the concept of "godly grief" versus "worldly grief," explaining that godly grief leads to repentance and life, while worldly grief leads to death. Using the acronym FRAME (Fear of God, Resentment toward sin, Authenticity, Motivation, Enlightenment), the sermon provides a practical framework for responding to God's correction. The ultimate goal is not punishment but transformation, leading to confidence in our relationship with God and assurance that we will continue to choose Him. The sermon concludes with the encouraging truth that repentance brings joy and confidence, not shame, and that God's promises to dwell with us, welcome us, and be our Father remain constant regardless of our sin.
Key Points:
-God promises to dwell with us, welcome us, and be our Father before calling us to repentance
-God's love does not require perfection, but our love for God does require repentance
-Spiritual guides should be morally upright, genuinely caring, and bold enough to speak truth
-Godly grief leads to repentance and life, while worldly grief leads to death
-The FRAME acronym: Fear of God, Resentment toward sin, Authenticity, Motivation, Enlightenment
-Paul's correction was motivated by love for the Corinthians' salvation, not desire for punishment
-Repentance reveals our earnestness to follow God to ourselves, building internal confidence
-True confidence comes from knowing we will choose God, not from self-determination alone
-God's correction should be received with joy because it leads to transformation and abundant life
Scripture Reference:
-2 Corinthians 6:16-18
-2 Corinthians 7:1-16
-The parable of the Prodigal Son (referenced)
-The story of the Rich Young Ruler (referenced)