Why Spiritual Maturity Shows Up In Conflict | 1 Corinthians | Week 5
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Something about a handwritten note hits different. It can carry encouragement across decades, drop you back into a moment, and remind you that God was working even when you did not see it. That idea becomes the doorway into Paul’s letters to the Corinthian church, where care and correction sit side by side, and where real spiritual growth gets tested in everyday life.
We dig into 1 Corinthians 3 and the sharp contrast between milk and solid food. Spiritual age and spiritual maturity are not the same, and time in church is not the same as becoming like Jesus. We talk about how conflict reveals what is really controlling us, why Matthew 18 pushes us toward reconciliation, and how jealousy, gossip, and retaliation expose immaturity. We also walk through the fruit of the Spirit as a practical growth marker, and we ask a question that gets uncomfortably specific: can we feed ourselves spiritually through prayer and Scripture, or do we live only on Sundays?
From there, the conversation turns outward to discipleship and mission. The call is not to stay comfortable in the light, but to go and make disciples starting with our neighbors and moving toward the hard places. Jamie Bridges connects Matthew 7 and 1 Corinthians 3 with a memorable warning: storms test foundations, and fire tests materials. If our foundation is Christ, what are we building with, and will it last when life gets loud?
If you want a clear, biblical framework for spiritual maturity, Christian discipleship, and building a faith that holds up under pressure, listen now. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the most challenging question you are taking from the message.
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