Carry The Fire - Week 4

Romans 8:13-17 Pastor Chuck Mosely
Thesis God is objectively near to His people by the Holy Spirit regardless of our subjective awareness, and He has given us ordinary means—the Word, prayer, and the gathered church—through which to experience His extraordinary presence.
Series
Carry The Fire
Type
Topical
Tone
pastoraldidacticcelebratory
Method
canonicalapplicatory
What's in this sermon

The shape of the argument

45 units across exposition, application, illustration, theological claim, and conclusion. The pastor's argument is built from these moving parts.

Pastoral correction · unit #44
"Issues concrete instructions for small group discussion and prayer, creating space for testimony and intercession. The application addresses both those experiencing nearness and those in crisis, modeling pastoral sensitivity to the congregation's varied spiritual states."
Doctrinal loci· 11 surfaced
Pastoral Theology · 8 Providence / Sovereignty · 8 Ecclesiology · 7 Sanctification · 6 Soteriology · 6 Bibliology · 5 Hamartiology · 4 Theology Proper · 2 Christology · 1 Doxology / Worship · 1 Spiritual Warfare · 1
Bible citations· 11
Psalm 91 | Revelation 3:20 | Matthew 28:18-20 | Psalm 34 | Hebrews 13 | Joshua 1:9 | Psalm 23 | John 1:12 | Romans 8:13-17 | Galatians 4:4-7 | Luke 15
Illustrations· 16
  1. personal story · unit #2 — Establishes the first layer of the narrative—the death of Michael after intense faith-filled prayer, and God's gracious revelation to Judy that reinterpreted their petition. This demonstrates God's nearness in crisis and His surprising answers to prayer.
  2. personal story · unit #3 — The climax of the narrative—during a new medical crisis, an unconscious idol surfaces in the pastor's heart. The Holy Spirit's convicting work exposes hidden sin that the pastor had been entirely unaware of, demonstrating God's nearness through conviction and cleansing.
  3. personal story · unit #4 — The narrative resolution—the pastor's spiritual crisis becomes his sermon, turning personal brokenness into public testimony. This models pastoral vulnerability and shows how God uses our hidden sins, once exposed, for the edification of others.
  4. cultural reference · unit #16 — Deploys a widely known cultural-devotional poem to reinforce the sermon's argument that God's nearness is most real when least perceived. The illustration bridges high theology and popular piety, making the doctrine accessible through familiar imagery.
  5. personal story · unit #22 — First congregant (John) testifies to 'Abba' as intimate access to God despite God's omniscience, emphasizing the Spirit's convicting work and the Father's readiness to receive the repentant. This personal testimony models vulnerability and theological precision.
  6. personal story · unit #23 — The pastor himself testifies, grounding 'Abba' in the physical intimacy of grandchildren seeking his lap and his story. The illustration connects the theological concept to embodied family life and multi-generational faith transmission.
  7. personal story · unit #24 — Second congregant (Diana) testifies to 'Abba' as total abandonment and trust, emphasizing security and love. Brief but theologically rich—captures the surrender required in filial intimacy.
  8. personal story · unit #25 — Third congregant (Larry) testifies through a childhood memory of discovering his father's hidden gift—a baseball glove—which testified to the father's love even during absence. The story parallels God's hidden work on our behalf.
  9. analogy · unit #27 — Fourth congregant (Marguerite) testifies to 'Abba' as the trust required to fall backward into someone's arms—complete confidence in being caught. The pastor affirms and names her, modeling pastoral care in teaching moments.
  10. personal story · unit #29 — Extended narrative of John's adoption—the loss of Hannah, the simultaneous birth of an adoptable baby boy, the nurse's insistent prompting, the Christian doctor's counsel, Judy's instant conviction, and the rapid transition from funeral to adoption. The story demonstrates God's providence in the most disorienting circumstances.
  11. historical example · unit #31 — Draws on the parable of the prodigal son to illustrate the Father's active, searching love for returning sinners. The exposition reframes the parable around the father's initiative and vigilance rather than the son's repentance.
  12. personal story · unit #34 — Frames Brent's forthcoming testimony by contrasting spectacular Holy Spirit experiences (Angelica's filling, the Grand Canyon) with the more ordinary but regular work of the Spirit in Scripture study. The illustration prepares for Brent's testimony on the Word as a means of nearness.
  13. personal story · unit #35 — Brent's testimony combines brief theological commentary on 'Abba' and the Lord's Prayer with personal testimony about Scripture as a living encounter with the Father. He emphasizes that the goal of Scripture study is not knowledge but knowing God, and that the Spirit uses the Word to convict, encourage, and sustain.
  14. personal story · unit #37 — Illustrates prayer as a means of nearness through the story of Judy's 93-year-old mother's honest, simple prayer. The narrative models unadorned access to God and the Spirit's facilitation of intimate communion even in theological confusion.
  15. personal story · unit #39 — Illustrates Spirit-created unity through an anecdote about four friends whose only common ground is Jesus. The story makes the abstract doctrine of Spirit-wrought fellowship concrete and memorable.
  16. personal story · unit #42 — Illustrates personal relationship with God through the life and testimony of Evelyn Wilkins, a recently deceased church member whose walk with God sustained and encouraged the pastor through his own trials. The illustration demonstrates how one person's nearness to God blesses the whole community.
Theological claims· 5
  1. The Lord faithfully uses trials as a furnace to expose hidden idols in our hearts so that He can sanctify us and make us useful for Him. unit #5
  2. Just as an adopted child is a legitimate son or daughter in an earthly family, believers are legitimate children of God by adoption, joint heirs with Christ, fully loved and fully belonging. unit #30
  3. The Bible is uniquely living and active because the Holy Spirit initiated its writing and makes it alive to us today as we read it. unit #36
  4. The Holy Spirit is at work in the gathered church, creating unity among diverse believers that transcends political and social divisions because we are baptized into the body of Christ. unit #38
  5. When believers gather to worship, the Holy Spirit is present, making Christ's promise to be 'in the midst' of the gathered church a living reality. unit #40
Quotations· 2
"I would not be your friends if it wasn't for Jesus" — unnamed friend (unit #39)
"I've been through enough to know that He's more than enough for me" — Evelyn Wilkins (unit #42)
Read it

Full transcript

41,474 characters 45 units ~46 min reading time

0 · Establishes the sermon's thematic tension: salvation is secure once God sets His heart on us, but the battle against sin and spiritual ineffectiveness continues throughout the Christian life

You know, I believe the, the Word shows us that once the Lord sets His heart on us, the enemy, the devil, our flesh can't keep us from coming to the Lord. Once God sets His heart on a person, we're gonna come to Jesus. But that doesn't mean the fight is over. We have an enemy who, as Christians, he's going to cause us and try to cause us to be ineffective.

And so we're going to be battling sin our whole life until the Lord takes us home. And that's why I wanted Dan to share that, because we're not out there worshiping idols, we're worshiping Jesus. But we can have idols in our heart.

1 · Frames the forthcoming personal narrative with pastoral self-deprecation and temporal setting, signaling a shift from doctrinal assertion to illustrative story

I'll tell my quick story about, and I've told this before, I joke that I only have about 10 stories and I tell them over and over and over again. So most of you probably heard this. But I was on my way down to speak at a friend's church down in the valley. This is 1980, 2, '83. We had had 2 babies that had died.

2 · Establishes the first layer of the narrative—the death of Michael after intense faith-filled prayer, and God's gracious revelation to Judy that reinterpreted their petition

One lived for 10 months, was in the hospital for 8 or 9 months. And we were trusting the Lord to give him health and a long life. Psalm 91, we were believing God's word that he was going to live. He made it through 5 surgeries and was doing really well. He was born prematurely, was 2 pounds 12 ounces.

When he was born. He recovered from these 5 surgeries, and then one day he was in the hospital. One day we got a call and the Lord had taken him. Gone, just like that.

And I had to stay home with Kelly. Judy and Kelly and I were at home, and someone had to stay with Kelly. So I stayed with Kelly. Judy drove to the hospital to see to see Michael. And I just knew that when Judy got to the hospital and saw Michael's body, that she was going to have a faith crisis.

On the way to the hospital, the Lord showed Judy that the long life that we were believing for Michael was going to be in heaven and not on earth.

And she saw that just as clear as day. So when she got to the hospital, she didn't have a faith crisis. God had already done a work in her heart between the East Side, like out in the Yarbrough area, and driving to Providence. God showed her that the long life that we had been believing for, for Michael, was not going to be here, but it was going to be with the Lord.

An amazing revelation. So I'd worked through that myself.

3 · The climax of the narrative—during a new medical crisis, an unconscious idol surfaces in the pastor's heart

And this was a few years later, and Judy was having some back problems. And she had an X-ray that showed a white spot on her X-ray. And that either meant an injury, an infection, or a tumor.

And they wanted to wait a few months and do another X-ray. And during those two months, they ruled out injury. They ruled out infection. So it was definitely a tumor. Did another X-ray.

The white spot was bigger and brighter, which meant that it was a tumor and probably cancerous because of the way it was growing. So the next thing they wanted to do was do a biopsy. So in between the second X-ray and the biopsy, this friend of mine asked me to go down and speak at his church, small church down in Fabens. He was like a spiritual dad to me. He had started his church.

Judy had lived with their family for a number of years right out of high school. So I'm driving down, I'm thinking about what I'm going to say, and I start thinking about this thing on Judy's back. And all of a sudden, out of my mouth comes this: Lord, you took Michael, and you took Hannah, and if you take Judy, I'm not going to serve you anymore.

I had never consciously had that thought before, ever.

But there was something in my heart that just erupted out of me. And I pulled over. I was somewhere between I-10 and Fabens. And I was just undone. Where did that come from?

What was that? The Lord said, spoke. It wasn't an audible voice, but it might as well have been. He said, you're idolizing Judy and your children. You have those above me in your heart.

And I had no idea that was going on. No clue. But there it was. And I just started weeping, weeping, weeping, asking the Lord to forgive me, receiving his forgiveness. You know, 20 minutes, 25, I don't know.

I was just crying, talking to the Lord. I had no idea that was in my heart.

4 · The narrative resolution—the pastor's spiritual crisis becomes his sermon, turning personal brokenness into public testimony

Get back on the road, I'm driving down to Jack's church. I walk in there and my face is just, you know, all puffed up. I've been crying. He goes, what is wrong with you?

So I told him, I said, Jack, I can't speak this morning. I mean, I'm undone. So I told him what had happened. And he said, well, just tell them. That's your message today.

Tell them what just happened to you. And so I did. I mean, I shared that and cried some more.

5 · Extracts the theological principle from the narrative: hidden idolatry is real, and God uses crisis (the 'furnace' and 'forge') to expose and purge it

But we can get idols in our heart. We can start putting things above God, serving God for what he'll do for us. And if he doesn't do those things, then we start charging him.

Sanctification, the furnace, the forge, crushing, crushing that needs to take place in our life to make us more like Jesus. And the Lord is so faithful to help us, show us hidden areas. I had no idea that was there. I knew Judy had some issues in trusting the Lord.

I was really concerned about her drive to the hospital that morning. The Lord is so faithful. He's so faithful by His Spirit to show us these areas in our heart that He's after. The sanctification of the Lord, setting us apart to be holy, useful for Him.

Where this fits

Recent preaching context

The three sermons immediately preceding this one in the preaching schedule.

Not enough data yet — this preacher has fewer than three prior sermons in the corpus.
Earlier in the corpus · July 9, 2025
A prior sermon on Romans 8:13-17
You preached this same passage — 1 Romans 8 citations in that earlier sermon. Worth re-reading before the next time this text comes around.
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Where this was preached

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Cross of Grace Church
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# Cross of Grace Church

A church preaching expository sermons through the books of the Bible.

## Sermons
- [Carry The Fire - Week 4 (Romans 8:13-17)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/carry-the-fire-week-4)

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