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Walk of Wisdom Part 1

with Michael Easley
  • Sermons

Walk of Wisdom Part 1

with Michael Easley
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Paul urges believers to walk worthy of their calling through humility, gentleness, patience, and Spirit-empowered transformation.

Walk of Wisdom Part 1

This is part of a 4 part series on Ephesians 4&5

Summary

In this sermon from Ephesians 4:1-2, Dr. Michael Easley explains that the Christian life begins with understanding who we are in Christ before focusing on what we do for Christ. Just as Paul structures his letters with doctrine first and application second, believers must build their lives on the foundation of the gospel rather than relying on self-effort. True transformation comes through the Holy Spirit’s power, not through determination, discipline, or legalistic rule-keeping.

Focusing on Paul’s command to “walk in a manner worthy of the calling,” Dr. Easley highlights five key “walk” passages in Ephesians and shows how they describe a life shaped by Christ. Paul identifies himself as a prisoner of Christ and pleads with believers to live consistently with the salvation they have received. This worthy walk is not about earning God’s favor but reflecting the new life already given through Christ.

The sermon explores the qualities that characterize a worthy walk: humility, gentleness, patience, and loving tolerance toward others. Dr. Easley challenges listeners to examine what truly controls their lives and whether they would identify themselves as servants of Christ. He reminds believers that spiritual maturity is marked by power under control, humility over pride, and dependence on the Holy Spirit’s transforming work.

Takeaways

  • Paul always grounds practical Christian living in the theological truth of what Christ has already accomplished.
  • Lasting spiritual change comes from the Holy Spirit’s power, not from self-improvement or religious effort.
  • Believers are called to live in a way that reflects the salvation they have received through Christ.
  • Paul’s description of himself as a prisoner of Christ challenges us to examine what truly controls our lives.
  • Humility means valuing others above ourselves and rejecting the pride God opposes.
  • Gentleness is not weakness but strength under control, displayed through wisdom, patience, and love.

To read the Psalms, click here.

Click here for other Michael Easley Sermons.

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Continue Series

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Psalm 90 reminds believers that life is brief, sin is serious, and only God can give lasting joy, meaning, and eternal hope.

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Psalm 74: Praying Through The Ruins

Psalm 74 reminds us that even in devastation and silence, God remains the eternal King who brings salvation from ruins.

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Psalm 71: Faith That Finishes Well

Psalm 71 shows aging as loss, but also deep faith, mentoring purpose, and joyful worship rooted in God’s lifelong faithfulness.

Read More »

Topics

  • Biblical Teaching, The Holy Spirit, Wisdom

References

Tags

  • Christian Living, Discipleship, Ephesians, gentleness, Holy Spirit, humility, sanctification, spiritual growth
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