Saturday, April 18, 2026

Just an Old Shepherd Thinking out Loud

 Ramblings of a Country Preacher

Next year, I will be retiring as a pastor at Sugar Plain Friends Church. I have served as a pastor for over forty years. My health has slowed me down, and it is time to step back and let the younger generation take charge.

Now and then, a man ought to stop and take a look at the road behind him—not to dwell there, but to understand how the Lord has led him step by step. I’ve been doing a little of that lately, and I reckon if I had to put it into plain words, I’d say this: I never set out to be anything more than a simple preacher of the Gospel, but the Lord had a way of adding a few burdens to my shoulders along the way.

First and foremost, I’ve always been a shepherd at heart. Not the kind that stands in a pulpit on Sunday morning, but the kind that watches for wolves, listens for trouble in the flock, and tries to keep folks pointed toward the Good Shepherd. There’s something in me that won’t let things slide when truth is at stake. Maybe that’s why I’ve spent so much time warning, teaching, and sometimes stepping on a few toes. A shepherd who never warns isn’t much of a shepherd at all.

But somewhere along the journey, I found myself becoming a keeper of stories too. Not just any stories—but the kind that matter. The kind that reminds us who we are and where we came from. Church history, family lines, old meeting minutes, fading photographs—those things aren’t just relics, they’re testimonies. They tell of faithfulness, sacrifice, and the quiet work of God through ordinary people. I suppose that’s why I’ve felt such a strong pull to write things down and preserve them. If we don’t, the next generation will forget—and forgetting is dangerous.

Then there’s this other burden I’ve carried, whether I asked for it or not—the burden of a watchman. The Bible speaks of men who stood on the wall and sounded the alarm when danger approached. I don’t claim any title, but I understand the weight of that calling. I look out at this world—its confusion, its pride, its drift away from God—and something in my spirit says, “Speak. Warn. Don’t stay silent.”

Not everyone likes that kind of preaching. Folks would rather hear smooth things, comfortable things. But truth has never been comfortable when hearts are drifting. If a storm is coming, it does no good to whisper about it—you sound the trumpet.

Now, I’ve never been one for fancy words or polished speeches. I’ve always believed that if a thing is true, it ought to be said plain enough that a farmer, a factory worker, or a schoolteacher can understand it. The Gospel wasn’t given to scholars alone—it was given to common people. So I try to speak in a way that folks can take it home with them, chew on it a while, and live it out come Monday morning.

Over the years, I’ve learned this much: you can’t please everybody, and you shouldn’t try. If you stand for truth, you’ll stand alone sometimes. If you speak plainly, you’ll be misunderstood. And if you refuse to follow the crowd, you’ll be called stubborn. But I’d rather answer to God for being faithful than answer to men for being agreeable.

So what does all that make me?

Just a country preacher.

A shepherd trying to guard the flock.

A historian trying to remember the works of God.

A watchman trying to warn of what he sees coming.

And a man who still believes that truth matters—now more than ever.

And if the Lord gives me a few more days, I reckon I’ll keep right on doing the same thing:

Preaching the Word, telling the story, and sounding the alarm when it needs to be sounded.

Because in the end, that’s my reasonable service.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Here is a carefully structured set of discernment questions you can use personally.

 “Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God” (1 John 4:1, KJV). Discernment is not suspicion for its own sake, but a Spirit-led testing against the life and teaching of Christ.


Questions for Discernment: Is This Truly Based on the Teachings of Christ?


1. Christ-Centered Doctrine

  • Does this teaching clearly affirm that Jesus Christ is the Son of God?
  • Does it affirm that Christ came in the flesh? (1 John 4:2–3)
  • Does it uphold Christ’s death, resurrection, and lordship?
  • Is salvation presented as coming through Christ alone, not through works, systems, or men?

2. Authority of Scripture

  • Is the Bible (rightly interpreted) the final authority?
  • Are Scriptures used in context, or twisted to support an agenda?
  • Does the teaching harmonize with the whole counsel of God, not just isolated verses?

3. Fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22–23)

  • Does this produce love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance?
  • Or does it stir up fear, hatred, division, pride, or anger?

4. Attitude Toward Sin

  • Does it call sin what it is, according to Scripture?
  • Does it promote repentance and transformation, not excuse or redefine sin?
  • Does it distinguish between the sin nature and sinful actions, while pointing to victory in Christ?

5. Holiness and Obedience

  • Does this teaching call believers to take up their cross and follow Christ? (Luke 9:23)
  • Does it encourage a life of obedience, purity, and separation from the world?
  • Or does it lower the standard of holiness?

6. View of Christ’s Character

  • Does it reflect the true character of Jesus—holy, just, merciful, and truthful?
  • Does it emphasize both grace AND truth? (John 1:14)
  • Or does it distort Christ into something culturally acceptable but not biblical?

7. Motivation and Spirit Behind It

  • Is the spirit behind the message humble and Christ-honoring?
  • Or is it marked by pride, control, manipulation, or self-exaltation?
  • Does it draw attention to Christ, or to a personality, movement, or ideology?

8. Gospel Clarity

  • Is the Gospel clearly presented (repentance, faith, new birth)?
  • Or is it replaced with:
    • political ideology
    • social activism alone
    • prosperity or self-help teaching

9. Treatment of Others

  • Does it teach us to love even our enemies? (Matthew 5:44)
  • Does it encourage forgiveness and reconciliation?
  • Or does it promote division, hostility, or dehumanization?

10. Consistency with the Early Church

  • Does this align with what the apostles taught?
  • Would this teaching be recognized by the early church as sound doctrine?
  • Or is it a new or novel idea with no historical grounding?

11. Freedom vs. Bondage

  • Does it lead to spiritual freedom in Christ?
  • Or does it place people into fear, control, or legalistic systems?

12. The Cross at the Center

  • Is the cross of Christ central, or merely mentioned?
  • Does it emphasize dying to self?
  • Or does it promote self-fulfillment without surrender?

13. The Role of the Holy Spirit

  • Does it honor the work of the Holy Spirit in conviction, guidance, and sanctification?
  • Or does it replace the Spirit’s work with human control or emotionalism?

14. End Result

  • If followed, will this teaching produce people who:
    • look more like Christ?
    • live holy lives?
    • love truth?
  • Or will it produce:
    • confusion?
    • compromise?
    • spiritual pride?

Closing Discernment Principle

At the end of the day, every teaching must pass this simple test:

Does this lead me closer to Jesus Christ, or further away from Him?

As Paul said:

“Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.” (1 Thessalonians 5:21, KJV)

Discerning Truth in an Age of Deception

Mark Them and Avoid Them

There was a time when plain truth didn’t need an apology.

A preacher could stand, open his Bible, and say, “Thus saith the Lord,” and people understood that truth mattered more than comfort. But today we live in a different hour—an hour where error is often tolerated in the name of unity, and where discernment is sometimes mistaken for judgment.

Yet the Word of God has not changed.

The apostle Paul wrote:

“Now I beseech you, brethren, mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye have learned; and avoid them.” — Romans 16:17 (KJV)

That is not a suggestion. That is a command.

And if we are going to be faithful in this generation, we must learn again what it means to discern, to mark, and when necessary—to avoid.

The Battle Begins in the Heart

Before we look outward, we must first look inward.

Paul reminds us in Galatians:

“For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh…”

The first battlefield is not Washington, not the culture, not some organization—it is the human heart. The same flesh that produces sin in the world lives in every man apart from the grace of God.

But God, in His mercy, did not leave us without clarity.

“Now the works of the flesh are manifest…” (Galatians 5:19)

And then He names them:

Adultery, fornication, uncleanness, idolatry, hatred, strife, envyings, drunkenness—and more.

These are not hidden things. They are visible fruits.

And Scripture is clear:

“…they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God.”

So yes—we are called to recognize sin, to warn about it, and to avoid it.

The Call to Discernment

We are not called to blind faith—we are called to tested faith.

  • “Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.”
  • “Try the spirits whether they are of God.”

Not every voice that sounds spiritual is from God.

Not every teacher who uses the name of Christ speaks truth.

And if we do not discern…

We will be deceived.

Mark Them—But Mark What?

Paul tells us to “mark them,” but he gives us the standard:

“…contrary to the doctrine which ye have learned…”

The issue is not personality.

The issue is not politics.

The issue is doctrine.

Anything that contradicts the clear teaching of Scripture must be identified for what it is—error.

But we must be careful here.

Not every disagreement is heresy.

Not every mistake is a false gospel.

There is a difference between:

  • A misunderstanding
  • And a message that corrupts the gospel itself

And we must know the difference.

The Spirit of Antichrist

Now we come to the heart of the matter.

The Bible draws a line that cannot be blurred.

“Every spirit that confesseth not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is not of God: and this is that spirit of antichrist.” — 1 John 4:3

This is not my opinion.

This is Scripture.

Any person, organization, or religious system that denies:

  • That Jesus Christ is the Son of God
  • That He came in the flesh
  • That He alone is the way of salvation

is not simply mistaken.

It is operating under what the Bible calls the spirit of antichrist.

That is strong language—but it is biblical language.

History Has Seen This Before

This is not new. The church has faced it from the beginning.

Early Gnosticism

They said Christ did not truly come in the flesh.

They replaced the cross with secret knowledge.

But the Word declares:

“The Word was made flesh…”

So the church rejected it.

Arianism

They taught that Jesus was not fully God, but a created being.

But Scripture says:

“The Word was God.”

Because if Christ is not God—He cannot save.

Systems That Add to Christ

Throughout history, there have been teachings that add works, money, or human authority to salvation.

But the Bible says:

“If righteousness come by the law, then Christ is dead in vain.”

Whenever anything is added to Christ—the gospel is lost.

Modern Distortions

Today, there are still voices that:

  • Redefine who Jesus is
  • Present Him as one option among many
  • Replace repentance with self-centered blessing

But Jesus said:

“I am the way, the truth, and the life…”

Not a way—the way.

Why This Matters

Error rarely announces itself as error.

It often sounds:

  • Spiritual
  • Encouraging
  • Even biblical

But if it shifts the focus:

  • From Christ to man
  • From repentance to reward
  • From truth to comfort

Then it is not harmless.

It is dangerous.

Avoid Them

Paul did not stop at “mark them.”

He said:

“Avoid them.”

That means:

  • Do not follow
  • Do not endorse
  • Do not allow their influence to shape your faith

Not out of hatred.

But out of protection.

Because what you listen to will shape what you believe—and what you believe will shape your eternity.

The Balance We Must Keep

We are not called to:

  • Hate people
  • Condemn souls
  • Act as final judges

But we are called to:

  • Identify false doctrine
  • Warn others
  • Stand firmly on truth

Jesus said:

“By their fruits ye shall know them.”

Not by popularity.

Not by influence.

But by fruit.

A Final Word from a Country Preacher

Church, the danger in our day is not just sin…

It is confusion.

And confusion thrives where discernment dies.

So test every voice.

Measure every message.

Weigh everything by the Word of God.

And when something does not line up with Scripture—

You don’t have to attack it…

But you do need to avoid it.

Because in the end:

It is not about who is loudest.

It is not about who is most followed.

👉 It is about what is true.

And truth is not found in men.

Truth is found in Jesus Christ—and in His Word.

“Mark them… and avoid them.”