Jeremiah 31:33, Ezekiel 36:26-27, John 4:23-34, John 16:7-11, Ephesians 2:8-10, Romans 10:3
Victor greets the audience and speaks about John 4, where Jesus mentions that God is seeking sincere worshipers who worship Him in spirit and truth. He questions the nature of the worship that the Jews practiced for the past seventeen hundred years, asserting that it was largely in the flesh and not truly in spirit and truth.
Victor explains that sincere worship is contingent on being born again, which provides believers with a new heart and the Spirit of God, enabling them to worship authentically. He links true worship to good works that naturally flow from a regenerated heart, underscoring that good works are reflective of a heart aligned with God.
He then discusses the “great exchange” mentioned in Romans 1, illustrating that salvation reverses the act of exchanging God’s truth for a lie. Victor emphasizes that the Spirit of God convicts humanity of self-idolatry and helps believers move from a life of sin to a life dedicated to the worship of the true God.
Victor shares his personal journey of realizing that many of his early religious observances, which he thought were valid, were actually dead works uninspired by a true relationship with God. He explains that dead works occur when individuals operate outside of a sincere worship experience with Christ.
He highlights that even the best attempts to please God without His Spirit are inadequate and can lead to a defiled conscience. Referencing Hebrews 9, he articulates the need for the cleansing of conscience from past dead works in order to serve God effectively.
Victor concludes by connecting all these insights back to worship, noting that genuine worship and service to God stem from a cleansed conscience and a reliance on the Holy Spirit. He emphasizes that the ultimate goal is to worship God in spirit and truth.