Blessed are the merciful

Key Passage: Matthew 5:7
Date: June 7, 2024


Matthew chapter number five in God’s word and verse number seven. Matthew five in verse number seven. We’re going through these beatitudes. We call them. They start with “Blessed.”

Really, the series is how to be blessed, or you could say, keys to being blessed. And we’re on, oh, I think our fourth one, verse number seven. Let’s stand, if you would please, as I read this beatitude together. Matthew 5 and verse number seven of God’s word. Jesus here is preaching. He’s standing on this mountain. The multitudes are gathered, and he’s talking to them, and he says, “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.”

Thank you so much for standing. You may be seated.

My wife and I—I was trying to tell two of our visitors are back today. I’m glad that this is my wife on the organ. They speak Spanish. I know poquito, just a little bit of Spanish, español. I was telling them, she’s bonita, ain’t she? And they said, yeah, you got it right. I mean, it’s beautiful, I think, you know.

But anyway, my wife and I, we have a friend, a good friend. And we don’t see them very often, but maybe once a year or so. They always have stories to tell, and they’ve got good stories. They’re good storytellers, too; that matters, you know.

And it’s interesting, they have stories of where they just tell somebody off. And usually, it’s somebody who deserves it, you know. And probably my flesh, but sometimes when you hear those stories, you kind of put yourself in there. You’re like, “I’ve been wanting to say that for a long time to somebody,” you know. I mean, they just tell them off. I mean, they just let them have it. And you’re thinking, well, they probably deserved it. And, man, they’re good at it. They’re gifted, you know, and you’re like, “Ooh, man, yeah, give it to them,” you know.

We try not to be judgmental, but we have noticed over—we’ve known them for years and years and years—and maybe the last four or five years we’ve noticed their stories. There’s a lot of them where, man, they’re just letting them have it, you know.

But then it also seems like there’s a lot of stories where someone’s letting them have it. And you’re like, “Man, you talk about that person was having a bad hair day that day for sure.” I mean, their bad-tasting toothpaste, they must have found out there was really Preparation H or something because they were having a bad day, you know.

It’s amazing. We’ve kind of watched it. We try—we’re not perfect—we try not to be judgmental. It just seems like they get a lot of people being mean to them and telling them off. And the last several years, we’ve just kind of put it together: “Man, it just seemed like they’re gifted at giving it out.” We kind of like that a little bit—everyone, my flesh, I should say, likes that. I don’t like it, you know. I mean, it seems like they get a lot.

That’s a little bit what the Lord’s saying here: “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.” Many of you know this with the Bible: if God says something will happen, you can count on it happening. But if he says it shall happen, that’s a little bit stronger. I mean, you just bank on it. And he says here, “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.” God says, “I’m going to see to it. My word is always true. They shall obtain mercy.”

And let’s talk for just a moment about this word mercy. What is mercy? The first time the Bible uses the word mercy, it’s in Genesis 19. And remember Lot? Help me out, what city was Lot in? I done gave it away. Preacher gave it away. You’re welcome. What city was Lot living in? Yeah.

And, of course, their sexual sin—they’re just awful. And God loves the sodomite, but God says that sin is vile in his eyes. Romans 1 says that. Now, he still loves the sinner, but he hates the sin, see. But he says, “I’m going to have to bring my judgment on this city.” He poured out fire and brimstone on there.

And God went to Lot—these two angels he used—and he said, “You better get out, you yourself and your daughters,” and kind of like they had to get on out of here, and they drug them out of there, if you will, before he poured down that fire, and he took them out of there in his manifold mercy. That’s the first time you find this word mercy being used in the Bible. Mercy is when we don’t get the judgment we deserve. All right?

Look, when someone gets saved by the grace of Jesus Christ, they go to heaven forever, and by the mercy of the Lord, they don’t go to hell forever. See? The mercy of God.

Years ago, my family and I were going to the Hiawassee River to go kayaking down. How many ever has been down the Hiawassee River? A lot of you men. We’ve taken many trips over there. Yeah, it’s a pretty good trip over there, you know. And you’re riding Interstate 24 for a good while, and then, you know, you’re going from 70 miles an hour—I’m trying to make an excuse here, all right? Trying to justify here a little bit. You’re going from 70 miles an hour, then you get on the side roads, and while the speed limit goes down, you already had me in your mind, you know what happened. Isn’t it the worst sight in the world to look in that rearview mirror and see those wonderful blue lights?

I tell you what, I said, quickly, “Tammy, get over here in the driver’s seat!” I’m not—no. But sure enough, and he pulls me over. Nothing will increase your prayer life like those blue lights, you know. “Lord, I need mercy, please.”

And that fellow came up there, and, boy, you’re just as respectful as kind as you can be. “Yes, sir.” I mean, “Yes, sir, whatever you need, sir, yes, sir.” And you say, “Sir,” before he even says anything to you; you’re just trying to be nice, you know. And, “Can I have your license?” “Yes, sir.” “And your registration?” “Yes, sir.” And while you have everything for him, and he went back in the back, and it took him a while. That’s never a good thing, you know. Oh, that’s times we had family devotions. Amen. Everybody pray. If you don’t pray sincerely, you’re grounded, kid. I mean, you better pray right now.

And praise the Lord, the Lord heard our prayer of mercy. And that fellow came up there, and he said, “Sir, I see you have a CDL license, commercial driver license.” “Yes, sir.” He said, “Well, I know how that affects you.” I don’t know if he thought I was a truck driver a while. He didn’t ask, and I didn’t ask, amen. He just said, “I see you have a CDL, and I know that you really hurt a lot of things. And so I’m not going to give you a ticket today.” Somebody say, “Praise the Lord,” right there.

Now, that’s mercy. That fellow—I deserved it. I was breaking the law. I deserved to pay a fine, to get a ticket. And that police officer, he had mercy on me. And that’s mercy. And the Bible says, “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain it.”

Now, here’s the amazing thing: Jesus is here talking to the Jewish people, the Pharisees, some of them. I mean, they kept the law. They would keep the Old Testament—kind of like civil law, ceremony, even about what you can and cannot eat. They didn’t even eat bacon, and that’s hard not to eat, friends. I mean, collard greens are wonderful, especially when they got bacon in them, you know. How many had bacon for breakfast this morning? A couple of you are right with the Lord. Amen, I tell you what. We don’t have to keep those ceremonial laws down.

I mean, they just kept the law to the teeth. The Bible talks about their tithing. They would tithe off the anise and cumin. In other words, they would tithe even off of a quarter and a dime and nickel. I mean, they just kept the very strictest. They would fast twice a week. Somebody like, “Wow, man, I hadn’t fasted in 30 years.” Now, they’re fasting from sunup to sundown, 6 a.m. to 6 a.m. I mean, they were fasting twice a week. I mean, these people were about keeping the letter of the law.

And Jesus stands up and it says, “Blessed are the merciful.” If you will, it kind of went against the grain of them. They’re about the letter of everything, and now Jesus is saying, “Hey, you can be blessed if you’re merciful on people that don’t keep it and they deserve it.” And you’re merciful. It kind of went against their grain, if you will. “Blessed are the merciful.”

And can’t I say this? I’m glad I serve and I get to pray and I get to go to a merciful God. If it wasn’t for a merciful God, his righteousness and justice is so high—I’ve heard, I think, as Brother Frank compared it to just a little old flashlight, our righteousness in comparison to the sun. The best you can do, friend, is pitiful.

And so I’m so glad that I get to go to a God that doesn’t judge me on his standard, per se, through Christ. He’s a merciful God. In fact, 41 times the Bible says—it only says it one time, that’s good enough—but 41 times the Bible says, “The mercy of the Lord endureth forever.” That’s why an old sinner like me and like you, if you’re saved through the blood of Jesus Christ, you won’t have to touch or taste, if you will, or feel hell for one second for all eternity. The mercy of the Lord endureth forever.

Help me out. If you did something bad and your teacher or your mom or your dad or whoever it is—in my school, it was our English teacher. She was strict. Brother Frank, were you an English teacher when you were a teacher? You were? Oh, man. Okay, it was our math teacher. No, I’m joking. I mean, you know, you kind of get to know who’s strict and who’s not strict. You know.

Help me. If you did something wrong and you know you deserve demerits, detention, a note home, a zero on your test, whatever—do you want to go to the strict teacher or do you want to go to the merciful teacher? Young people, you got it? You’re right. I’m glad I get to go to a merciful God. I’m glad for that.

If it wasn’t for the mercy of God, no one would stand a chance. We serve a merciful God. Friend, we’re so far from being what God’s standard is. And God said, “Hey, I’m a merciful God.”

If you never go to the Lord at salvation or even beyond that as a Christian, you never go get right with God, it’s not because God doesn’t have mercy. It’s because you don’t get to him. You don’t go to him in sincerity and truth. Mercy of the Lord endureth forever.

Over the years, as a pastor, you know, some people, when they want to get right with the Lord, they say, “Well, I need to talk to the preacher. Maybe the preacher can help a little bit,” you know. And I’m thankful that they maybe help me out a little bit. And over the years, you know, I think of some men that came and more than one and say, “Pastor, I battle. I have problems, have issues with pornography and so on.”

I remember, man, oh, and I don’t want to go into all the different things, but whether it be family issues or pornography or drinking or whatever it may be, and I’m thankful they will let me have input and try to help them in this thing. They don’t have to confess to me. There is one mediator between God and men, the Man Christ Jesus. They don’t have to go to me, but maybe I can help them a little bit in this.

And so when they come, and I think about a man—I think about a man that had years and years and years, he’d been married, but he had physically harmed his wife. He’d never done it before, and he hasn’t stopped having nightmares of that thing and couldn’t sleep. And he had asked for—give us tons of time. Or I think of so many others. I think of a lady coming; she had committed an abortion years ago. Whatever it may be.

Now, as a pastor, what do you think? “For you a dirty rotten sinner, I can’t believe you did that.” You think I’d do that? More often than not, would you look over in Proverbs 28? Let me show you the verse I’ll typically use when those situations come up. Look over in Proverbs 28. I’m so glad I have a merciful God. Oh, what a blessing. And I’m thankful when they let me have opportunity to try to help in this thing, getting them back to the Lord.

Great verse here. Proverbs 28. Proverbs 28. Look down, if you will, in verse number 13. Proverbs 28:13. If you’ve found it, would you say, “Amen?” Amen. Here it is: Proverbs 28:13, “He that covereth his sins shall not prosper.”

It’s a sad thing to watch people, and they got sin in their life, and they’re just busy, busy covering it up. A friend, you might be able to cover it up from the preacher. You might be able to cover it up from your spouse. You might be able to cover it up from your neighbors and other fellow church members. But you won’t cover it up from God. And God says, “You’re not going to prosper.”

It’s such a sad thing. Now, I’m not saying if someone’s going through a hard time, it means because they have sin in their life. It may be God’s just trying them a little bit. I don’t know. But I do know this: if they’re covering and hiding sin and hiding sin and hiding sin and hiding sin, you’re not going to prosper. They’re just not. It’s a sad thing to see people’s families and marriages and children and finances sometimes and health sometimes and so many, and they’re just not prospering, and they’re not going to because our habit is just to cover it up.

So I’m grateful when someone comes to the office and says, “Pastor, I can’t believe it, but I did. I took the life of my child years ago in abortion.” We mentioned Sodom. I’ve had sodomites come to me and said, “You know, I’m trying to overcome this sin, and I need help in this thing,” so many things down 20 years and all that.

And here’s the thing: first of all, I’m glad they decided to open up about their sin a little bit. Now, the key, they open up to the Lord, but sometimes someone with skin on can help a little bit. And the Bible says, “He that covereth his sin shall not prosper.” Help me out, help me out. What’s the last part? Let’s read it out loud. Here it is: “But whoso confesseth and forsaketh shall have…” What’s the next word? That’s a promise.

That’s a promise, by the way. You say, “I don’t want to tell Pastor anything. I don’t want him to know.” Honestly, honest truth, I can’t keep it all straight in my head anyway. I don’t know who did what, man. I’ve been to too many, you know. So I say that and say, I can’t remember the last man—I don’t know who it was that came to the office about pornography. It’s been a minute. But listen, it’s a wonderful blessing, and say, “Hey, you’re opening up. Let’s work at this thing. By God’s grace, let’s overcome this thing.” God says, “You confess it and forsake it, shall have mercy.” Oh, friend, I’m glad we have a merciful God.

What a wonderful blessing I can go to him. I’m not been—I’m not been the perfect prayer. I’m not been the perfect soul. I’m not been the perfect husband. I’m not been a—Lord, I’m sorry. God said, “Hey, I got mercy for you.” I’m thankful for that. A merciful God. A merciful God. It’s such a blessing. We serve a merciful God.

But let’s go a little bit. Let’s go on just a touch. You can’t—and I don’t want to belabor this point here—but just very quick, let’s try to get this thought in here a little bit: You can’t have mercy unless you have the law.

You see, if I was driving to the Hiawassee somewhere on the Autobahn, but there’s no law, no limit, I’d be a long ways from the Hiawassee, first of all, right? I don’t know how I’m going to drive across the ocean to get there, you know. But look, I would not need any mercy. But I needed mercy because there was a law that said speed limit, 55, 60, whatever it is on that road. I mean, and there was a law, and I broke that law, and because I broke that law, I needed mercy.

See, that’s why the Lord, he gave us the law through Moses. Why? Because it teaches us we’re far from where we ought to be. By the way, friend, nobody’s kept all the Ten Commandments. Nobody. That last one—“Thou shalt not covet.” Come on. You never coveted? That’s the last one. You’ve always kept the Lord? You know, nothing ever before him? No, friend. By the honest truth is, somebody said, “Well, I keep the Ten Commandments.” Usually, they don’t even know the Ten Commandments. But God said the Ten Commandments is a teacher, a schoolmaster, to show us that I need mercy. And I have mercy available through a Savior named Jesus Christ.

And often, young Christians, I say, “Man, read the New Testament through a time or two, maybe just to touch easier, it’s all good.” But once they get to that Old Testament and they realize the righteousness and the justice and the law, they realize, “Wow, God sure is merciful.”

Can I say this? Parents or grandparents—I’m entering that category. Amen? I mean, pretty soon it’ll be here. We don’t know if it’s a boy or girl yet. We’re going to find out. But I’m going to be preaching to myself on this. But can I say this: with young children, it’s very important that I teach them, if you will, the law.

In our day and time, they’re all about timeout and this, that, and another, you know, and there’s many forms of discipline. But that child needs to understand what a spanking is. Now, I’m not talking about hauling off and slapping them where y’all know not to slap them. I’m not talking about child abuse or all that. God’s given us a proper place. They got a little padding back there, some more than others. Well, they say canoes or paddle best for the rear, you know.

But the Bible speaks of these sayings here. And let me read here a couple of verses. Very interesting: Proverbs 13:24, “He that spareth his rod hateth his son: but he that loveth him chasteneth him betimes.” That “betimes” has to be early. Chase, in Proverbs 19:18, and chasing that somehow there is hope. It’s interesting. He says, “While there’s hope.” In other words, there’s going to come a day when there’s no hope.

And I’m getting at this: that when they’re young, it’s very important that they understand that. Why? Because once they have a sense of justice, there are consequences for when I don’t do right. Now, I’m not saying every time spank them, but when they understand that, man, there’s this thing called consequences. In our day and time, a lot of times young children don’t ever get that. And so you can show them a lot of mercy, but they never kind of comprehend it in their head and in their brain and in their heart because they never got the law in the beginning.

I think about the Antrims—control. Praise the Lord. They’re doing a great job raising their girls. But I’m saying if they never—if they never get the discipline, especially when they’re young, later on when I show mercy, they’re not going to get it. See?

And that’s why the Bible has verses about this. You heard about the Bible, and I got to get off. We don’t have them any young couples. Us grandparents, they take care of business. That’s the grandparents saying, “Oh, that poor child.” My honest truth is, if your child did it, you’d beat him half to death, you know. But now you’re a grandparent, you know. Brother Anthony said, “Yes, real.” That—I don’t even know where I was going when I got there, you know. But you got to have a law before you can get mercy, all right?

But can I say this? Once the Lord established law, he comes—it’s very interesting when you find the words “mercy and truth” found together in the Bible. Ten times you’ll find “mercy and truth.” Mercy is always first. You’ll never, ever find it “truth and mercy.” It’s always, ten times always, mercy and truth.

When we go out trying to witness to someone and love, we don’t go out there, “Ah, you dirty rotten…” We go out there to love. Mercy, if you know, mercy and truth. Destiny just woke up over there. She just had a heart attack. She has a stress test. She has a good heart, amen. I’m going to pay you later for a stress test. Charge you for it.

Hey, but let’s change gears here for a little bit. We’ve talked a lot about how merciful the Lord is. Praise the Lord for that. Let me ask you: How merciful are you towards others?

I’ve seen someone this week, and someone had just a minor traffic mistake. Really, they just didn’t understand what the other driver wanted them to do. And, man, that person—I mean, it must have been at least 30 seconds, probably a minute. And I was like, “Wow. How do you handle other drivers?” I don’t know about you, but I’m tempted when somebody pulls out in front of me and I got to slow down and tailgate real close. That’s my temptation. I just seen a wife nudge her husband.

How merciful are you? If you’ve got an appointment and maybe you and your spouse are going to meet at a restaurant, and they’re running a little late, how merciful are you? Maybe a coworker is having a bad day, and they’re just rude, and they deserve somebody to come down and just—because you’re having a bad day, don’t mean you have to have a bad day with everybody else, you know. That’s what they deserve. Somebody said, “Amen.” They’ve been wanting to say that to them for a long time. How merciful are you with that coworker? “Blessed are the merciful.”

Parents, do you ever show mercy with your kids? I’ve already mentioned: there’s law to understand mercy, but somewhere along the line, they ought to have some mercy.

Are we merciful? Hey, young people, young people, how merciful are you with your parents or your grandparents or your guardian, legal guardians? Or are you always judging them, watching them? “They don’t do this, they do this.” Do you grade them in mercy?

How merciful are we as people? When you go to the restaurant this afternoon, and you’ve been sitting there for a lot longer than you should, and they haven’t even come and served your drinks to you yet—it’s a sad thing. I’ve heard stories, and anybody’s getting the wrangling, but I’ve heard stories of some waiters or waitresses saying, “You know, the Sunday afternoon crowd when Christians get out of church can be the roughest crowd.” Just not real merciful. And that’s the sad thing, because Jesus here says, “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.”

I don’t forget as a young man, I’d worked at machine shops and factories and whatnot, and they had a job in the fabrication shop that was stainless steel. How many of you know stainless steel was expensive? Oh, man. And it was sheet metal stainless steel, very expensive, and they wanted me to do some work on whatnot, and I made wrong cuts. And it was food grade type. You couldn’t weld it up. And this is just wasted money. And, oh, my goodness, man, you won’t get that pink slip, you know.

And I never forget the vice president of the company, the factory, comes out there—not a huge place, but Ed came out—and, boy, I thought, “Oh no, the big guy’s coming out here to talk to me.” And I never forget. I was maybe 18, 19, 20 years old. Now, of course, I’m 25 now, so it’s five years ago, folks, you know. I need mercy, you know. All right?

But he came out, and I’ll never forget. I still remember it all these years later. Thirty years later. And he said, “Paul, sometimes the guy that’s doing the most work makes the most mistakes.” Now, he’s probably stretching the truth on my behalf. He showed me mercy. Thirty years later, I still remember that mercy. He said, “You’re good,” and probably he was stretching the truth, but he said some kind things. He was lying on my behalf pretty much. I still remember it.

“Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.” I heard a story at a store this week about a spy. They’re in the Civil War, and he was spying on the North and he got caught. Boy, the Civil War spies, and it was boom, you know what I mean? They’re taking out back and shot, you know. And he was locked up, and about a year he was locked up, and they say that man just constantly cursed Abraham Lincoln.

Those guards heard that, those Northern Union guards up there, and, boy, just infuriated them. And somehow word must have got up to the top because from D.C. the word came down toward the end of the war: “I want you to pardon that man.” And that guard went to let that man out, and he said, “Sir, you have been shown mercy. You’re free to go.” And that man just couldn’t believe it. He said, “All I’ve done for a year is curse Abraham Lincoln, and you’re telling me…”

And that guard didn’t like it a whole lot. They said the guard told him, “Sir, you deserve to be taken out back and shot. But D.C., Washington, D.C., showed you mercy.” How merciful are you and I when someone curses us? I grade life on just everybody’s got to keep every single law there is. Where am I merciful towards people?

“Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.” It’s interesting to me how the Bible often uses this word “obtain mercy” together. Hebrews 4: “Let us come therefore boldly to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy.” Find grace, be obtained mercy.

But here’s the interesting thing: let’s kind of take the flip side. If I’m not merciful, no mercy equals no mercy. Now, if I’m not going to be merciful in my dealings with people, friend, I better be perfect. Y’all with me out there? Because you’re going to need mercy sometimes. James chapter number 2, verse 13, kind of gives the same truth: “For he shall have judgment without mercy, that hath showed no mercy.” Is that how you treat your spouse? If they’re just not up to par being the wife they ought to be, the husband—how do you treat them? Better be careful because no mercy equals no mercy.

Look over Matthew 6 real quickly. Matthew 6 real quickly here. We’ve got to hurry along. Matthew 6. I want you just say something real quickly here. Matthew 6. Look in verse number 14. We’re just a chapter over, Matthew 5. Matthew 6. Look at verse number 14. You there? Amen? Good deal. Matthew 6:14 says, “For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if he forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.” Wow.

Now, let me clarify a little bit there. I’ll never forget a lady—she’s in heaven now, I believe—but she lived down the seminary road here, and she was from, I think it was Pakistan. And she had been told, “You can lose your salvation,” and she understood, “No, no, no. The Bible said they shall never perish,” become a child of God. And she said, “Pastor, now what about that Matthew 6?” And I had the privilege in her house down here taking her, and said, “Well, wait a minute. Notice that where it says, ‘your Father will not forgive your trespasses.’ He’s still your Father. You’re still his child. You’re still saved. But there’s something between you and your Dad now.”

And I just get this ritualistic rules, rules, rules, rules, rules. By the way, there’s a lot of “thou shalts” and “thou shalt nots” in the Bible, amen. I can’t have mercy unless there’s laws, and they’re there in the Bible. They’re very clear in the Bible. But, friends, if I’m all about rules, rules, rules, rules, rules, listen, and it just becomes a way of life, I better be careful because if I don’t have mercy, I don’t receive mercy. And if I just can’t forgive, God said, “I’m not going to forgive you either.” There’s something between me and you.

And friend, it’s not like we’re starting from zero. We’ve been given so much mercy. It’s not like I have to create and generate the mercy. I’ve been shown so much mercy from God. It’s not like when someone comes along—you ever have your—I’ve got to be merciful towards my wife, but you ever have your spouse come along and it’s like the last sip of the coffee and they want it? Like, “Man, that’s hard to give up.” That’s the last sip there, you know. Good to the last drop. Friend, we’ve got our cup overflowing with mercy. And shame on me if I’m not willing to give mercy to someone else when God’s given me so much.

If it wasn’t for the mercies of God, we’d be consumed daily. You wouldn’t even be here for it for the mercy of God. It’s the mercy of God that you have air to breathe. It’s the mercy of God that you’ve got lungs to breathe it. You said, “Man, these hands have worked hard and accomplished all this and bought it and earned all this.” No, friend, God gave you the hands. It’s his mercy. We’ve got so much mercy. Shame on us if we’re not willing to be merciful.

“Blessed are the merciful.” Now, you’ve got to get one thing, and we’re done. We’re done. He does not say, “Blessed are those that show mercy.” That wouldn’t be bad if you go by, but the wording of God’s word is very important. He said, “Blessed are the merciful.” It’s not just something you show; everyone, it’s why it’s something you become.

Now, here’s what I’m getting—here’s how we get there: If we’re not careful, we’re merciful to those we want to be merciful towards, but we’re not towards others. Now, who is that person you don’t want to show any mercy to? That might be when you’re really showing mercy, not favoritism, but mercy. Who is that person that did you wrong and they deserve—and I understand they do deserve that—but be merciful. “Blessed are the merciful.” If there’s someone popping in your mind, that might be the one that you can really show mercy to.

“Blessed are the merciful, for they shall”—mark it down—“they shall.” You say, “That person never going to show you mercy.” I don’t know about that. I don’t know. But God promised it. God always fulfills it. “They shall obtain mercy.”


Original File: Blessed Are The Merciful - Part 5 - Pastor Paul Chisgar Sunday 22320