Insight

Chaplain/ LAC-T Counselor Jeffrey L Johnson

🎙️ The Insight Introduction "Welcome back to The Rectitudes: From Character to Conduct. If the Beatitudes (Matthew 5:1-12) revealed who God has blessed—the 'poor in spirit' and the 'pure in heart'—then the Rectitudes are where the rubber meets the road. These are the external commands of Jesus, describing not who we are, but what we do with the transformed character God has given us. Jesus takes the law of Moses and brings it from the public square right into the hidden chambers of the human heart. He doesn't come to abolish the standard, but to raise it, showing us true righteousness.

  1. 🎙️Matthew 7:1-5 Love: The Lens of Judgement

    VOR 3 TAGEN

    🎙️Matthew 7:1-5 Love: The Lens of Judgement

    Application: This week, when you feel the urge to criticize a family member or a co-worker, perform a "Plank Check." Ask: "What am I ignoring in my own character that makes their flaw so annoying to me?" * Thematic Commentary: To encapsulate Matthew 7:1-5: The life of a disciple is a move from Condemnation to Contribution. You cannot contribute to someone’s healing until you have submitted to your own. Imagine a master watchmaker who has spent forty years hunched over a workbench, repairing the most delicate movements in the world. To do his work, he uses two distinct tools. The first is a High-Powered Magnifying Loupe. He uses this to find the smallest grains of sand, the tiniest flecks of rust, and the microscopic burrs on a gear that cause the watch to lose time. Without this lens, he cannot see the "specks" that ruin the mechanism. The second tool is a Mirror on the wall behind him. At the end of every hour, the watchmaker must look into the mirror to check his own eyes. Why? Because if his own eyes are strained, or if a piece of debris from the workbench has fallen into his own eye, his vision becomes distorted. If he tries to perform surgery on a watch while his own vision is blurred, he won't fix the gear—he will crush it. The Spiritual Reality: Most of us walk through life like a watchmaker who has lost his mirror. We walk around with our magnifying loupes permanently fixed to our eyes. We see every grain of sand in our spouse's temper; we see every fleck of rust in our coworker’s work ethic; we see every microscopic flaw in the "specks" of everyone around us. But because we never look in the mirror, we don't realize that the reason the "watch" looks so broken is that we are peering through a lens smeared with our own pride, our own unresolved trauma, and our own "plank" of hypocrisy. The Insight for the Restless Soul: Jesus isn't telling us to throw away the magnifying loupe. He wants us to help our brother with his speck! But He is insisting that we go to the Mirror first. As a Counselor, I see it every day: You cannot heal what you are busy condemning. When you deal with the plank in your own eye first, your magnifying loupe stops being a tool of judgment and starts being a tool of restoration. Love is the watchmaker who cleans his own glasses before he dares to touch the heart of another. The Bridge: Use this illustration right after the Historical Perspective to help the audience visualize the absurdity of the "plank." The Counselor’s Application: "Men, some of you have been trying to fix your families with a magnifying loupe for years, and all you’ve done is scratch the surface. It’s time to put the loupe down and look in the Mirror of the Word." Benediction: "May the God of all Grace give you eyes to see yourself as He sees you—fully known and deeply loved. And may that love overflow so that you see others not through the lens of judgment, but through the lens of Christ. Amen." Call to Action: "If you’ve been living under the weight of someone else’s judgment, or your own, come find rest in the Grace of the Kingdom. Reach out to us." Facebook Interaction: "Visit our Facebook page and share: What is one 'Lens' you are asking God to change this week? Are you moving from Judgment to Love? Let’s support one another in the comments."https://www.facebook.com/InsightpodcastRectitudes 2. Point 2: The Danger of "Sin-Hunting"3. The Two Points SummaryPoint 1: The Standard of Reciprocity (v. 1-2)Point 2: The Priority of the Plank (v. 3-5)

    19 Min.
  2. Sermon Matthew 6: 25-34 The Stewardship of Trust

    28. JAN.

    Sermon Matthew 6: 25-34 The Stewardship of Trust

    •• Post-Sermon Reflection: "Friends, if a man as burdened as Lincoln could find a way to lean on Providence, so can you. What is your 'House Divided' today? Give it to the Father." I added the denominational spiritual expression, and the tradition is a Christian seeking God. We have lost the way to express our spiritual selves by going to a Christian mainline church. In some cases, I think we stop going to church because it sometimes emulates the world that we live in. Not Jesus Christ and the Kingdom of Righteousness. We need a good, Bible-believing church to guide our growth in sanctification.  Denominational Spiritual Expression (Liturgical/Mainline) • The Collect: "O God, who cares for the lilies of the field and the birds of the air: Cleanse the thoughts of our hearts by the inspiration of Thy Holy Spirit, that we may perfectly love Thee, and worthily magnify Thy holy Name; through Christ our Lord. Amen." • The Assurance: "Hear the good news: The Father knows your needs before you ask. In Christ, the debt of our worry is paid, and the wealth of His grace is ours." 1. The Denominational Spiritual Tradition • The Reformed Stream (The Sovereignty of God): This tradition emphasizes that God is the primary Actor. In your sermon, this is expressed through the idea of "Providence." The spiritual expression here is one of rest. You aren't just "trying harder" not to worry; you are yielding to a Sovereign King. • The Holiness Stream (The Virtuous Life): This emphasizes the "internal" change Jesus mentions in Matthew 6. The spiritual expression is transformation. It moves the man from external legalism (being seen by others) to internal peace (trusting the Father in secret). 8. Application & Thematic Commentary • Application: Conduct a "Worry Audit" this week. When you feel that tightness in your chest, stop and say aloud: "My Heavenly Father knows I need this, and He is already there." • Thematic Commentary: The life of a disciple is a move from the External (doing things to be seen) to the Internal (trusting the Father in secret). When your secret life is anchored in God, your public life becomes unshakable. 7. Evangelistic Section: The Invitation "Perhaps you realize your life has been built on the foundation of 'What’s next?' and 'How will I survive?' You’ve spent decades carrying the weight of the world, and you’re exhausted. Jesus invites you to stop being the 'Lord' of your own life—a job you were never meant to have—and submit to the King who feeds the birds. Salvation is a transfer of ownership. If you surrender to Christ today, you aren't just getting a Savior; you’re getting a Father who promises to carry the burdens you’ve been struggling to hold. Will you let Him take the lead?"   Closing & Interaction Benediction: "May the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. Go in the confidence that you are known, you are loved, and you are provided for. Amen." Call to Action: "If you decided to follow Christ today, or if this message helped you lay down a heavy burden, please reach out. We want to walk with you." Facebook Interaction: "Visit our Facebook page and share: What is one 'stone' of worry you are laying at the feet of Jesus this week? Let’s pray for one another in the comments."https://www.facebook.com/InsightpodcastRectitudes

    15 Min.
  3. 🎙️ Insight Podcast: The Temple Foundation & Spirit ScienceMatthew 6:16-24

    19. JAN.

    🎙️ Insight Podcast: The Temple Foundation & Spirit ScienceMatthew 6:16-24

    Sermon: The Science of the Spirit Text: Matthew 6:16–24; Romans 8:11; 1 Corinthians 3:16–17 “No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money.  In ancient Israel, the Temple was not just a building; it was a "thin place" where the physical and spiritual dimensions collided. The priests had to follow strict protocols of cleansing and "calibration" because they were dealing with the raw power of the Creator. To the ancients, holiness was a matter of spiritual physics. If the environment wasn't tuned to the right frequency, the Presence could not dwell there. Today, under the New Covenant, that laboratory has moved from a stone building into your very cells. To grow in the Spirit, we must understand the "Science of the Strings"—how the frequency of God vibrates through our physical frame. Nesteia (Fasting - v. 16-18): In Greek, this refers to the voluntary abstinence from the "Master of Convenience." Historically, it is the process of creating "tension" in the strings to bring the dross of the ego to the surface so it can be skimmed off. Thesauros (Treasure - v. 19-20): This is the "Conductivity" of your life. Just as gold conducts electricity, your "Kryptos" capital (your secret heart) conducts peace. Where you store your treasure determines your spiritual voltage. Haplous (The Single Eye - v. 22): This translates to "single, simple, or healthy."1 It is the Master Reference Point. If the lens of the eye is clear, the whole body—the whole temple—is flooded with light. Romans 8:11: "And if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you..."2 Insight: This is the Power Grid. The same energy that reorganized the atoms in the tomb is the energy currently sustaining your heartbeat. Spiritual growth is simply the process of removing the "insulation" of sin so that power can flow freely. 1 Corinthians 3:16–17: "Don’t you know that you yourselves are God’s temple..."3 Insight: If the body is the Cathedral, then your lifestyle is the "maintenance crew." You cannot have a high-frequency spirit in a low-maintenance temple. Imagine a massive theater spotlight. The bulb (the Spirit) is at full power, but the lens (your "Eye" or Focus) is covered in the soot of the world—processed shortcuts, ego, and constant digital noise. The Point: The light doesn't change, but the output does. If your "eye" is clouded, the Temple stays in the dark. Calibration is the act of cleaning the lens so the "Kryptos" light can become "Phaneros" (visible) to the world. We calculate your Spirit-Standing using the 7-day week as our scoring period: $$S_{truth} = (S_{visible} - E) \times K$$ The 7-Day Markers: You score yourself daily on Mindfulness, Bible Illumination, Prayer, and Witnessing. The Multipliers: Add Discipleship and Church Attendance to your weekly $K$ (Kryptos Constant). Application: Every morning, "Zero the Scale." Subtract the Ego ($E$) by doing one act of temple-care or service that no one sees.

    16 Min.
  4. Matthew 6:16-18; 19:21 The Indwelling presence

    13. JAN.

    Matthew 6:16-18; 19:21 The Indwelling presence

    4. The Rest of the Story "The man was a man of contradictions. He was a youngest son, overlooked by his own father. He was a musician who could soothe the soul of a King, yet he was a warrior who stood over a giant with nothing but a stone. He rose to the highest heights, but he fell to the lowest depths of betrayal and scandal. For years, people thought his greatness was in his crown. They thought his legacy was the gold in his palace or the borders of his kingdom. But when he lost it all—when his own son hunted him through the wilderness—he didn't ask God to give him back his throne or his riches. Instead, he sat in the dust of the desert and wrote a prayer that has echoed for three thousand years: 'Cast me not away from Thy presence; and take not Thy holy spirit from me.' He understood that you can have a kingdom and be empty, but if you have the Presence, you are home. He was a shepherd boy named David, who became a King—not because he was perfect, but because his heart was a 'Secret Room' where the Architect was always the Guest of Honor. And now, you know... the rest of the story." 5. Thematic Commentary: The Seven-Point Synthesis The "One Meaning" of this series is The End of Exile. When we align the Keys (Motives), the Blueprint (Order), and the Presence (Relationship), we see that the Gospel is a Homecoming. You are being rebuilt so the Creator can once again walk with His creation. 6. Inight Podcast Closing & Interaction • Benediction: "May you walk this week with a 'single eye' and a light heart. May the Resident of your soul find rest in the space you've cleared for Him. Go in His peace." • Call to Action: "Look at your heart today. If there is one thing cluttering the room for the Guest, carry it to the curb. Make room for the King." • Facebook Interaction: "Join us on our Facebook page and tell us: If the Owner moved into your 'living room' today, what's the first old habit He would throw out?" Final Thought: Reverence in All Things Ultimately, this journey is about reverence for the Lord in everything that we do. Whether we are fasting to clear the secret rooms of the heart, eating healthy to honor the Master’s instrument, or simply living the kryptos life away from the gaze of the world, we do it for the Audience of One. We invite you to come to our Facebook page to give your insight about this message http://www.facebook/Rectutudespodcast!

    14 Min.
  5. 🎙️ Matthew 6:7–15 The Kingdom Blueprint

    9. JAN.

    🎙️ Matthew 6:7–15 The Kingdom Blueprint

    Sermon: The Kingdom Blueprint Scripture Text: Matthew 6:7–15 Thematic Commentary: The Integrated Life "Welcome to the Inight Podcast. As we open this series, we have to clear the air about the words of Jesus. Many people approach the Beatitudes or the Sermon on the Mount looking for 'therapy'—a quick dose of spiritual medicine to soothe their anxiety or make them feel 'blessed' in a worldly sense. But let’s be clear: Jesus is not your therapist; He is your King. The Beatitudes are not a psychological exercise for quick healing; they are a mandatory guide to lead us into the specific type of behavior and character God demands of His citizens. They aren't meant to make you feel comfortable in your current state; they are meant to transform your behavior so you can navigate the world—and the technologies of 2026—with a Kingdom mind. The "Kingdom Blueprint" is the bridge between the Kryptos (the hidden, inner reality) and the Phaneros (the visible, outer world). We often approach prayer as a shopping list, but Jesus designed it as a realignment tool. When we pray this blueprint, we aren't asking God to join our agenda; we are submitting our lives to be the construction site for His glory. By moving from the "Hallowed Name" to "Daily Bread" and finally to "Deliverance," we are building a "Cathedral of the Soul" that can withstand any earthly storm. Matthew 6:6 But when you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you. 7 “And when you pray, do not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do, for they think that they will be heard for their many words. 8 Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him. 9 Pray then like this: “Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name. 10 Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. 11 Give us this day our daily bread, 12 and forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. 13 And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. 14 For if you forgive others their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you, 15 but if you do not forgive others their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses. 1. The Grand Illustration: The Cathedral of the Soul Imagine you are building a great cathedral in the secret place of your heart. Most of us spend our lives building Phaneros shacks—flimsy structures built for the world to see, made of hay and stubble. But the Lord’s Prayer is the Blueprint for a Cathedral. We need an intentional worship space within ourselves. This is why the Prayer Shawl was so significant; it allowed a person to use their own body as a tent—a mobile temple for God. King David understood this. He didn't just want to build a stone building; he wanted to build a house for God that would last forever. David knew how to meditate in a way where the body becomes a bridge, allowing our spirits to transcend to the heavens, bringing a total reliance on God’s Presence. When you follow this blueprint, your life becomes a cathedral where God is always "at home." Closing & Call to Action Benediction: "May the Architect of the Universe align your heart with His Blueprint today. May His Name be your foundation, His Will be your walls, and His Grace be the very air you breathe. Go now, and build something eternal in the secret place." Call to Action: This week, I challenge you to pray the Lord’s Prayer not as a poem, but as a checklist for your soul. Take one of the five sections we discussed and dwell on it for an entire day. Interaction: I want to hear how this "Realignment" is working for you. Join the conversation on our Facebook Page. Tell us: Which part of the Blueprint is the hardest for you to build right now? Let’s support one another in the comments as we build our cathedrals together.

    26 Min.
  6. Matthew 6:1–6 & 6:19–21 The Kryptos Life (The Faith Investment)
Text: Matthew 6:1–6 & 6:19–21

    31.12.2025

    Matthew 6:1–6 & 6:19–21 The Kryptos Life (The Faith Investment) Text: Matthew 6:1–6 & 6:19–21

    Thematic Commentary: The Seven-in-One Meaning The Kryptos Life is the bridge between our daily behavior and our eternal destiny. When we unite these pillars—blind faith, invisible dividends, encryption, stewardship, alignment, and perseverance—we find the "Seven-in-One" meaning: That our life is not a performance for the world, but a private partnership with the Creator. True righteousness is a matter of the heart’s motive, and true wealth is the result of a life hidden with Christ in God. Call to Action: "Head over to our Facebook Page. Share one way you are choosing 'The Wonder Life' over 'The Atlas Shrug' this week. Let’s build the Kingdom together. See you there." Text: Matthew 6:1–6 & 6:19–21 1. The Pillar of Blind Faith (The Eternal Goal) • Historical Perspective: Ancient farmers often planted "slow-growth" crops like olive trees, knowing they might not see the full harvest in their lifetime. They planted for the next generation. • Greek Meaning: Pistis (Faith). Not just belief, but a relational trust that acts on what is unseen. • Illustration: Planting a seed in the dark. You can't see the roots growing, but you trust the biology of the soil. • Insight: We give and serve for eternal value because we trust God’s long-term goals over our short-term visibility. • Commentary: Faith is the currency of the Kryptos Life. It trades the "now" for the "eternal." 2. The Pillar of Invisible Dividends (Faith vs. Sight) • Historical Perspective: In the Roman "Honor-Shame" culture, public recognition was a tangible asset used to pay off social debts. • Greek Meaning: Misthos (Reward/Wages). Jesus says if you do it for men, you’ve received your misthos—your wages are spent. • Illustration: A bank account with no online access. You can’t see the balance, but the interest is compounding daily. • Insight: An unrecorded act on earth is a recorded deposit in Heaven. • Commentary: We bypass the "receipt" of men to secure the "inheritance" of God. 3. The Pillar of Spiritual Encryption (The Security of Secrecy) • Historical Perspective: Ancient treasures were kept in "inner rooms" (tameion)—the only room in a house with a lock. • Greek Meaning: Kryptos (Secret/Hidden). Where we get "Encryption." • Illustration: • Insight: Secrecy is the firewall of the soul. By hiding our obedience, we protect it from the "hacking" of human pride. • Commentary: Encryption ensures that the glory intended for God isn't stolen by our own ego. 4. The Pillar of Divine Stewardship (Transferring Funds) • Historical Perspective: Merchants used "bills of exchange" to move money safely across dangerous borders where physical gold would be stolen. • Greek Meaning: Thesauros (Treasure/Storehouse). A place of safe-keeping. • Illustration: Moving assets from a volatile stock (this world) to a "Blue Chip" Kingdom bond. • Insight: We do things in faith because we are listening to God’s secret instructions, not the world’s demand for visibility. • Commentary: Stewardship is simply the act of moving God's resources to God's "Kryptos" ledger. 5. The Pillar of Heart Alignment (The Location of the Soul) • Historical Perspective: In Hebrew thought, the "heart" (kardia) was the seat of the will and the center of gravity for a person's life. • Greek Meaning: Kardia (Heart). The physical and spiritual center. • Illustration: A compass needle. It doesn't matter where you turn; the needle always points to the strongest magnetic pull. • Insight: Your heart follows your deposits. If you invest in public opinion, your heart will always be "unstable." • Commentary: To fix the heart, you must change the location of your treasure. 6. The Pillar of Long-Term Perseverance (The Vision Brought to Life) •

    21 Min.
  7. Matthew 5:38–45 (ESV) Radical Love

    22.12.2025

    Matthew 5:38–45 (ESV) Radical Love

    Call to Action: Thank you for joining us on Insight. If this message challenged you today—especially the part about loving an enemy—I want to hear about it. Go to our Facebook page, look for the "Intervention 5" post, and tell me: What is one way you can go the second mile this week? Let’s discuss it there. God bless you. Host 2: To join our community, head directly to: https://www.facebook.com/InsightpodcastRectitudes! You can also find the clickable link at Summary of the Message Title: Intervention 5: The Climax of Rectitude (Radical Love) Scripture: Matthew 5:38-48 Core Theme: This message addresses the hardest command of Jesus: to love our enemies. It challenges the natural human instinct for revenge ("an eye for an eye") and replaces it with the supernatural power of the Holy Spirit. Key Points: • Relinquish Your Rights: "Turning the other cheek" is not about being a doormat; it is a dignified refusal to return an insult, breaking the cycle of retaliation. • Go the Second Mile: We take power back from oppressors by doing more than is asked, moving from duty to grace. • Love Actively: Love is not a feeling but an action (prayer) that changes the heart. • Imitate the Father: We prove we are God's children when we show indiscriminate kindness, just as God gives sun and rain to both the good and the evil. • Strive for Maturity: The goal is to be teleios (perfect/mature)—having a love that is complete and lacks nothing, even for enemies.

    43 Min.
  8. 🎙️ Insight: Intervention 4: Matthew 5:33-37 The Integrity of Rectitude (Vows & Oaths)

    15.12.2025

    🎙️ Insight: Intervention 4: Matthew 5:33-37 The Integrity of Rectitude (Vows & Oaths)

    👑 🗣️ Overarching Thematic Commentary: The Gospel of Radical Reliability Host: The single, unifying meaning of all five interventions is that rectitude is the development of Christian character—a visible manifestation of sanctification. We are called to abandon all forms of hedging, silent deception, and self-reliant vows, because our transformation must begin with the surrender of our καρδία. The goal is for our daily $\lambda$ó$\gamma$os$ (word) to mirror the perfect, unwavering faithfulness of The Eternal $\Lambda$ó$\gamma$os$ (Jesus Christ). Apologetically, our integrity is the only way to prove that the heart transplant promised by Christ is real. 🎬 Closing: Invitation & Call to Action (Sound: Uplifting, reflective music swells slightly) Host: We serve a God whose word is so true that it created the universe. Let’s commit to making our words true, too. Call to Action: This week, I challenge you to take the One-Week Reliability Challenge seriously. Don't be the person of fine print; be the person of profound integrity. 🎯 Invitation to Interact: We invite you to join our dedicated Insight Podcast Facebook page! This page is the hub where you can ask questions, get sneak peeks, and vote on topics. To join our community, head directly to: https://www.facebook.com/InsightpodcastRectitudes! Conversation Starter: What "stumbling block" (Scandalon) are you praying for the courage to "cut off" this week? Let us know in the comments on the page! 🕊️ Benediction and Outro Host: Now, may the God of all grace, whose promises are eternally "Yes" in Christ, give you the courage to live a life so honest, so reliable, and so filled with rectitude that your simple "Yes" and "No" will shine as a faithful witness to His unwavering character. Go and be people of your word. Amen. Thank you for joining us on The Rectitudes: From Character to Conduct. We look forward to seeing you next time!

    16 Min.

Info

🎙️ The Insight Introduction "Welcome back to The Rectitudes: From Character to Conduct. If the Beatitudes (Matthew 5:1-12) revealed who God has blessed—the 'poor in spirit' and the 'pure in heart'—then the Rectitudes are where the rubber meets the road. These are the external commands of Jesus, describing not who we are, but what we do with the transformed character God has given us. Jesus takes the law of Moses and brings it from the public square right into the hidden chambers of the human heart. He doesn't come to abolish the standard, but to raise it, showing us true righteousness.