The Truth Behind The Sermon
Step beyond Sunday morning and dive deeper Behind The Sermon. Each week, Lead Pastor Dr. J Perry Fowler, Student Pastor Ryan Willis, and Technical Director Trayvain Morrell unpack the latest message, exploring the truths of Scripture and how they apply to everyday life.
With a blend of timeless biblical teaching and real-world conversation, this podcast offers fresh insights, honest reflections, and practical takeaways that help you build a life rooted in the truth of God’s Word.
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“Life Built on Truth.”
The Truth Behind The Sermon
Honor God’s Name
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God’s name is everywhere in our culture and that’s exactly why it’s easy to let it become weightless. We start with some honest stories about “forbidden words” at home, then pivot to a much bigger question: what does the Third Commandment actually demand when it says we must not take the Lord’s name in vain?
We dig into the meaning behind “vain” as emptying or reducing value, and why this commandment goes far beyond blatant profanity. We talk about the subtle version too: the passive, casual way we can toss out “God” or “Jesus” as filler, as a punchline, or as a shortcut answer that helps us move on without reverence. From there, we explore how God introduces Himself as Elohim and Yahweh, and why knowing His name is tied to knowing His character. Worship becomes a practical counterweight, a way to retrain our hearts to exalt the Lord together in a world that keeps conditioning us toward a smaller view of God.
We also sit with the sobering warning of Matthew 7 and the difference between using the name of Christ and actually knowing Christ. Then we get practical: giving God our “firsts” at the start of the day, guarding our speech in public spaces, and using a distinct life as a natural doorway to share the gospel. We close with a family-focused challenge to teach our kids God’s Word and the names of God, connecting Jehovah Jireh, Jehovah Rapha, and more to real-life needs and real trust.
If this helped you reset how you speak and what you honor, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show.
Welcome And A Word Story
SPEAKER_00This is the Kennesaw First Podcast. Life built on truth.
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SPEAKER_01And we're Jance from the Masters. Hello, friends. Hello, friends.
SPEAKER_04So we're back with the truth behind the sermon podcast for another week. Pastor Perry jumps into honoring God's name. We think a lot about how we use our words. Um, what was the word that your parents didn't want you to say growing up? That maybe wasn't actually like a bad word, but like you couldn't say it. That makes sense what I'm asking.
SPEAKER_02Oh, I couldn't say any words. That was not okay. Uh I had too many stops on the side of the road with uh, you know, uh, I can tell you story after story where I would say something and we would end off on the side of the road and I'd be getting the belt to my behind, but you know. We live in a different world now today, folks.
SPEAKER_01So um I I grew up in a a little bit of a different household. Um, my brother and I are just under 11 years apart. And uh so I was in a very different stage of life when he was in a very different stage of life. So um our word was stupid. You couldn't say stupid, yeah, yeah, but I was, you know, 14, 15 at the time, and he's you know, four and five. And uh so one day we had this dog that I swear was the spawn of Satan. It was the worst dog I have ever encountered. It chewed everything, it bit everyone, it never stopped barking. And anytime you opened the door, you had to be really quick because it would get out.
SPEAKER_04Was it a Dotson?
Family Rules About What We Say
SPEAKER_01Uh no. Okay, it was like a little kind of collie mix. Okay. It was like a like a heel collie, you know, it was um, it would just bite your heels all the time. Oh my goodness, it was so annoying. So one day it got out, and it was on me that it got out, so that meant I had to go chase it around the neighborhood. And so I come back with the dog, and my mom and my brother are standing there, and my mom has this look on her face. I was like, what? And she said, Kobe said that you said the S word. And I said, No, no, I didn't. And I'm thinking, I'm saying the pretty S word. I'm like, I did not say that word, and that word is not even close to being in my vocabulary. And so later my mom and I are talking about it. She was like, Yeah, it was actually really funny because she comes in, he comes in, and he's like, Mom, mom, Jason said the S word. And my mom was like, He said, What? And she said, Yeah, yeah, you know, the the it starts with a sss and ends with pid. And my mom just started laughing because I said, Oh, that stupid dog got and uh so that that kind of became a joke. It's like, hey, we don't say that. We don't say that. I said the S word.
SPEAKER_04Oh yeah, our kids are quick to tell you that we don't say stupid. If you eat lunch with Judah and Asher and you accidentally say the S word, uh Judah will look at you quick fast and in a hurry and say, we don't say stupid. But I think they like it because then they get to say it when you're when they're telling you we don't say it.
SPEAKER_02Oh, that's funny. Well, I grew up in that time that you know, the Christmas story uh, you know, where you end up with life boy in your mouth. Did y'all ever did y'all ever have to, you know, have the soap put in your mouth, have your mouth washed out with soap?
SPEAKER_01No, I never gotten, I was scared of getting in trouble. Yeah. I never really said anything around the mother.
SPEAKER_04Um I was much more of a belt to tushy. Yeah, that's what's much. I didn't really get the life but we messed up. Now Kara will tell you that she got the the soap in her mouth numerous times. Yeah. Her dad'll tell you to this day that she was the mouthiest of any of them. Um so it's really funny because Judah, uh Judah hangs out with teenagers all the time. Right. Right. And so he hears how they talk and thinks that he can talk to us the same way. And not that our kids, not that our students are disrespectful all the time or anything like that. But teenagers are teenagers, they say things to be funny or whatever. And so every once in a while, Judah will say something, and me and Carrie just have this conversation of like, I didn't have that punishment, so I don't know how I feel about that punishment now. But she she didn't get a ton of my kind of punishment. And so, so it's a it's a very interesting, uh, interesting dynamic there. So we had a we had a pastor's wife, first church I ever served at, um, who was the pastor's wife was a volunteer in our student ministry, and that was fun. She was a very southern lady, and her pet peeve was shut up. She did not like shut up. And I remember a Wednesday night I was teaching, and one of the kids looked at another kid and said, Shut up. And you know, like I'm proud youth pastor in this moment. Like my kids are policing themselves, they're trying to help each other pay attention, and you hear from the back of the room, uh-uh, we don't say SU.
SPEAKER_01That's so good. We better move on quickly.
SPEAKER_04But now it's fantastic. But now, if you ever hear it, one of us will look at each other and be like, we don't say SU.
SPEAKER_01That's so good, man. So that that all kind of ties together with what we're talking about this week. That um the words that we speak have power, um, they have uh uh a very particular value, uh, especially in our society and in the way that that God sets things up. You know, he speaks to us with words through the Bible, through other people. Um, and he desires us to speak to one another. And so the way that we speak and what we say has very uh has so much value. And so, Pastor, you talk about this a little bit this week. Uh, why don't why don't you tell tell us what you're thinking?
The Third Commandment Explained
SPEAKER_02Yeah, it's um it's this commandment of God that says, I mean, it's a pretty straightforward command. It's kind of hard to miss the depth of what God is saying here, but he says, You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain, for the Lord will not leave unpunished those who take his name in vain. That's a pretty straightforward command. I mean, uh, I mean, he not only says, Don't do this, but I'm gonna make sure you don't miss out on your punishment for this. This is one thing you're definitely going to get um corrected on and disciplined on if you take the name of the Lord in vain. And so the question really leads up to a to really um when when we think about it, what what does that mean? What does it mean to take the name of the Lord in vain? And so it means not just we we usually think straight up of profanity, somebody using God's name in vain. Um but beyond that, what it does mean when we kind of venture into that whole subject, the word vain is the Hebrew word shaw, which means to reduce value or to empty it. And so that's that was the whole uh viewpoint, kind of take a take a higher viewpoint, you know, get up to get up in the balcony and look down on this a little bit and see what does that really mean. And so that was that was the thought there is let's make sure that when we are speaking about the holy, awesome God that we serve, how do we how do we verbalize his name? God is a person, and God comes and introduces himself in this passage. He says, I'm the Lord your God. Again, we we see this repetitive thing where God is calling himself Elohim, and he's going by his his um name the Lord, which we get the word Yahweh, the Hebrew word Yahweh. And both of those really speak to his personality. I mean, back in the days where, of course, the Hebrews in biblical times they would name their children certain things, and a lot of times they would name it based upon their personality, what they what their personality was that they could see right at birth or shortly thereafter. Uh, but it also would often communicate their dreams, goals, and objectives for that person's life. And that's why we have so many names in the Bible that reflect that. And I think the most mind-blowing one, we talked about this recently during the Easter season, was that Judah's name, uh, which uh ultimately then Judas means may the Lord be praised. And Judas, of course, did just the opposite. Yeah, he betrayed and he obviously sold Jesus off for these 30 pieces of silver. So, so the question is, is do I live up to my name? You know, uh, but even more do I sacredly look at God's name and do I honor it? Because it says something about his introduction to us. This is who I am. So Elohim uh is a word which we get our word God, what he's saying is I'm not absent, I'm the king of the universe, uh, I rule all things. And then Lord means I'm not going anywhere, I'm the Lord of everything. I that I'm consistently there, and my strength and my completeness is before you. So that's um how God wants us to view him. And so when we communicate what we do about him and we call upon his name, we should know the name of the Lord. The name of the Lord, the psalmist is a strong tower and the righteous run to it.
SPEAKER_04Yeah. So, you know, it's always interesting when we get on topics like this because the world certainly does an excellent job of conditioning us to a lesser view of God in his name. Um but understanding what God's name means helps us to elevate that name. Uh, with student ministry, especially, we have these moments where, you know, why does it matter if I say, Oh my God. Uh or they also have sometimes this understanding that that's the only way you take the Lord's name in vain. And it's like, well, guys, really, you know, the uncomfortable reality is even when we just throw the name of Jesus out as a Sunday school answer because we want the teacher to move on, that's taking the Lord's name in vain. We're minimizing it to a quick answer as opposed to treating it with reverence. Uh so what are some ways that we can try to make sure that we don't lessen our view of God in his name, but are actively making sure we hold high the name of the king?
Elohim And Yahweh As God’s Name
SPEAKER_01I would say probably the way that we interact with with him um and the way that we view our our relationship. Um, this takes a little bit of discipline. Uh, it takes a little bit of you know, making sure that we're staying up on our spiritual practices, but um making sure that we revere him, that we remind ourselves of who he is, when we when we dive into his word, we are forced to be reminded of who the real God of the universe really is. And so when we spend time in his word, when we spend time with him, we are reminded that he is not only holy, but he is our personal Lord, that he is our God, that he is our savior. Um, that helps us remember who he really is. Uh, and so that when we have those moments of, you know, how are we going to revere him and how are we going to interact with him that that we're reminded that he is the Lord and that his name has power, and that when it is spoken, um, and that when it is thought about, uh, it has power.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, I think worship is one of the most important elements of really learning to revere the name of the Lord, because the Bible says in Psalm 34, 3, let us exalt his name forever, uh or together. And as we do that together, we speak to one another in psalms, hymns, spiritual psalms. And when we do that, you know, the the world may take God's name in vain consistently. And we're constantly conditioned to that. You mentioned that a minute ago. We're conditioned to that. We we're used to hearing people using God's name in vain, whether it's using it in profanity or in, I call it passivity. And in passivity, it's like just the there's a natural thing of just using God's name that way. But when we come together and when we exalt his name together, there is power in that worship experience because what we're doing is at that moment, that is just the opposite of taking his name in vain. We would hope that we're all in there and we are with a loud voice, giving exaltation to the Lord. The worship experience is meant to be a moment in our life and those times in our life, those the even seasons of worship that we have that we go through are meant to be moments where we stop and do as Jesus said, remember. We remember who He is. And the the Jews had this, they had consistent festivals and so forth to remember what God had done. I mean, Passover, we we just went through Easter and we're reminded of that. And Jesus took that same, those same pictures. He kept those those particular festivals. He went to worship, he went to the synagogues in Galilee, and he spoke and he taught and he walked among people and he lived it out. But he didn't, he didn't, even as God himself, he didn't he didn't neglect that. He exalted the Lord and they did it together. He gave honor to his father, and you hear him doing that verbally through the gospels over and over. So he did.
Passive Speech That Shrinks Reverence
SPEAKER_01Yeah, you give us uh you give us three ways that, you know, practical ways that we are passive. Um, one, we can passively call ourselves by Christ's name. You quote Matthew 7, where Jesus says, Many will say to me, Lord, Lord, have we not everyone who says to me, Lord, Lord, will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. Many will say to me, Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, drive out demons in your name? Did we not perform many miracles? Then I will tell them plainly, I never knew you. And there's this, there's this idea that if we wear, if we wear a cross necklace, then we've got Jesus on our side. Or if we wear um a cool t-shirt that has this cool, you know, trendy Jesus saying that um we'll do the we, you know, we'll we'll enter the gates of heaven. Um, and so many of us can find ourselves in a situation like this by saying, well, maybe we didn't cast out demons or perform miracles in in his name, but we can say, well, we went to church. I was on the roll for Sunday school. Um I, you know, I even went to camp. I led camp. I did this, that, and the other, but we don't really have a real relationship with him. And uh what a tragedy it would be if we got to that point and we heard him say, I never even knew you.
Worship As The Antidote
SPEAKER_02Yeah, that's a shock and awe verse to me. Yeah. Because they, these people that the Lord is going to speak to about this, they said, Didn't we do this? And what they what they talk about is not your everyday ordinary thing you see. Didn't we cast out demons in your name? Yeah, didn't we perform these miracles in your name? And we we look at them and we're going, how in the world could they have not been people connected to God? Because he says, I never knew you. That just shows you the power of God's name. I had a seminary professor one time that said, you know, he said, we often wonder how anyone who gets up to speak God's word, how somebody can come to know Christ through that. And they really walk away from their faith years later. And one of the things he said is, is, you know, there's so much power in Jesus' name and in the gospel that the devil could get up and read John 3.16 and somebody could be saved. That's how powerful the word of God is. So you look at these kind of people, and there was a passivity while they were leaning on their the miraculous and the power of their usage of the name of the Lord. They thought, well, I must be good.
SPEAKER_03Yeah.
SPEAKER_02Um, and instead, they used the name of the Lord, and it was a strong power, it it tower, and it it accomplished great things as they spoke things in Jesus' name because his name is his name. It will never quit being powerful. But yet the person that uses it, you know, the question is, do I really know him? And I mean, that'll take us down a path that'll go for a long time. You know, we could go all day long talking about that. But that is that is a shocking verse for sure.
SPEAKER_04So do we think, and this is this is drilling down a little deeper. Do do we think that for a lot of folks the emphasis on knowing Christ has been going to heaven instead of a relationship with Jesus? Do we think that that is a connecting point here that leads to using his name in vain? That because we in a in our society we get so end result focused, right? We we like the idea of knowing, hey, I'm gonna go to heaven one day. And and that's a part of the gospel, right? Like we get to live with Jesus one day in heaven. So I'm not not saying we don't talk about that. Um but in the same way, if that's the end focus, are we surprised sometimes when we see people who do end up using the Lord's name in vain because they don't know him? Right? That's all they know of him.
Matthew 7 And Knowing Jesus
SPEAKER_01Yeah. Well, you touched on something, seeing Jesus as a means to an end rather than the end all be all himself. Yeah, you know, um one thing that I share with my worship team a lot is that hey, Jesus is not just the object of our worship, he's also the source of our worship, he's the sustainer of our worship, he's the reason for our worship, he is everything about our worship. And and that kind of gets into this this last point of okay, so if taking his name in vain means to minimize our view of God, how do we what is the the inverse of that? And that is Exalting God. And I think you already hit on it, you know, is our worship, but but beyond, you know, just singing and giving praise to Him, um, the exaltation of God is uh twofold, at least how I view it. There is a uh there is a positional raising, but there is also a relational raising of God. So positionally, we understand that He is our authority, that He is physically and positionally above us. He is controlling all things, He is sustaining all things, He is governing. Um, and then relationally, He is above us as well. That in our relationship with Him, we look to Him for guidance, we look to Him for help, we look to Him for clarity, uh, and we look to Him as the source of our worship. And so we have to do the work on our end to raise Him, which is what exalt means, which means to raise above and see Him as greater than ourselves and not minimize who He is. Because at the end of the day, He is the creator of the universe, He is our Lord and He is our Savior.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, and as I close that, there was this is one of those sermons that could have gone on and on and on, and you have to find a stopping place. But as we came to this whole conversation and the communication of this passage, I kind of came to an evangelistic end with that, saying, How do we exalt the Lord? Well, we exalt him by turning to him in repentance and salvation. And that definitely is very, very much uh that's that's the very foundation of what truly honoring his name is. It's calling upon the name of the Lord and being saved. You know, it doesn't stop there. We continue to call upon the name of the Lord, we continue to uh to exalt him in prayer in our life, and we look to him and know he is who he said he is. There's 24 different names for God. And some people do studies of the names of God, and I think Tony Evans did a fantastic job teaching uh some of the names. And some people even, when they pray, they'll go to the names of the Lord, like Jehovah Rapha, you know, Jehovah Shema. And you they learn these Hebrew names because it's based upon who God is and what he provides. I think that's a good thing to do. I really do. I think that's that's Christ honoring. I do believe that is. But the bottom line is is who am I trusting? Who is who is everything I need? You know, who is the one that he is enough? Yeah. And I think that bring when we understand that he is enough, and that brings us to a place where we do look to his name, we do call on his name. It's the first thing we think of in our morning when we wake, we think of I'm gonna call on the name of the Lord. It's the first thing we think of in in walking through life when we're giving thanks for the good things that God has given to us. It keeps our focus so centralized on who he is. When we know his name, the Bible says we'll put our trust in him. And so that's why he has given to us the beauty of his introduction. This is who I am. And by the way, don't use my name in vain. Use my name in worship. Use my name in prayer, use my name to call upon the name of the Lord and be saved. Because it's a powerful name. The name of Jesus, every knee will bow, every tongue will confess that he is Lord. That's one of those words that he introduces himself with. He is this ruler, he is king of the universe, he is Lord of all. Every tongue will confess that he is Lord to the glory of God the Father. That's what the scripture says. So I love this passage, I love this commandment. Uh, it really is a good reset for our life is to stop and say, How am I using God's name? And how how am I cognitive, even in a world where his name is so flippantly used? Um, and sometimes in profanity, but probably even more. We we get off on the profanity thing so easily, but the passivity is what really convicted me and made me think, okay, how am I using your name? Am I giving your name the honor that it deserves? And I pray that we are.
Practical Habits For Honoring God
SPEAKER_01Well, and kind of your last point there is very helpful for us in how we view the Ten Commandments, because the Ten Commandments is a lot of do not, do not, do not. If we think of them in um the positives of saying, rather than focusing on things to not do, I'm gonna focus on things to do. And so for this one, um, it it's easy to say, oh, well, maybe we just shouldn't say that one phrase, or maybe instead of that, we'll just say, oh my goodness, or oh my Lanta. You know, we've kind of been doing this with Olivia because she'll say, Oh my gosh.
SPEAKER_04Yeah.
SPEAKER_01And we're like, okay, maybe that's getting a little bit too close. So we're saying, okay, if you have something, you know, if you do stub your toe or whatever, you say, Oh, oh my Lanta, or you know, something. Um, but it, but it goes much deeper than that. It is, how do we how do we honor God? And uh last question, uh, and and this is something that listeners out there can take throughout their week and really just evaluate themselves and uh and get really practical. So, what are some ways that this week we can honor God with our speech, our conduct, um, with our our actions? What are what are some ways that we can do that?
SPEAKER_04Yeah, what a great question to frame our whole life around, let alone just this week. But uh, you know, I think the first thing we do is how do we how do we honor God uh in what we're doing is we use him, not use him is probably not the best words when we're talking about his name in vain, but uh we keep him as the focal point, right? We let him be where our day begins. You know, um in student ministry, especially, there's a lot of times where I'm like, you know what, guys, like if you can't get up early in the morning and read your Bible, read it at some point in time in the day. And I I believe that, but man, there's something powerful about setting apart the first portion of your day, giving God that those first moments before before we clear our emails, before we check our notifications, before we do any of those things where we sit down and say, Lord, I belong to you. Man, when we keep that in perspective, uh it it keeps things positionally aligned, like you were talking about, where we can remember that he is over it. And so then that shapes our whole perspective going into the day. Um, it's a lot harder for me to be content uh consuming content that dishonors God if my framework at the beginning of the day is set on belonging to God and understanding who He is. So that's what I would say. Like, if you want like tangible, practical, sacrifice those 15 minutes, sacrifice that snooze button. I know it's tough, right? It gets the best of us sometimes, but lay that on the altar and say, Lord, I'm yours. Yeah, and I want you to be, I you are worthy of my firsts. Yeah, so take my firsts, yeah.
Teaching Kids The Names Of God
SPEAKER_01Well, and so there's I think you really did a good job of hitting on the the private and the relational aspect, um, but there's also that public uh and kind of social aspect. Uh, you know, I remember back in high school, I was on the baseball team, and they the um, you know, sailors would say they cuss like baseball players. Yeah. Um, and so there was a lot of stuff going on, and you know, my brother and I talk about it sometimes. It's like, man, even the coaches, like it is just awful. And, you know, it's kind of it's kind of daunting because then you're gonna be seen as the weirdo if you're like, uh, well, no, I really don't talk like that. Um, and so really standing up for that belief and saying, I'm I'm really not gonna talk like that, or I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna treat others that way just because it might be cool or whatever, but uh really taking that that stance of I'm gonna refrain from that because it and then that opens up a window and it opens up an opportunity. Well, you may get called a funny name once, but if you do it two, three, four, five times, and they'll say, Okay, something's really different about that guy. And then they start to ask, Why do you do that? Why do you do that? It's like, well, let me tell you, it's because I have a high view of who God is.
SPEAKER_04Yeah.
SPEAKER_01And here's why I have a high view of who God is. Because one, I believe that he created everything you and I see. And I also believe that that Jesus is God and that he lived, he was fully God, fully man, lived a sinless life, went to the cross to die for my sins, and then three days later rose again. And you, right now, here in this dugout or at this school or wherever you are, in in line at the grocery store, um, he died for you as well. And then boom, you you have an opportunity to share the gospel because you have kept God first, you have kept him high, you have honored and revered him with both your speech and your conduct. You are now a living, breathing testimony for others to witness the goodness and the greatness of God.
Final Encouragement And Next Week
SPEAKER_02Yeah, and really that plays itself out not only in our lifestyle around others and in the world, but probably one of the most important things that God tells us is in Deuteronomy when he talks about teaching your children. Yeah. Teach, teach my words to your children. Part of what we do is we introduce our children to God. And one of the greatest ways we can do it is by saying, Do you know God's name means this? There are certain, there, there are these 24 names of God. And when they're going through certain things in life, we can point out those names and we can do that really easily. And the Bible says, teach these to your children, talk to them while they sit at your home. You know, let this be part of your lifestyle, sitting at your home. And uh walk as you walk down the road. I guess this would be driving in Atlanta traffic for us. And when you lie down and you get up, so before they go to bed at night, when they get up in the morning, write them on the door frames of your houses and upon your gates. And I love that. That's how God said, practically, I want you to communicate my word and I think also my name. And you know, I I kind of finalized a lot of this talking about when you lack, do you know Jehovah Jair is your provider, when you're broken, he's Jehovah Rah for our healer, when you're lost, he is Jehovah Ra or our shepherd who leads us down the paths of righteousness for his namesake. When you feel guilty, he's Jehovah, our righteousness, who forgives and forgives our sins and cleanses them. When you feel alone, he's Jehovah Shema, who is the Lord that is there. And there's just a, I mean, you can just go down all the names of God. God introduces himself in certain ways, in certain names, when he knows there's a certain need in our life. And so I love the way he does that. And I love the fact that he doesn't just say, okay, just call me just simply Elohim and Yahweh. He that that would be enough. But what God does is he introduces himself to us based upon what our needs are and how he is the fulfillment. He is the fulfillment of every need, and it's found every time in one of his names.
SPEAKER_01Well, gentlemen, what a great conversation we have had around the third Great Commandment and the Ten Commandments. I guess we'll see you guys next week on the Behind the Sermon podcast.
SPEAKER_02Yes. God bless y'all. Great week. Speak the name of Jesus.
SPEAKER_00We're glad you joined us for today's segment. We believe a life built on truth is a life that transforms everything. To stay connected, share this message, subscribe, or visit us online at Kindesoff First Todd Church. We'll see you next time. Keep building your life on truth.