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The Hardest Sin to Spot (Clip)
Shane Idleman

Shane Idleman (1972 - ). American pastor, author, and speaker born in Southern California. Raised in a Christian home, he drifted from faith in his youth, pursuing a career as a corporate executive in the fitness industry before a dramatic conversion in his late 20s. Leaving business in 1999, he began studying theology independently and entered full-time ministry. In 2009, he founded Westside Christian Fellowship in Lancaster, California, relocating it to Leona Valley in 2018, where he remains lead pastor. Idleman has authored 12 books, including Desperate for More of God (2011) and Help! I’m Addicted (2022), focusing on spiritual revival and overcoming sin. He launched the Westside Christian Radio Network (WCFRadio.org) in 2019 and hosts Regaining Lost Ground, a program addressing faith and culture. His ministry emphasizes biblical truth, repentance, and engagement with issues like abortion and religious liberty. Married to Morgan since 1997, they have four children. In 2020, he organized the Stadium Revival in California, drawing thousands, and his sermons reach millions online via platforms like YouTube and Rumble.
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This sermon addresses the dangers of spiritual pride and the tendency to be critical and fault-finding towards others. It emphasizes the importance of approaching correction with a humble and loving attitude, rather than deriving pleasure from pointing out flaws. Jesus prioritized addressing the prideful and arrogant hearts, highlighting the need for self-reflection and repentance from spiritual pride.
Sermon Transcription
Do you enjoy being critical? Do you love critiquing others? Do you love being a fault finder? Then I would submit to you that your heart needs spiritual resuscitation. I love what Leonard Ravenhill used to say probably 40, 50 years ago now, that we must weep before we whip. Before Jesus went in and made the whip and drove them out, he wept over the condition of Israel. If you want to whip, you first need to weep. We shouldn't be excited about pointing out the flaws in another. We shouldn't be excited about pulling other churches down, other ministries down. That should not excite us. If it does, there's something wrong. Because the minute we think that we're the spiritual say-so, we have the spiritual say-so, that God has given me the gift of criticism when no such gift exists. There's no such gift as criticism and being critical. Now, do I say we shouldn't contend for truth? Absolutely not. We're called to contend for truth. But it better come from a broken, humble, loving attitude that does not enjoy what they're doing and weeps over the condition of the person or the church or the ministry instead of taking delight in it. Because if we're just happy about going around telling everybody off and showing how right we are, that's called spiritual pride. And Jesus goes right to it. As a matter of fact, let me submit to you you're all older, many of you, some young adults in here, you can take it. It's gonna hurt a little bit. But Jesus went after prideful, arrogant religious people more than sinners. That in and of itself should tell you something. Jesus, He just went after these religious people because they had spiritual pride. They were looking down at everybody else. So just take that, just take it and just dwell on that. And it's hard to spot spiritual pride because we wanna make excuses. And these are the excuses that I've heard. These are the excuses I've had. And I've told you before, I've been through a time, 2005, 2006, in being in ministry that I could put down everybody. Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. What were my excuses? I'm just passionate. No, I'm prideful. I'm contending for the faith. No, I'm contentious. I'm right. No, you're wrong in your attitude. I'm a defender of the faith. I'm a defender. No, I'm being defensive. And a lot of times, I can pick a critical, arrogant person out very easily because I wanna see what they do with constructive criticism. When you start to call them on the carpet, they run the other direction. One example, there's a group I won't mention, and many of you know, Pastor Chuck Smith passed away recently, and people were going after him as a false prophet, not doing some things in his ministry he should have, and just going, you know, just really not saying some good things. So I emailed the guy, and I said, hey, I have some experience with Calvary Chapel and the movement. I know a lot of the pastors. You got a time for about an hour call? No, he just, I don't need to listen. You know, I know enough, and he didn't even wanna talk to me. And I was just, hey, let's talk. You might be missing some very important points here. You might be only hearing one side of the equation. Didn't wanna talk to me. And guess who might be on his heretic list next? Why? Because you challenge those arrogant, prideful people. That critical heart has gotta be convicted just as much as the lukewarm heart does. I'm convinced of that. We love to point out the lukewarm church, the lukewarm church, they're compromising, they're this and that, but Christ went after the prideful, arrogant heart just as much. These groups that do not like, they are unteachable, they are proud, and they are eager to dispute. And Paul says, do not have anything to do with them. So this is a very important topic, spiritual pride, because it's hard to spot. It's hard to spot. It isn't getting drunk every weekend. It's taking pride in the fact it's not getting drunk every weekend. It's not sleeping around. They're taking pride in the fact that they're not sleeping around. It's not because they're not in the Word of God, oh, they'll let you know they're in the Word of God as much as possible, because they're the defenders of the faith, and they can critique everything. They'll be critiquing this service. This and this and this, the worship, and all these videos go out, so I hear from a multitude of different people on what we're just not quite doing right. You guys need to go to the old hymnals, the Spirit's not there.
The Hardest Sin to Spot (Clip)
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Shane Idleman (1972 - ). American pastor, author, and speaker born in Southern California. Raised in a Christian home, he drifted from faith in his youth, pursuing a career as a corporate executive in the fitness industry before a dramatic conversion in his late 20s. Leaving business in 1999, he began studying theology independently and entered full-time ministry. In 2009, he founded Westside Christian Fellowship in Lancaster, California, relocating it to Leona Valley in 2018, where he remains lead pastor. Idleman has authored 12 books, including Desperate for More of God (2011) and Help! I’m Addicted (2022), focusing on spiritual revival and overcoming sin. He launched the Westside Christian Radio Network (WCFRadio.org) in 2019 and hosts Regaining Lost Ground, a program addressing faith and culture. His ministry emphasizes biblical truth, repentance, and engagement with issues like abortion and religious liberty. Married to Morgan since 1997, they have four children. In 2020, he organized the Stadium Revival in California, drawing thousands, and his sermons reach millions online via platforms like YouTube and Rumble.