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Articles
Salvation

Timeless Truths: Faith Without Works Is Dead

Steve Gallagher

Timeless Truths: Does the fact that we are justified by faith mean that the way we live our lives has no bearing on our salvation?

Sermons
Salvation

Judas, What Went Wrong?

Ed Buch

Latest sermon: Ed Buch delves into the life of Judas, asking the poignant question, “Judas, what went wrong?”

Podcasts
Finding Freedom

#628 - Reason #2 Our Res. Program Works - Our Counselors Teach the Truth

Pure Life Ministries Podcast

This episode: Why is our Residential Program so effective? Because we lead people to the truth that sets people free.

Sermons
Root Issues

Believing God for the Victory | Unveiling Yahweh Series

Steve Gallagher

In the 23rd message of our “Unveiling Yahweh” series, Steve Gallagher talks about God’s ways into victory over sexual sin.

All Posts

The Church Addicted - When Being Converted Became Making a Decision

#345 - The Church Addicted: When Being Converted Became a Decision

Podcasts

The Church Addicted—it's a series where we look at why the Church is just as addicted as the world is. First reason: false conversions.

Salvation
Root Issues

The latest statistics concerning men addicted to pornography and other illicit sexual sins are staggering. 64% viewing porn at least monthly. 36% of young men watching it at least daily. 35% of men admitting that they are having an affair. The worst part? These statistics are not from unbelievers—but from people professing to be followers of Jesus.

Welcome to The Church Addicted—a series of shows where we look at how these statistics have become the Church's reality.

In today’s episode, we discuss the modern trend of basing one’s eternal destiny on a single decision to ask Jesus into their heart, and the lack of life-change these incomplete conversions often lead to.

Podcasts
20 Truths: #4 Go Near the Prostitute's House & You Will Get Burned

Truth #4 - Go Near the Prostitute's House and You Will Get Burned

Short Videos

There are key principles in Scripture that struggling Christians can apply to turn away from temptation and down the road toward victory.

Sexual Sin
Finding Freedom

Every believer is tempted to sin, but for those addicted to porn, even the slightest temptation seems unconquerable. Steve Gallagher pulls out key principles in Scripture that any struggling Christian can apply to turn away from temptation and down the road toward victory and deliverance.

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Short Videos
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Pornography Is Not Your Problem. Pride Is.

Articles

Selfishness and pride are deeply interwoven into the life of a sex addict, but God wants to open up an entirely new way of life to him.

Root Issues
Finding Freedom

People who are sincerely seeking freedom from sexual sin usually have a vague idea that there is something under the surface that needs to be dealt with—a kind of root sin that lies underneath all of their other sin. And they are right. But they are usually very surprised when they find out what it is. Pastor Steve Gallagher talks about the subject of pride and how this relates to a man’s struggle with sexual sin.

Jim: Pastor Steve, in your book At the Altar of Sexual Idolatry, you point out that two of the root issues behind sexual sin are selfishness and pride. How are selfishness and pride related to each other?

Pastor Steve: Let me start by talking about selfishness for a minute. We all basically know instinctively what a selfish person is like. It's someone who's just all about himself and focused on what he wants, without regard to how it may affect other people. That would be a selfish person. But I want to dig a little bit deeper. I got to thinking about, "OK, how did that word come about⁠—the word 'selfish?'" And I started thinking about some other words with the suffix "-ish" on the end, like "amateurish." We understand that when someone is acting amateurish, it means that they're acting like an amateur⁠—acting foolishly. We understand that it means that they are acting like a fool would act. So then, thinking of it like that, what does selfish mean? It means someone who is wrapped up in his own self-life.

Now, how does pride tie in with the self-life? I've done some real thinking on this, and I'm not sure how perfectly right I am, but I've really tried to think on the subject on a deep level. And the best way I could think of to correlate pride with selfishness (or the self-life) is to think of it like this: pride is the perspective of the self. So you have the self-life, which is just another way of describing the carnal nature—our fallen nature, who we are as a person. It's understood in Scripture that who we are as a person is tied up with our fallen nature. So that fallen man—our lower nature, as some would call it—his perspective on life, the way he looks at other people, and the way he looks at God are all coming from the perspective of "What's in it for me?" And so his first primary concern is to protect himself and to exalt himself. So that's the best way I can think of to correlate pride with the self-life.

Jim: Now, can you show us how selfishness and pride connect to the problem of habitual sexual sin?

Pastor Steve: Well, I can get it down to a bare-bones, simple formula: the more self, the stronger the self-life, the more that sexual sin or sexual addiction can thrive. That's because the stronger the self-life is, the more the person is wrapped up in what he wants and the stronger that drive becomes. But as a contrast, think of a totally selfless person—like maybe some saint of old. They are constantly going through life giving themselves away. There is no way that habitual sin is going to find a home in a person like that, because they aren't totally wrapped up in self. They are thinking about other people.

Jim: Does the Residential Program completely destroy this life of pride—the "self-life" that you're talking about?

Pastor Steve: Well, I don't know, but I can tell you that I've been in this fifty years, and my self-life hasn't been totally destroyed! But the Lord has certainly put a good-sized dent in it. And you know, for a guy coming into the Residential Program, he's been living for himself for years. That is just the way it is. I'm not trying to run him down; it's just the reality that if he's been addicted to sex, then he's been living for self. And everyone around him has had to suffer for it.

So what we try to do is get the sexual addict focused in a completely different way. We get him focused on the Lord; we show him what a joyful life it is—those of us on staff who have been have broken out of that rut and the joy that we have as believers. We want the guy in the Residential Program to get a sight of that and to have something rise up in his heart that says, "I want that kind of life—the joy-filled life where I don't need to go running after every kind of sexual desire!" If he can get to that place, he will fight to have that kind of life. And of course, the Lord wants to dismantle our self-life. But we have to cooperate with Him; it doesn't just happen automatically. It's two of us in that yoke, and the Lord is doing the primary work, but we have to be going along with him.

Jim: In your books, you reveal that there are seven different types of pride that can coexist inside a man: unapproachable pride, self-exalting pride, and others. How did you make this discovery?

Pastor Steve: That happened in 1990, right when I had first begun the Residential Program. I was trying to think on a deeper level—but from a spiritual perspective—and answer the question, "What is pride?" So I started breaking it down, looking at my own life and at how people affect me and at my reactions. I just kind of came up with those seven things, which are in my book At the Altar of Sexual Idolatry. Since that time, I've been able to look at it on a deeper level, and that comes out in my new book, i: the root of sin exposed, where I was really able to repackage it and look at it in a much deeper way.

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Jim: In one part of i: the root of sin exposed, you dramatically retell the story of how pride started at Satan’s fall. How does that story relate to someone in sexual sin?

Pastor Steve: There are things expressed in Scripture about what happened to Lucifer—like in Isaiah 14, Ezekiel 28 and other places. So you start putting the pieces together like a jigsaw puzzle, and you have this somewhat fractured picture, and then you start tying it all together. As best I could, I told the story about what happened to Satan, or Lucifer, in my book—how he fell and how he took others with him.

That was how pride all began. Human beings are moral beings, just like angels are. The difference is that the angels had a set probationary period. Those who went along with Satan fell and became demons and those whose withstood his temptations and stayed faithful to the Lord remained as angels. That came and went. And then, all these thousands of years since, they've played out their roles. But with humans, it's different, because our entire existence on earth is a probationary period.

So for a guy who has gotten involved in sexual sin, basically what he has done is to pattern his choices and his lifestyle after the thinking of demons. He has dug himself into a deep spiritual pit, and now he must walk himself out of that pit by changing the way that he does life—changing his behavior. And over time, little by little, he's coming out of that pit, coming into the bright life that the Lord has planned for him.

What is the way out? What is the opposite of following the enemy of our souls? It's following the Lord. It's doing all that we possibly can to fight for a life in God. And as we do that, it opens the way for the Holy Spirit to work that wonderful process of sanctification in our inner man. Little by little, we change and we become more godly—I almost want to say "God-ish." We are going to become more full of the Spirit of the Lord rather than full of pride.

Articles
Purity for Life Episode #344: What's Pride Got to Do With It?

#344 - What's Pride Got to Do With It?

Podcasts

Sexual sin is just the fruit of a life that is full of pride. But there are key ways to overcome pride that really bring freedom.

Root Issues
Sexual Sin

People who are sincerely seeking freedom from sexual sin usually have a vague idea that there is something under the surface that needs to be dealt with--a kind of root sin that lies underneath all of their other sins. And they are right. But they are usually very surprised when they find out what it is. In this show we’re going to look at how pride relates to a man’s struggle with sin, give you an inside look at how we help men in our Residential Program identify and deal with pride, and then offer hope that there really is freedom from the root…and the fruit.

Podcasts
20 Truths: #3 Sexual Sin Comes with a Price

Truth #3 - Sexual Sin Comes with a Price

Short Videos

Sexual sin always tries to entice us, telling us only of the pleasure giving over will produce. But it never tells us the price we will pay.

Sexual Sin
Finding Freedom

Sexual sin is always trying to entice us. It reminds of us of the pleasure that we experienced the last time we gave in to it. But you know what it never tells us?

It never tells us about the price that we will have to pay. It never tells us about the shame and the guilt. It never tells us that we are methodically forging the chains that will bind us. It never reminds us that we are committing a slow spiritual suicide.

In this video, Pastor Steve Gallagher brings truth from God’s Word to show us the indescribably steep price that we will pay if we continue to give our hearts to sexual addiction.

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Short Videos
partial view of young couple wearing dress clothes with hands touching

Facing Homosexual Attractions within Your Marriage

Articles

Pastor Ed Buch offers hope for a married man who has crossed the line into homosexuality and basics of biblical counsel in this situation.

Sexual Sin
For Leaders

Pastor Ed Buch shares counsel to Christian men who wrestle with homosexual attraction within their heterosexual marriage.

Interviewer: Pastor Ed, how common is it for married men to struggle with same-sex attraction?

Pastor Ed: Well, I don't think that I would necessarily say it is a common problem, but it certainly wouldn't be considered uncommon either. If I had to peg a percentage, I would say probably less than ten percent of those that we see in counseling are married men who have a homosexual orientation. But there is a larger group of men out there who maybe don't have that orientation but who have certainly crossed boundaries in viewing pornography or even engaging in sexual activity with other men. But they still wouldn't describe that as their primary orientation. Across the board, married men are engaging more and more in homosexual activities and pornography, for sure.

Interviewer: So you've seen that a man could start looking for porn and end up drawn toward homosexuality unintentionally?

Pastor Ed: Absolutely. That's kind of true of sin in general, but sexual sin, specifically, will take anyone—man or woman—across lines that they imagined they would never cross and even told themselves they would never cross. More and more, with homosexuality becoming so commonplace in our culture, we see that it's very common for men to at least have enough curiosity to cross those lines.

Interviewer: Just to get this out of the way, can we say that any sexual activity outside marriage is sexual sin and a violation of Scripture?

Pastor Ed: Certainly, yes, we can say that. We probably need to say that more and more, because obviously our culture is redefining sin—especially sexual sin. So yeah, it probably pays to just say it up front: sexual activity outside of marriage is scripturally forbidden. Obviously, for Christians, our definition of sin is going to come right out of the pages of the Bible. Christianity cannot take its definition of sin from what our culture decides is acceptable and normal. Christianity depends on the Word of God, and the Bible gives us God's standards amazingly clearly in some ways that our culture has managed to somehow blur in the minds of people. But let me hasten to add that those boundaries in Scripture are really not intended to deny us some pleasure or good in our lives. They're there for our protection, and they keep us within the boundaries where God can reach us and bless us and lead us into eternal life with him.

Interviewer: How do you counsel a married man who has committed homosexual sin? Is it different from counseling a man in heterosexual sin?

Pastor Ed: There really isn't much difference in our counsel. The answer for sexual sin is the same, regardless of whether it's heterosexual or homosexual sin that we're dealing with. All sin is rooted in the heart. Like every other sin, sexual sin flows out of a person's love of self, his love of pleasure, his love of his life in this world. Sexual sin is simply the fruit of a very self-centered lifestyle, so, in general, our counsel will focus on the issues of pride and selfishness that are dominating this man's life.

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Individually, counseling men in sexual sin may mean dealing with one man's self-protective pride or another man's spiritual pride or perfectionism. With another guy, maybe it's his know-it-all pride. We may need to address other manifestations of that "self-life," like bitterness or unforgiveness or anger. Maybe there are things like hopelessness or unbelief mixed right in there as well. When it comes to the counseling we provide, we deal almost exclusively with the underlying heart issues, and the sexual sin—that thing on the surface level—will actually need very little attention in the counseling process.

Interviewer: But if a man is married while he's committing homosexual sin, isn't that situation more complicated?

Pastor Ed: It depends on what you mean by the word "situation." His sin problem is not any more complicated. I wouldn't say that helping him overcome the sexual sin is more complicated because of marriage and children. But obviously, with a wife and possibly children involved, there are almost certainly more ripple effects from his sin—more damage, more heartache, more spiritual and emotional wreckage across his life. So from the perspective of dealing with consequences and the work of reconciliation, the situation is going to be a little more complicated, for sure.

And for a married man dealing with homosexual activity or even a homosexual orientation, there's that added aspect of building a godly marriage with his wife. That is almost certainly going to be the most complicated of all of his issues. Our experience is that when both the husband and wife come into counseling at Pure Life, they both tend to come in with the belief that somehow, if the husband goes through some counseling, his homosexual attraction will change and become a heterosexual orientation. I could say, maybe, that in a small number of rare cases that happens. The Lord may actually deliver someone out of a homosexual orientation and into a heterosexual orientation. But that's very uncommon at best. What almost always happens is that the man is still dealing with that same-sex attraction at some level but has got to learn how to allow the Lord to teach him to love his wife and remain faithful to her in every way—including emotionally and sexually.

Interviewer: What hope would you offer the married man who struggles with same-sex attraction? Can he have freedom, forgiveness and a fulfilling marriage?

Pastor Ed: The best hope I have to offer is to say that there really is freedom from sin through Jesus Christ. We have literally hundreds of people completing our counseling programs every year who would give that same testimony—that Jesus came into their lives in a very real way and forgave them, transformed them and led them into freedom from sexual sin and all sorts of other underlying issues. With the love of Christ at work in our lives, we discover that we truly can enjoy a faithful and fulfilling marriage with our wife. Even if we still have a homosexual orientation, there is so much more to marriage than the sexual aspect. So we learn to develop and accent those other things, especially the emotional connection, for example. And honestly, that's my personal testimony. The Lord gave my wife and I new marriage, and believe me, we're both very fulfilled in our relationship.

Articles
Purity for Life Episode #343: Pastors: Love Sinners While Standing Against Homosexuality

#343 - Pastors: Love Sinners While Standing Against Homosexuality

Podcasts

It is possible for pastors to show loving concern and offer wise counsel, even to married men, without compromising biblical truth.

For Leaders
Sexual Sin

Homosexuality— this is THE issue that most churches are facing today. In today's show, we discuss with Steve Gallagher how pastors can show loving concern for those dealing with homosexuality without compromising biblical truth. Then, Pastor Ed Buch shares how he counsels the married man who struggles with Same-Sex Attraction. We'll wrap it up with a wonderful testimony of a man who found freedom in Jesus after decades of bondage.

Podcasts
Sexual Sin is a Liar

Truth #2 - Sexual Sin is a Liar

Short Videos

Sexual sin not only fails to bring lasting pleasure and happiness, it also encourages us to believe lies about others, ourselves, and God.

Sexual Sin

Sexual sin promises people many things. Pleasure. Fulfillment. Satisfaction. Happiness.

But sexual sin is a liar. Not only does pornography fail to give us lasting pleasure and happiness, it destroys our lives. It destroys our ability to have fulfilling relationships. It destroys our relationship with God.

And one of the most devastating effects of porn is that it deceives US. We begin to believe lies about other people, ourselves, and even about God.

This video will help you to understand how sin works to deceive you, and how to find your way back into the freedom of God’s truth.

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Short Videos
woman wearing knit shawl sitting in chapel on wooden bench next to Bible

Renounce Self-Pity for the Goodness of God

Articles

Fight to silence self-pity and its soothing lies, and discover a new foundation for life: living in light of God's unfailing love.

Spiritual Growth
Testimonies

Self-pity is an awful monster that wants to eat away the life inside you. It's a monster, because it comes portrayed as a comfort to assist you thru difficult, unfair situations in life. But in reality, what it actually does is tighten the rope around your neck a little tighter, draining out all life and happiness and vibrancy. The inner gnawing that self-pity brings continues to churn and burn inside you, and it will eventually destroy you if you don't get it out of your life!

I know all this, because my life was dominated by self-pity from the day I was born, I do believe. I was almost choked by it before God helped me to see what it was, how wrong it was. When others around me experienced joy or blessings, I could not be happy with them. Indeed, no matter what good things I did experience, I always found something I considered unfair or uncaring, taking these things as ground to accuse God and others of being unjust and not giving me what I felt I deserved.

But God showed me that my attitude was wrong. As I begged God to change my heart and to show me what is true about the issue of self-pity, He opened my eyes to see how wicked my accusations toward Him really are. I slowly learned, and am still learning, to fight against the lie of self-pity—because it is a lie—with the truth of God's goodness and righteousness in all He is and does. “Thou art good, and doest good.” (Psalm 119:68) In those moments when self-pity came begging for a pity party, I learned to quote verses about God's goodness and rightness, many times having to literally force myself to quote them, because of this monster's natural fierce aversion to truth. As my mind was renewed and I began to see that God truly is good, I started learning to be happy with those who experienced blessings and happiness, even when the blessings they were given are some that I long for and don't have.

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In my fight to be free from this, I studied the life of Joseph. Where was self-pity in his story? I see from his life, actions, and attitude an inner strength. In every circumstance he faced, very unfair situations, he faithfully obeyed God's law of uprightness. When he was treated unjustly, he cheered the people around him. Even in prison, he served others. He was a trustworthy man. From what I see in his life, he was an inspired, full of life man, even in prison, because it was said of him “anything that was done, he was the doer of it”. He continually sought to encourage the hearts of the people around him.

Now, if anyone had a reason, according to our human way of thinking, to pity himself, it was Joseph. But he didn't! He glorified God thru every circumstance he was in. And I believe that's the difference, and the choice we must make. Will we glorify God, or will we become sour, dried up bits of humanity that stifle the party everywhere we go?

Romans 9:14 says, “Is there unrighteousness with God? God forbid!” I believe when we allow self-pity in our hearts, we are unknowingly, or knowingly, accusing God. Accusing him of not treating us kindly, of not giving us what we want and what we think is good for us, and so many other things. But later in Romans 9, God says that He ordered the events to be what would glorify His name, and that His name might be declared throughout all the Earth. That shows me that God is doing what will bring the most glory to Himself! What right do I have to accuse God of anything because he's not letting me have what I want?! Life is not about what makes me happy! It's about God and what makes Him happy!

We have no right to self-pity.

You can overcome self-pity first of all by looking away from yourself, into your precious Redeemer’s face, and ask Him how you can know Him and glorify Him in the painful or difficult or even unfair situations you find yourself in. Then, you must yield your stubborn heart and allow yourself, or force yourself, if need be, to acknowledge the goodness of God, and go forward, with your focus on God and how you can love Him thru loving the people around you. Learn to look for ways to bless and do good to others, no matter how insistently your mind and feelings scream that you need the blessings they already have! And of course, cry out to God to change your heart and way of thinking.

Articles
Purity for Life Episode #342: God's Discipline is Proof of His Great Love

#342 - God's Discipline is Proof of His Great Love

Podcasts

Men in sexual sin desperately need the discipline of the Lord. He has to reprove us, to correct us, and even, at times, sorely chastise us.

Sexual Sin
Finding Freedom
Spiritual Growth

Men in sexual sin desperately need the discipline of the Lord. He has to reprove us, to correct us, and even, at times, sorely chastise us. In today’s program, members of the Pure Life Staff discuss their insights into this often overlooked, but clearly biblical truth: God disciplines His children whom He loves for our own good.

Podcasts
There is a Way Out

Truth #1 - There is a Way Out

Short Videos

For the struggling Christian, deliverance from porn often seems impossible. But no one is too far from the outstretched arm of the Lord!

Sexual Sin
Testimonies
Finding Freedom

For the struggling Christian, overcoming sexual and deliverance from pornography often seems impossible. But no matter how deep you are in sexual sin, no one is too far from the outstretched arm of the Lord!

Pastor Steve Gallagher was deeply enslaved to pornography and other forms of sexual sin in 1980, but he can tell you from his own testimony that God can help ANYONE overcome.

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Short Videos
Purity for Life Episode #341: When Leaders Fall: The Process of Biblical Restoration

#341 - When Leaders Fall: The Process of Biblical Restoration

Podcasts

Shame can keep us hiding sin, but for those courageous enough to fight, there is a biblical foundation for restoration, even for leaders.

For Leaders
Finding Freedom

The Bible encourages us to "imitate the faith" of our spiritual leaders. But what happens when a leader falls? In part two of our series on moral failure in the ministry, we look at the process of restoration for a leader. Former pastor Jim Lewis discusses the fear and shame that kept him from seeking help for his sexual sin. Counselor Jordan Yoshimine talks about how he counsels pastors and ministry leaders, and Pastor Ed Buch outlines from Scripture and practical experience a biblical foundation and plan for restoring a fallen leader to ministry.

Podcasts