Saturday, November 1, 2025

Grace and Obedience: A Reflection on Pastor Mark Pettus Message ‘Jesus Celebrates – The Goodness of God'

Upon the recommendation of close friends, I listened to Pastor Mark Pettus’s sermon titled Jesus Celebrates – The Goodness of God, delivered on October 26th, 2025. I found the message both encouraging and thought-provoking. Having met with Mark many times over the years, I deeply value our friendship and have come to know him as a man of integrity, humility, and genuine love for people. His heart for God and His church is evident in all he does.

For that reason, what follows is not a criticism of his ministry or motives, but a prayerful reflection—an effort to thoughtfully engage with his words through the lens of Scripture and the Spirit. My intent is to explore how this message aligns with the fullness of what Yeshua taught and revealed, offering insights meant to strengthen, not divide, the Body of Messiah.

I share these thoughts not as a critic standing apart, but as a fellow believer within the broader Body of Messiah—listening carefully to his words, engaging with them thoughtfully, and weighing them through the light of Scripture and the guidance of the Spirit. My goal is not to question his motives, but to explore how this message aligns with the fullness of what Yeshua taught and revealed.

As a member of the royal family of New Jerusalem, I take seriously the responsibility to weigh every teaching by both Scripture and Spirit. This is not about fault-finding, but about clarity—about honoring truth wherever it’s found and gently questioning where a message may have drifted from it. Scripture reminds us that those who belong to this Kingdom must be free from lying, sorcery, and idolatry (Revelation 21:8; 22:15, ESV).

With that in mind, what follows is not a rebuttal but a reflection—a thoughtful effort to hold Pastor Mark’s message up to the Word of God, discerning what resonates with the heart of Yeshua and what may need a second look.

I have reviewed the entire message in full and selected several key portions that I believe warrant deeper consideration. Below, I’ve outlined those sections with timestamps and my corresponding reflections, offered in a spirit of respect, truth, and love for the Body of Messiah.





Part I – Language and Identity (clip 06:20 & 18:35)

A subtle but significant nuance appeared when Pastor Mark referred to Israel’s story as something belonging to them rather than us. By repeatedly calling the patriarchs and prophets “they,” he separated himself and the Church from the family of the Old Testament—as though that lineage were an outside entity rather than our own inheritance.

In truth, those are our ancestors. Scripture calls us grafted into the same olive tree (Romans 11:17–18). The language of they risks perpetuating a divide that Yeshua came to heal. When we speak of Abraham, Moses, or David, we should speak of our forefathers—not as spectators of their story, but as participants in it.


Part II – Fulfill or Abolish? (clip 16:35 – 18:00)

In these few minutes, Pastor Mark presented his case for why the “Law” is no longer binding today, interpreting Yeshua’s words in Matthew 5:17—“I have not come to abolish the Law but to fulfill it”—as evidence that the Law’s purpose has been completed and therefore set aside.

However, fulfillment in this context does not mean termination; it means completion of a process still in motion. Yeshua was finishing what had begun, not discarding it. His life and sacrifice perfected a covenant that was already good, but not yet whole.

It’s like an Amazon fulfillment center: the order (the Law) was placed long ago, but the package (salvation) wasn’t ready to be delivered until Yeshua sealed it with His own blood. His fulfillment is the completion of that process—the moment the Law became ready for distribution, not destruction.

To suggest the Law was only temporary raises a serious question: Why would an eternal God create temporary commands? The appointed festivals and holy days were set “by the sun and the moon” (Genesis 1:14) as everlasting ordinances. Yeshua Himself observed them; so why would His followers abandon what He modeled?

Pastor Mark later called the Law a framework for biblical living—a statement that contradicts his earlier position. A framework is essential for design; progress collapses without it. If the Law is unnecessary, then by definition it cannot serve as a framework. At best, it becomes inspiration. But those grafted into Israel’s covenant cannot merely be inspired by it—we belong to it.

The names of Israel’s twelve tribes are written on the gates of New Jerusalem (Revelation 21:12). Those who call themselves citizens of that Kingdom must therefore see Israel not as an ancient reference but as our family. The Law may inspire the nations, but it remains the framework of God’s covenant people.

Pastor Mark Pettus, Senior Pastor, Church of the Highlands



Part III – Types and Shadows (clip 17:05)

At this point Pastor Mark invoked the familiar phrase “types and shadows,” a concept often used to diminish the authority of the Law. But shadows do not negate reality—they reveal its shape.

The Word of God is both shadow and substance: the Law is the shadow of God, and Yeshua is the person of God. One cannot exist without the other. Many Christians try to embrace the person without the shadow, while many Jews embrace the shadow without recognizing the person. Both halves are incomplete.

📖 Hebrews 10:1 (ESV)

“For since the law has but a shadow of the good things to come instead of the true form of these realities, it can never, by the same sacrifices that are continually offered every year, make perfect those who draw near.”

This verse addresses the sacrificial system, not the Law itself. It shows that the sacrifices were symbolic, pointing to the ultimate atonement found in Yeshua—not that the Law was obsolete.

📖 Colossians 2:16–17 (ESV)

“Therefore let no one pass judgment on you in questions of food and drink, or with regard to a festival or a new moon or a Sabbath. These are a shadow of the things to come, but the substance belongs to Christ.”

Here Paul affirms that the feasts and Sabbaths were prophetic rehearsals of Yeshua’s redemptive work—the shadow cast by His coming.

📖 Hebrews 8:5 (ESV)

“They serve a copy and shadow of the heavenly things… ‘See that you make everything according to the pattern that was shown you on the mountain.’”

The earthly tabernacle mirrored the heavenly one; the Law’s shadow still reflects eternal realities.


Part IV – The Festivals and the Family of God (clips 18:20; 23:56; 36:50)

Throughout his message, Pastor Mark referred to the biblical festivals as Jewish traditions. Yet Scripture identifies them as the Lord’s feasts (Leviticus 23:2)—holy convocations for all who are in covenant with Him.

To call them merely Jewish overlooks their full covenantal reach. The Jewish people are a clan within the tribe of Judah, which is one of the twelve tribes of Israel. However, the festivals were given to the entire nation of Israel and to all who sojourn with them. Those in covenant with the God of Israel are invited to celebrate these feasts as family, not outsiders.


Part V – Substituting Holy Days (clip 21:00)

At this point in the message, Pastor Mark referenced Easter, Valentine’s Day, and Christmas as examples of the celebrations we now observe—suggesting, perhaps unintentionally, that these serve as modern equivalents to the biblical festivals once kept by Israel.

While I’m sure he didn’t mean to present these as literal biblical commands, the contrast reveals something deeper: how our culture has traded the appointed times of God’s Kingdom for the national and sentimental holidays of man’s kingdoms. The Feasts of the Lord—established as eternal appointments and patterned by the sun and moon—are often dismissed as irrelevant, while the celebrations rooted in Western tradition are held up as sacred expressions of faith and gratitude.

But Scripture warns that those who enter the Kingdom must be free from idolatry, sorcery, and falsehood (Revelation 21:8; 22:15). Many of these modern holidays—Christmas, Easter, and Valentine’s Day—were not born from Scripture but from pagan systems of worship later absorbed into Christianity to win cultural approval and political power. Repainting idolatry with Christian language does not redeem it; as the saying goes, putting lipstick on a pig still makes it a pig.

I have no doubt that Pastor Mark and the Church of the Highlands already recognize Halloween as a pagan and demonic celebration—its darkness is obvious. Yet, the same spirit that produced Halloween also inspired the origins of Easter and Christmas. These festivals, too, were designed to mimic the holy while redirecting worship away from the one true God.

This is how deception works: it hides in what feels familiar and safe. Just as modern “phishing” scams trick people by impersonating trusted sources, Satan imitates what looks and sounds holy to lure believers into false worship. He does not always come dressed as rebellion; often he comes disguised as reverence.

That is why we must be vigilant to separate the holy from the common, the eternal from the cultural, and the truth of God’s appointed times from the counterfeits that seek to replace them. To “come out of her,” as Revelation commands, is not merely a call to reject evil—it is an invitation to return to the pure worship of Yeshua, celebrated in the times and ways He established from the beginning.


Part VI – The Burden and the Rest (clip 24:00 – 26:00)

Pastor Mark spoke of shedding the “burden” of the Law as though obedience to God’s commands were an oppressive weight. Yet in practice, rejecting the Law often replaces divine rest with human busyness.

When the Sabbath becomes “whichever day works for you,” it ceases to be Sabbath at all. It turns rest into preference. Yeshua declared, “The Sabbath was made for man” (Mark 2:27)—not as a burden but a blessing. To cast it off is to walk away from the very rest God designed for our souls.

True freedom is not the absence of structure; it is the ability to dwell securely within God’s design.


Part VII – Pentecost and Shavuot (clip 32:00)

Later in the message, Pastor Mark separated the giving of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost from the giving of the Law at Shavuot on Mount Sinai—as though these were unrelated events.

In truth, they are the same festival. The Spirit who wrote the Law on tablets is the same Spirit who now writes it on hearts (Jeremiah 31:33; Acts 2). The disciples were celebrating Shavuot when the Holy Spirit came upon them; Pentecost was not a new holiday but a renewed visitation of the same Spirit. The Law and the Spirit were never at odds—they’ve always been one work of God.


Part VIII – Conclusion (clip 36:25)

Pastor Mark concluded by reiterating that the Law is null and void. Yet the testimony of Scripture consistently presents the opposite:

“Do we then overthrow the law by this faith? By no means! On the contrary, we uphold the law.” — Romans 3:31

Yeshua did not end the Law; He embodied it. His grace does not erase God’s commands—it empowers us to live them with joy.


Final Reflection

This message from Pastor Mark represents the mainstream tension between grace and obedience, a topic worth ongoing discussion. My aim here is not to diminish his ministry but to call all of us—including myself—to deeper alignment with the Word.

When Yeshua said He came to fulfill the Law, He wasn’t ending it—He was bringing it to life. He warned that anyone who teaches others to set aside even the least of His commands will be least in the Kingdom of Heaven, while those who practice and teach them will be great.

Genuine worship, in Spirit and Truth, is rare and costly. It requires us to resist the easy gospel of “grace without obedience” and return to the fullness of Yeshua’s teaching—where grace empowers, truth convicts, and obedience glorifies God.

Feel free to visit my other article, Fulfill or Abolish?” (Part I) Grace is not a license to rewrite or remove what God established..” for a more in-depth discussion on the meaning of “the fulfillment of the Law.

“Fulfill or Abolish?” (Part II) Grace is not a license to rewrite or remove what God established.

Recap: What Part I Established

In Part I, we examined Yeshua’s words in Matthew 5–7:

“Do not think that I came to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I did not come to abolish but to fulfill.”

We saw that Yeshua was not canceling the Law but intensifying it—revealing its spiritual intent and calling His disciples to live in righteousness that surpasses the Pharisees. We learned that the Law remains intact “until heaven and earth pass away,” and that grace does not erase the commandments but empowers us to live them in Spirit and truth.

Now, in Part II, we turn to the other side of that coin: What, then, is grace?





Grace Did Not Begin in the New Testament

Many believe grace began with Yeshua’s death and resurrection, but grace has existed since the beginning.
In Hebrew, the word for grace is חֵן (chen), meaning favor or kindness; in Greek, it is χάρις (charis), meaning gift, favor, or divine enablement.

  • Grace appears about 38 times in the Old Testament.

  • Grace appears about 156 times in the New Testament.

From Genesis to Revelation, both Law and Grace run hand in hand—never contradicting each other. Grace didn’t begin in Matthew, the first book of the New Testament, and the Law didn’t end in Malachi, the last book of the Old Testament. They coexist across every page of Scripture.

“But Noah found grace in the eyes of the LORD.” – Genesis 6:8
“The LORD is gracious and full of compassion.” – Psalm 145:8
“Of His fullness we have all received, grace upon grace.” – John 1:16

Grace is as old as God Himself. It is His nature expressed toward humanity—first as mercy, then as empowerment.


Grace Redefined After the Cross

Yes, additional grace was given to us through the death and resurrection of Yeshua. Before, the Law served as our guardian (Galatians 3:24–25). Now, under the New Covenant, we are mature sons and judges within the household of God.

Our position to the Law changed—not the Law itself.

The Law did not vanish; rather, our relationship to it was elevated. We are no longer merely subjects being disciplined by the Law; we are now entrusted with the responsibility to uphold it as sovereign judges under Yeshua, the Righteous King.

But even judges must live according to the Law.
Grace gives us the ability to live by the Spirit without constant dependence on teachers and preachers to tell us what is right or wrong. We can—and must—seek guidance from spiritual leaders, but each believer is ultimately responsible to study, interpret, and live out the commandments for themselves, from Genesis to Revelation.


Grace Is the Power to Remain in God’s Family Despite Imperfection

Grace is not permission to sin—it is the covering that keeps us in covenant when we fall short.
The Blood of Yeshua fills the gaps we cannot fill ourselves.

“For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” – Romans 3:23
“If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.” – 1 John 1:8

No one will exit this side of life sinless. That is why we depend on grace daily.
The curse of the Law is not the Law itself—it is the penalty for disobedience.
Through Yeshua, we are not freed from the Law but from the curse that the Law pronounces on willful rebellion.

“Christ redeemed us from the curse of the Law by becoming a curse for us.” – Galatians 3:13

Grace does not erase the commandments—it covers our inability to perform them perfectly.


Examples: Where Grace Fills the Gap

1. The Law of Circumcision

  • Genesis 17:10–14 commands circumcision as an everlasting covenant.

  • Yet many believers today are not circumcised physically. Grace provides spiritual circumcision of the heart (Romans 2:29).

2. The Law of Marriage and Divorce

  • Deuteronomy 24:1–4 and Matthew 19:6 forbid divorce except in narrow cases.

  • Yet many believers experience divorce through brokenness or ignorance. Grace restores, forgives, and brings healing.

3. The Law Against Lust and Anger

  • Exodus 20:14 commands: “You shall not commit adultery.”

  • Matthew 5:22, 28 expands this to include anger and lust in the heart.

  • Who among us has never faltered inwardly? Grace convicts and cleanses us.


Grace in the Appointed Times (Moedim)

Another beautiful example of grace is seen in how we worship during the appointed times.
God commanded His people to observe His feasts (Leviticus 23), including Passover, Shavuot, and Sukkot.

Yet today, even among sincere believers, there are small differences:

  • Some are off by 2–5 days in their calendars.

  • Some dwell in tents, others in campers or lodges.

  • Some celebrate from sundown, others from morning.

Still, God looks at the heart. Grace is what allows us to draw near in imperfect obedience—seeking to honor Him, not to perform flawlessly.

“The LORD looks on the heart.” – 1 Samuel 16:7

Grace covers the sincere effort of those who desire to obey, even when their understanding is incomplete.


Grace in Conviction and Correction

Grace not only forgives—it teaches.
It is grace that awakens conviction when we realize our error. It is grace that moves us to repentance. And it is grace that cancels the debt we could never repay.

“For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation for all people, training us to renounce ungodliness and worldly passions.” – Titus 2:11–12

Grace is both teacher and rescuer—the voice that says, “You are wrong,” and the hand that lifts us when we repent.


Grace and Food Laws

Even in what we eat, grace abounds.
While the Torah defines clean and unclean animals (Leviticus 11), Yeshua clarified that what defiles a person comes from the heart (Mark 7:15).
That doesn’t nullify dietary laws—it reveals their spiritual intent.

Orthodox believers maintain strict dietary separations, and that discipline is commendable. Yet grace understands that we live in a fallen world where contamination happens unknowingly.
If you accidentally consume what is “unclean” through ignorance or circumstance, God’s grace covers it.

Grace forgives error—but never excuses rebellion.


Conclusion: Grace and Law—From Genesis to Revelation

Law and Grace are not enemies. They are two expressions of the same covenant love.
The Law reveals God’s standard; Grace provides God’s strength.
The Law defines holiness; Grace empowers holiness.
The Law exposes sin; Grace redeems from sin.

They exist together—from Genesis to Revelation—because they both flow from the same eternal heart of God.

So then, what is grace?
Grace is the divine power and mercy that keeps us in covenant relationship with God as we strive to fulfill His Word with sincerity, even in imperfection.
It is the blood of Yeshua covering every sincere attempt to live righteously.
Grace does not remove the Law—it crowns it with compassion.

“Let us then approach the throne of grace with confidence,
so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.” – Hebrews 4:16

“Fulfill or Abolish?” (Part I) Grace is not a license to rewrite or remove what God established.

 Few statements of Yeshua have been more misunderstood—or more frequently used to dismiss the Torah—than His words in Matthew 5:17:

“Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them.”

For many believers today, this verse is cited as the reason the Law no longer applies—that Yeshua “fulfilled” it on our behalf so that we no longer need to live by it. But a closer look at the full context of Matthew chapters 5 through 7 reveals a very different meaning—one that actually intensifies the call to righteousness rather than relaxes it.





Context: A King Teaching His Disciples, Not a Crowd





At the time of this teaching—known as the Sermon on the Mount—Yeshua’s influence was growing rapidly. Large crowds from across the region followed Him, drawn by His miracles and authority. Yet instead of speaking to the masses, Matthew tells us that Yeshua retreated up the hill and began to teach His disciples directly (Matthew 5:1–2).

This was no casual sermon. It was a leadership retreat.
Yeshua had just called these men into ministry, and they were now being trained as His representatives—spiritual leaders who would soon become the primary voices of biblical instruction to the people. In that context, His statement about the Law wasn’t a public announcement of its cancellation—it was a private mandate to uphold and rightly interpret it.

He was preparing His disciples to become the new teachers of Israel, in direct contrast to the existing religious establishment—the Pharisees and teachers of the law. And He made clear from the outset that their standard of righteousness must exceed that of those before them.


The Meaning of “Fulfill”

After declaring that He did not come to abolish the Law or the Prophets, Yeshua continues:

“For truly I tell you, until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen,
will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is accomplished.
Therefore anyone who sets aside one of the least of these commands and teaches others accordingly
will be called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever practices and teaches these commands
will be called great in the kingdom of heaven.” (Matthew 5:18–19, ESV)

Here, Yeshua explicitly teaches that not a single part of the Law will disappear until heaven and earth pass away—a condition which clearly has not been met.

The Greek word for fulfill (plēroō) means to complete, make full, or bring to its intended purpose.
Yeshua didn’t terminate the Law; He embodied it perfectly, showing its true purpose—righteousness expressed through love, truth, and obedience. His life fulfilled the Law in action and intent, setting the ultimate example for His disciples to follow.


Righteousness That Surpasses the Pharisees

Yeshua’s warning in verse 20 was both radical and sobering:

“For I tell you that unless your righteousness surpasses that of the Pharisees and the teachers of the law,
you will certainly not enter the kingdom of heaven.”

This statement doesn’t abolish the Law—it raises the bar.
The Pharisees focused on external obedience; Yeshua called His disciples to internal transformation. He wasn’t replacing the Law with grace—He was revealing that true obedience begins in the heart.

That’s why, immediately afterward, He begins tightening rather than loosening commandments:

  • Anger is equated with murder.

  • Lust is equated with adultery.

  • Oaths are unnecessary because truth should be constant.

  • Retaliation gives way to forgiveness.

  • Love extends even to enemies.

Far from abolishing the Law, Yeshua reestablishes its spiritual depth and moral intent, showing that obedience is not merely legal—it is relational.


The Narrow Path of True Obedience

At the end of this powerful discourse, Yeshua gives three solemn warnings:

  1. The Narrow and Wide Gates – Few will choose the narrow path that leads to life; many will follow the broad road of easy religion (Matthew 7:13–14).

  2. True and False Prophets – Teachers who appear righteous but bear bad fruit will be cut down and cast away (Matthew 7:15–20).

  3. True and False Disciples – Not everyone who claims to follow Him will enter the Kingdom, but only those who do the will of His Father (Matthew 7:21–23).

Notice that the final test of discipleship is not one’s claim to faith, nor one’s use of His name in ministry, but whether one does the will of the Father.

Yeshua’s own words make clear: obedience remains central to Kingdom life. Grace does not replace obedience; grace empowers it.


Grace and Law: Not Opponents but Partners

Paul, often misquoted as dismissing the Law, actually affirms its place:

“Do we then overthrow the law by this faith? By no means! On the contrary, we uphold the law.”
(Romans 3:31, ESV)

Grace is not permission to sin—it’s the power to walk in righteousness.
The Law defines what righteousness looks like; grace enables us to live it through the Spirit. Together, they form the full expression of covenant relationship with God.


Conclusion: Spirit and Truth

When Yeshua said He came to fulfill the Law, He wasn’t ending it—He was bringing it to life. He warned that anyone who teaches others to set aside even the least of His commands will be least in the Kingdom of Heaven, while those who practice and teach them will be great.

This is why genuine worship, in Spirit and Truth, is so rare and so costly.
It requires us to resist the easy, popular gospel of “grace without obedience” and return to the fullness of Yeshua’s teaching—where grace empowers, truth convicts, and obedience glorifies God.

This truth naturally leads to the next question: If the Law still stands, then what is grace? I invite you to continue in Part II of this series, where we uncover how grace and the Law work hand in hand from Genesis to Revelation.