Fasts and Feasts
by Sermon Recap on April 20th, 2026
This powerful exploration of Mark 2:18-22 challenges us to examine whether we're truly feasting with Jesus or just trying to fit Him into our old religious routines. The Pharisees and John's disciples were fasting while Jesus' followers were celebrating, and this difference wasn't about breaking rules—it was about recognizing who was in their midst. Jesus uses vivid imagery to make His point: He's the bridegroom at a wedding feast, the new cloth that covers our shame completely, and the new wine that requires entirely new wineskins. The warning is clear and urgent: we cannot simply patch Jesus onto our existing lives or pour His transformative presence into the containers of our old ways. He didn't come to be added to what we're already doing; He came to make everything new. This message confronts our tendency to reduce Jesus to a religious accessory, to repackage Him according to our preferences, or to reject Him altogether. The question that should shake us is this: Why would we continue fasting on Jesus while feasting on the world, when we could be feasting on Him and fasting from everything that brings death? The joy of knowing Christ isn't about somber religious performance—it's about celebrating the reality that our Bridegroom has come, our shame is covered, and we've been given completely new life. Read More