Standing for Truth: A Research Tool for Biblical Discernment
A Call to Berean Nobility
“Sanctify them through thy truth: thy word is truth.” —John 17:17
The Bereans were a group of Jewish and Gentile believers in the city of Berea (located in modern-day Greece) who heard the preaching of the Apostle Paul. While many in the neighboring city of Thessalonica reacted to the Gospel with emotional upheaval or hostility, the Bereans responded with a unique combination of openness and scrutiny.
“These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” —Acts 17:11
Why the Berean Standard is “Noble”
Biblical nobility is not a matter of social status; it is a matter of theological integrity. It is considered noble because it subordinates the voice of man to the voice of God.
- It guards against the “External”: The Bereans did not care about Paul’s popularity or the “signs and wonders” associated with his ministry; they cared about his doctrinal alignment with Scripture (Galatians 1:8).
- It practices “Sola Scriptura”: By searching the Scriptures daily, they demonstrated that God’s Word is the final judge of all truth (Psalm 119:105).
Our Methodology: The Objectivity Filter
We test modern preaching against the historic Reformed standard of Sola Scriptura. To ensure our reviews remain pastoral and objective, we adhere to a “Scripture-First” filter:
- We do not judge motives: We leave the “intents of the heart” to the only righteous Judge (Hebrews 4:12).
- We judge the fruit: We evaluate the “fruit of the lips” (Hebrews 13:15)—the actual words, doctrines, and applications proclaimed from the pulpit.
- We disregard the external: A preacher’s popularity, the size of their congregation, and their perceived sincerity are not metrics for truth. The only metric is the infallible Word of God.
How to Use This Site
This site is designed to be a functional laboratory for the student of the Word. You can engage with our content in three primary ways:
1. The 7 Church Parallels (Review Path)
Every sermon we review is compared to the seven historical churches of Asia Minor. By identifying modern parallels to the commendations and warnings given by Christ in Revelation 2-3, we provide a biblical context for evaluating the health of a message.
Reviews by Church
Recent Reviews
2. The Doctrinal Search (Researcher Path)
Use our Search to look beyond titles. Our search engine parses the raw data within every sermon review. You can search for specific theological terms (e.g., “Justification,” “Substitutionary Atonement”) or specific errors (e.g., “Antinomianism”) to see how they are being handled in modern pulpits.
3. The Berean Protocol (Learner Path)
New to biblical discernment? Visit our Berean Protocol page to learn the step-by-step process we use to “prove all things” (1 Thessalonians 5:21).
The Three Core Questions
Every review on this site seeks to answer three foundational questions based on the text of Scripture:
- Scripture Density: Is the sermon built upon the careful exposition of the Word, or is it a collection of personal anecdotes and human wisdom? (2 Timothy 4:2)
- Redemptive Focus: Does the message ultimately point the hearer to the finished work of Christ, or to the self-improvement works of man? (1 Corinthians 2:2)
- Doctrinal Alignment: Does the teaching parallel the historic “faith which was once delivered unto the saints”? (Jude 1:3)
Following the Berean mandate, we seek to find parallels between modern teaching and the standards established by the Lord Jesus Christ when He walked "in the midst of the seven candlesticks" (Rev 1:13). We evaluate the "fruit of the lips" to aid the believer in discerning a healthy spiritual diet.
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The Poison of Pride and the Power of Humility
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The Boldness of Elijah: A Call to Courage or a Missed Connection to Christ?
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Faithful Stewards or False Prophets? A Review of ‘Fairness or Faithfulness’
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The Motive That Matters: Is Your Faith for an Audience of One?
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The Counterfeit Grace: A Theological Review of Creflo Dollar’s ‘Grace-Based Prayer’
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When What You Waited For Disappoints: Finding True Satisfaction in Christ
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Embracing Your Place or Chasing a Position? A Review of Christine Caine’s Sermon
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Finishing Strong: How Nehemiah’s Wall Points to Christ’s Finished Work
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Beyond the Walls: Reclaiming the Mission to Seek the Lost

