The Modern Pew

The Cost of Misalignment

From the Pulpit

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 44:54

In this message titled “The Cost of Misalignment,” Pastor Paul Bailey delivers a compelling teaching on the danger of living out of alignment with God’s will, and the power that is released when faith, speech, prayer, and action are unified under divine purpose.

Drawing from Matthew 21:18–22, he begins with the account of Jesus cursing the barren fig tree. As the morning unfolds between Bethany and Jerusalem, Jesus encounters a fig tree “in the way” that appears fruitful but produces nothing but leaves. Pastor Bailey highlights the symbolism: the tree represents anything in life that gives the appearance of productivity but lacks true fruit. Jesus’ response is immediate, and the tree withers—illustrating the swift consequences of misalignment with purpose. From this moment, he emphasizes Christ’s teaching on faith without doubt, speaking to obstacles, and ensuring that what is prayed for is believed and aligned with what is spoken.

The message then expands into the tension of life, death, and eternal life. Pastor Bailey stresses that believers must accept the reality of physical death while also embracing the promise of life after death. However, the greater focus is on “abundant life” now—an experience shaped by aligning belief, confession, prayer, and obedience with the will of God.

Through personal testimonies, he illustrates how alignment produces divine outcomes. From a locked church door opened at the right moment, to a distracting fly removed during ministry, to supernatural protection during a long drive, and even a healing in a hospital room—each story is presented not as personal power, but as yielded obedience to God’s will. He repeatedly emphasizes that he was simply a willing vessel, positioned in alignment with God’s purpose.

Turning to James 2:15–17, Pastor Bailey reinforces that faith without works is dead. He challenges the idea of passive belief, insisting that faith must be demonstrated through action. Even when God commands stillness, as seen in Old Testament examples like Exodus and 2 Chronicles, obedience still requires action in response to God’s instruction.

The message then moves to the book of Jonah, exploring why Jonah resisted God’s command to preach repentance to Nineveh. Pastor Bailey highlights God’s mercy, the people’s repentance, and the surprising fact that God responded to their change of heart. He emphasizes that God intentionally involves human participation in His redemptive work, choosing to work through obedience rather than bypassing it.

Concluding with Deuteronomy 6:4–5, the call is clear: wholehearted love and total alignment with God are the foundation of a life that bears fruit.

The sermon ends as a strong encouragement to listeners to examine their own alignment and discover the power of a life fully surrendered to God’s will.