Turn and Keep Turning

Paul Durbin
May 20, 2026

2 Minute Read

Following Jesus is not about never stumbling. But it’s often about learning to turn back quickly.

All of us mess up. We say things we should not say. We look at things we should not look at. We chase things that cannot give us life. We get selfish, distracted, proud, tired, or just plain foolish. That is not an excuse. It is just honest.

But here is the good news: when we do stupid, we do not have to keep doing stupid.

Repentance is not a one-time religious word we dust off when life falls apart. It is a daily movement of the heart. We turn from sin and turn toward Jesus. Then, when we drift again, we turn again. And then again. And then again. Not in panic. Not in shame. But in trust.

David prayed, “Turn my heart toward your statutes, not toward selfish gain. Turn my eyes away from worthless things.” I love that because David knows he needs help. He is not pretending he can muscle his way into holiness. He is asking God to turn him from the inside out.

That is where the path of purity really begins. Not with willpower. Not with pretending. Not with hiding. It begins by yielding to Jesus, the One who cleanses us, forgives us, and gives us His life.

So today, if the Spirit shows you something, don’t run from Him. Turn toward Him.

For more reflection, spend some time with the full sermon and study guide.

163 | How Do We Stay on the Path of Purity?

Paul Durbin teaches from Psalm 119 and asks the same question David asked thousands of years ago: how can a person stay on the path of purity? Purity is not just about avoiding obvious sin; it is a life of honesty, integrity, holiness, and character, where we have nothing to hide and our lives honor God and people. Paul walks through six practical ways to stay on that path: prioritize the Word of God, unreservedly seek God, restrict your freedom, internalize Scripture, turn and keep turning, and ultimately yield to the lordship of Jesus. The message reminds us that we cannot walk this path in our own strength, but Jesus cleanses us, forgives us, and gives us resurrection life so we can live differently.

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May 20, 20262 Minute Read
Turn and Keep Turning
Following Jesus is not about never stumbling. But it’s often about learning to turn back quickly. All of us mess up. We say things we should not say. We look at things we should not look at. We chase things that cannot give us life. We get selfish, distracted, proud, tired, or just plain foolish. That is not an excuse. It is just honest. But here is the good news: when we do stupid, we do not have to keep doing stupid. Repentance is not a one-time religious word we dust off when life falls apart. It is a daily movement of the heart. We turn from sin and turn toward Jesus. Then, when we drift again, we turn again. And then again. And then again. Not in panic. Not in shame. But in trust. David prayed, “Turn my heart toward your statutes, not toward selfish gain. Turn my eyes away from worthless things.” I love that because David knows he needs help. He is not pretending he can muscle his way into holiness. He is asking God to turn him from the inside out. That is where the path of purity really begins. Not with willpower. Not with pretending. Not with hiding. It begins by yielding to Jesus, the One who cleanses us, forgives us, and gives us His life. So today, if the Spirit shows you something, don’t run from Him. Turn toward Him. For more reflection, spend some time with the full sermon and study guide.Turn and Keep Turning
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