(Disclaimer: This transcript is auto-generated and may contain mistakes.) Jesus is the sacred name. Jesus is the name above all names. There's power in that name. You know, when you go to a school, you know, they outlaw the name of Jesus. You know, you can take that name in vain, but when it comes to using that name seriously, people get offended. The Bible says that Jesus is a rock of effects. One of the main things that really upset me, I think, was the attack against Christians. I would see, again on social media, on Facebook, I would see just these horrendous sort of, you know, like memes that are posted on Facebook, and most of them were very, very anti-Christian. I could wear a t-shirt in the school that says, in college, that says Yeshua right on it. Nobody would give a care. In fact, they would probably say, hey, this guy's cool. He's a religious zealot of some sort. But the moment that you claim the name of Christ, the Bible says that you'll suffer persecution. And Brother Dave, I remember, I remember being in a room of people back when I was in the Hebrew Roots movement. One by one, this group of people, my friends, started to deny Jesus Christ. They started out by denying his name, and then they went to denying him even existing. And I had begged my friends, I said, look, you guys don't want to go down this route. You don't need to deny Christ. You need Christ. He's the Savior. He's the only source of salvation. But in that room, one by one, people just started to deny Christ, and finally it got to me, and it was my turn. And I just remember looking around and thinking to myself, I can't do this. You know, I'm saved. He bought, the Bible says you're bought with a price. And I just said, I can't. I can't do it. And before I left that day, you know, and obviously they asked me to leave because Jesus is offensive to them, and he still is, the main leader of their group looked at me and said, Matt, you'll never amount to anything preaching in the name of Jesus. And he said never to come back. You wouldn't amount to anything by preaching the name of Jesus, yet the name of Jesus still is in the world 2,000 years after, right? You never amount up to anything, yet the name of Jesus is what divided our two eras, right? Before Christ, after Christ. As soon as I saw the name Jesus being sort of slandered, if you like, that's when I really took a step back, and I thought, no, I don't like this. I don't like it. There's something about that name that is very precious to me. And that's the end game of the Hebrew Roots movement, is to get people to deny the name of Jesus, deny Jesus, deny that he was the Messiah, and go so far as to say that he didn't even exist. So it's just a trick, it's just a bob sled down. And people in the Hebrew Roots movement need to understand that a lot of it seems very friendly on the surface. A lot of people in the Hebrew Roots movement, a lot of the teachers, they put on a kippah or a yarmulke, and they put on tzitzit, and they try to make themselves look really nice and really harmless to people, but a lot of times the most harmless looking people can be the most dangerous. The Bible says the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God. And so whenever they keep the Passover, it's like the veil is still over their head. They can't understand that God gave the Passover to show them, hey, redemption happens once. Jesus said, I am the bread of life. He that cometh to me shall never hunger, and he that believeth on me shall never thirst. I think it's important for people that are new to the Hebrew Roots movement that they understand that they don't have this attitude of, hey, Brother Matt, I don't know what you're talking about. This is this is completely foreign to what I know. That they're not like that. They haven't made me do anything like that. It's very important that they understand it's coming soon. That these cults and these secret religions, that they slowly feed you with little by little, little by little. If you're asking questions to your leaders, your church leaders, or whoever, and they seem to be skeptical about answering you, you have a textbook case of a cult in your hand. I would rather try to gain someone's interest and desire to meet Jesus than to push them away by using a name they're not familiar with. It's important, but not as important as drawing folks in.