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A Brand Plucked from the Fire | Gary Wilkerson
Episode 21819th April 2026 • World Challenge Sermons • World Challenge, Inc.
00:00:00 00:40:50

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Gary Wilkerson delivers a jarring prophetic assignment, walking leaders and believers through the story of Samson to show how subtle seduction works one small compromise at a time until the anointing is gone, the eyes are out, and the only thing left to offer the crowd is entertainment.

Preached: March 4, 2026

Main Points:

• Gary didn't want to preach this message. He would have preferred pleasant prophecies, but his assignment was to peer through the hole in the wall like Ezekiel and name what he saw: headlines full of fallen pastors are just the visible tip of a far deeper iceberg of hidden compromise.

• Samson's problem wasn't that Delilah was irresistible. It was that he was convinced he was too strong, too anointed, too godly to ever fall. That confidence is exactly what made him vulnerable to the game of then, then, then.

•Seduction never announces itself. It doesn't show up as a prostitute at your door. It shows up as Instagram, as a little coldness toward your spouse, as tolerating jealousy, as managing a sin instead of repenting of it.

• The most terrifying verse in the story is not when Samson's hair is cut. It's when he wakes up and says, "I will go out as other times," without knowing his strength had already left him. Pastors are preaching sermons, leading churches, administrating ministries, and not knowing the Lord has departed.

• When all the anointing is ground away, what's left is entertainment. Somewhere between 50 and 75 percent of American churches have become entertainment centers, because clowns entertaining goats is all that remains when the Holy Spirit has left the building.

• The difference between Samson and Joshua the high priest is not the severity of their sin. It's where they chose to stand. Samson kept standing before Delilah. Joshua kept standing before the Lord, filthy clothes and all, and got a clean garment put on.

• Gary ends with the strangest altar call he'd ever given, sending people out a back door alone with Jesus for five minutes, because sometimes before there can be rejoicing, there has to be weeping and mourning and real business done with God.

https://wcmin.us/SS260419c

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