(Disclaimer: This transcript is auto-generated and may contain mistakes.) You see, there's this sort of thing in our flesh, this kind of King Saul mentality. You notice with King Saul that when people left King Saul, he ends up changing what he's supposed to do. He ends up, and it's the same thing that pastors do. When people flee, they change the sermons. They change the way things operate in order to get more people to come in. But that is not what we're supposed to do. I understand it's in everyone's flesh. We want people to like us. I want everybody to like me, honestly. I don't want anyone to dislike me, but if you preach the Bible, is it possible for everybody to like you? It is not possible for everyone to like you. If you're a pastor and your goal is to get everyone to like you, you're not going to make a very good pastor, and you're not going to make a very good leader. Can you imagine if you were a father and you just wanted your kids to like you so you never told them no? That's what we see in America, that a lot of fathers are doing that. A lot of parents are doing that. They're afraid to tell their kids no. We don't need men to become pastors that are going to do this.