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This episode explores Zechariah 5–6, arguing that God’s kingdom expands only as habitual sin is driven out of both temple and marketplace. It emphasizes that the flying scroll (5:1-4) pronounces judgment on persistent liars and thieves whose hardened character profanes God’s name, and it highlights how the woman-in-a-basket vision (5:5-11) exposes “religious” greed that shrinks measures, inflates prices and builds an altar to money in Babylon’s land of man. Drawing from Amos 8, it shows that such dishonest gain is theft dressed as commerce; from the four chariots (6:1-8) it reveals God’s worldwide patrol that executes judgment so His Spirit can finally rest. The message reframes worship as lifestyle integrity: private and public conduct must match, ridding speech of casual “God told me” claims and ridding business of every tiny theft—from company pens to unpaid hawker change—so the community becomes the light that points to the coming Messiah. The call is clear: banish every trace of lying and stealing, let Christ alone sit on the throne of your heart, and season every word, text and transaction with the unmistakable flavor of God.