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Come to you in Jesus name and
we thank you and we praise you that you have given us this time
and opportunity to study from your word. I pray first and foremost
that you would keep me from error as I seek to give exposition
of the word. And father, also that you would
open the hearts of your people to the truth. And if there are
those among us who have never heard the gospel, that it will
be clearly enunciated to them today. and that your spirit would
use this time to build up your people and to convict and convert
the lost. We thank you for your glorious
gospel. We thank you for the truths that
we get to proclaim because you have called us to be your children.
We praise you and give you all glory and honor in Jesus name
and for his sake. Amen. Today is an historic day for
Sovereign Grace Family Church. This church has been in existence
for over half a century. We began as Forest Christian
Church in a different building and in a different time in history.
Throughout the years, The denomination which we were formerly associated
with became increasingly further from the Word of God. And so
at the end of last century, 1999, we decided we could no longer
stand with them. Then in 2008, we experienced
a time of revival. We began to see the need to fortify
our doctrinal positions. and to take strong stands on
the truth. This did not please everyone.
In fact, it displeased some, but those among us who were fighting
for the truth were most concerned not about pleasing people, but
about pleasing God. In 2010, As a result of this
revival, we even changed our name to demonstrate the fact
that we had in many ways become a new church. We are sovereign
grace because we are committed to the historic principles of
the Protestant Reformation and specifically reformed theology,
which is centered on God's sovereign grace. And we are a family church. Because we are also committed
to the role of the family in the life of the church, the role
of fathers as disciples of their wives and children, the role
of mothers as nurturers of the home. And we are committed to
building strong and godly families. Well, today we have an opportunity
to take another step in our continued reformation, our elders, After
a long time of study and prayer have decided to seek the congregation's
affirmation that we join the fellowship of independent reformed
evangelicals. As I said, this is an historic
occasion, one that a decade ago would have been considered unreasonable
even to suggest. Yet, God, in his sovereign providence,
has brought us to a very important place and time. One of the great
quotes that came out of the Reformation was the phrase Semper Reformanda. Most of you are familiar with
the term Semper Fi, always faithful, the Marine quote. Well, Semper Reformanda means
always reforming. We are always to be reforming
the church in accordance with Scripture. The church has the
responsibility to always be seeking to ensure that it never deviates
from God's word and it is always willing to make reforms where
they are necessary. So today is a good day. Today
is an exciting day. It is a day of continued reformation. So in keeping with what we're
doing, I want to address a question. which I imagine many of you already
know the answer to. But as we know from Scripture,
it is good to be reminded of certain truths. It is good to
be reminded of principles. So we're going to ask the question,
what is a reformed evangelical? We're joining the Fellowship
of Independent Reformed Evangelicals. Well, what is a reformed evangelical? Well, let's begin first by answering
the question, what is an evangelical? The term evangelical, the root
word is evangel, and the evangel is the gospel. So an evangelical
is a person who believes and promotes the gospel of Jesus
Christ. The title evangelical should
apply to all Christians, because to be a Christian is to be a
believer of the gospel. If a person doesn't believe the
gospel, then they're not a Christian. A few years ago, a term back
in the 70s, I think it was the term born again, Christian was
was popularized. He realized born again, Christian
is an ox is not is not oxymoron, it's superfluous. It's saying
the same thing twice. If you're born again, you're
a Christian. And if you're a Christian, you're born again. Well, the
same thing is true for evangelical Christian. The term evangelical
identifies you as a Christian, and if you're a Christian, you're
an evangelical because it means you believe and promote the gospel
of Jesus Christ. So why not just call ourselves
evangelicals? Sounds simple enough. The problem
is, like with many phrases, certain things become hijacked and misused. And the term evangelical has
been used to apply to just about any type of Christianity there
is, including easy believism, open theism, even cultish groups
are now identifying themselves as evangelical. So it is important
that we that we add a qualifier. What type of evangelical? So
we add the qualifier reformed. That's the type. That is the
class, that is the group that we identify with. So what is a reformed evangelical? Well, when most people discuss
reformed theology, two sets of doctrines tend to come to mind.
You're either going to be talking about the Latin solas. Or you're
going to be talking about that favorite flower of many reformed
people, the tulip. Yeah, you're going to talk about
the solas or the tulip if you're talking about reformed theology.
However, over the past 10 years, I have I've invested a lot of
time teaching on both of those subjects. So I felt like it would
be a little bit of a rehearsal of things I've already said many
times to simply go over the tulip or to go over the five solas.
So this morning I wanted to step away from both of those lists.
I wanted to sort of I wanted to deal with a distillation of
what it means to be a reformed evangelical. Because people who
people who teach reformed theology differ on certain things that
we would consider secondary issues, things like eschatology is somewhat
debated among reformed theologians as to what is and what isn't
the right view. And even administration of the
sacraments, whether or not a person should be baptized as a baby
or whether or not they should be baptized. I'm not saying that's
necessarily secondary here as primary here. We believe in baptism
of believers only. But but I'm saying that in whole,
we believe a person like R.C. Sproul, who might differ with
us on on baptism, can still be a Christian and a good, solid
teacher of the word. Yet we would differ with him
on that subject. But as I was considering this
week and praying and and and Considering what it is that really,
really, really joins the reform community together outside of
solas and tulips, what is it that joins the reform community
together? And I came to four things. No, this does not make me a four
pointer, for those of you who know why that's funny. I'm a
committed five pointer, but when it comes to the tulip. But on
this issue, I want to distill it down to four ideas, four things
that solidify what it means to be reformed. I put in this the
first time I've done this a long time, I actually put the notes
in your worship folder with blanks. So I did that because I really
wanted to keep your attention today because this is such an
important subject. The first one. The first principle
that we would say is is a bedrock of reformed theology is the complete
sufficiency of Scripture, the complete sufficiency of Scripture. If you'll turn in your Bible
to Second Timothy, yes, you know where I'm going. Chapter three
and verse 16. As I said, many of you have heard
these things many times, but we need to be reminded of truth.
Second Timothy, chapter three and verse 16. It says all Scripture is breathed
out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction
and for training in righteousness that the man of God may be competent,
equipped for every good work. Now, in the old King James Bible,
you would see that it would say that all Scripture is inspired
by God. In the newer translations, it
says it is breathed out by God. I do think this is one of those
times where the newer translations are closer to what the original
intent of the author was, because the Greek word here is actually
one that I believe Paul created. Because this is not a word that
we find in other other sources. It's actually a word which is
a combination of two words, theanoustos, the word theos is the Greek word
for God and pneuma or pneumos is the word for breath or to
breathe out or to breathe. That's where we also get the
word spirit, where we get the word Holy Spirit. The pneumatology
is a study of the Holy Spirit. So when he says theanoustos,
he's creating an idea. He's saying that the Scripture
is from God. It is God-breathed. The words of Scripture are the
words of God. The Holy Spirit superintended
the writing of Scripture so as to ensure that we would have
the truth and that it would contain no error. 2 Peter 1 and 21 says,
For no prophecy was ever produced by the will of man, but men spoke
from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit. It's
an important passage because it sort of tells us how the prophecies
came about. It tells us how scripture came
about. The Holy Spirit was carrying them and he was undergirding
them as they wrote the scripture down and ensuring that they were
giving to us the very words of God. During the time prior to
the Protestant Reformation, the ownership of a Bible was out,
ownership of the Bible outside of the church was illegal. In
fact, sometimes they would even chain the Bible to the pulpits
so that it could not be removed from the church. During the Inquisition,
a person could be killed, burned at the stake for even reading
privately a copy of the Psalms. The Bible was only to be allowed
in the Latin language. It was not legally owned in any
other tongue. That was the Bible of the time.
For a thousand years, Jerome's Vulgate had been in the church. And for a thousand years, this
was the Bible. And if you translated it into another language, it
was heresy, condemnable by death. William Tyndale, many of you
know that name, Tyndale Publishing. William Tyndale was burned at
the stake for having translated the Bible into English. His last
words Lord opened the king of England's eyes. And with that
prayer, not 100 years later, the King James Version of the
Bible was commissioned. A beautiful testimony to the
prayer of William Tyndale. The reformers believed that the
word of God was necessary for people to be able to read so
that they would be able to understand God for themselves. They believed
in something called the perspicuity of Scripture. Sorry, that's hard
to say. It means clarity, ironically enough. Martin Luther said this, he said,
A simple layman armed with Scripture is greater than the mightiest
pope without it. So true were his words. You see,
they not only believed that the Bible was the word of God, they
also believed that it was sufficient They believe that it could do
what it said it could. It could teach. It could reprove. It could train in righteousness.
It had the power to do those things. They knew that the word
of God was more powerful than the words of men. It was capable
to cut a man in half and expose him for who he really was. As
Hebrews 4.12 says, the word of God is living and active and
sharper than any two edged sword piercing to the division of soul
and of spirit, of joints and of marrow and discerning the
thoughts and intentions of the heart. I've said over the years
and I continue to believe that reform theology, the idea of
reform theology, is really just a synonym for biblical theology. Reform theology holds a high
view of Scripture. We do not just say we believe
the Bible is true. We believe it and act upon it. We teach the Bible expositionally,
which means that we allow the Scripture to speak for itself
and we seek the proper, consistent, interpretation of it. Because
we believe it is sufficient to teach and to correct and to train. And somebody might ask, well,
Pastor, don't all don't all churches believe that that seems like
such a foundational thing, don't all churches believe that the
Bible is sufficient? The answer, sadly, is no. There is a very low view of scripture
throughout the church today, even among those who say that
they hold to the inerrancy and infallibility of it. This is
how it is often demonstrated, a man will get up. He will read
a verse of Scripture and then he will depart there from through
a series of personal tales and stories about how to live a better
life or make more money or get a better parking spot or how
to have your best life now or yesterday or tomorrow or whenever
it is supposed to come. It's always about you. It's always
about your life. It's always about health and
happiness and. Rarely is it. based on Scripture,
and even when Scripture is involved, it's used in sort of a sort of
a hanging attachment. It's not the root. I remember
one time years ago I was in a church and I used to do music. I don't
do it much anymore, but I used to lead music and and I was asked
to come lead the music at a church. And I knew that it was a holiness
church. It was not a reformed church. So I kind of knew what
I was getting into when I when I went, but I went. And I led the music
and then I sat down on the chancel and the gentleman got up to preach.
And I was I was interested as to what would happen because
I wasn't sure. He walked up to the pulpit. He
opened his Bible. And then he walked away and he
never went back. He said, I was going to read
the Bible to you this morning, but God spoke to me and told
me that somebody out here needs a word from the Lord. And people
started coming up and crying and he started laying his hands
on them and they would fall over. And and I was thoroughly embarrassed
because I think such is nonsense. But but but but the point is,
he he. He left the only thing that gives
us authority and power in the church, the word of God. He left
the only thing sufficient to lead anyone in that room to Christ,
the word of God. And he abandoned it. For some
other method. Beloved, may it never be that
we abandon the gospel, that we abandon the word of God for some
other method. In a reformed church, the word
of God is central and preaching takes a place of preeminence
and not preaching as me telling stories, preaching of God's word. Because when we hear from God's
word, we are hearing from God. We know that the Bible has the
ability to change lives, to convert souls and to open hearts. And
we've seen it down through the ages. The word of God changes
people. We do not trust in pizza parties
and light shows and emotional music and in a coffee bar. We
trust that the word of God is sufficient to save the soul and
we believe in the complete sufficiency of Scripture. So what is it first
to be a reformed evangelical is a person who believes in the
complete sufficiency of Scripture. Moving on to number two, you probably already wrote sinfulness
if you did take it out, because that's not what it is. The utter inability of man, that
is what This number two. I was going to put sinfulness,
in fact, that was my first draft, as you know, I write my manuscripts
early in the week and I read right throughout the week as
the Lord opens my mind to new ideas and things as I'm reading
the text. And and so I wrote originally the utter sinfulness
of man, but I got to thinking about it. You know what? A lot
of people are willing to say that they're sinners. A lot of
people are willing to say, hey, I'm not perfect. I'm a sinner.
But you know what? Not many people are willing to
say what the Bible says about them. And that is that apart
from grace, we are absolutely incapable of doing anything good
towards God. That there is a natural moral
inability of man. But that's what the Bible teaches.
Turn with me. I want you to look at this one. Romans, chapter
eight. And I hope that you are writing if you are writing notes,
I hope you're writing down these Bible verses so that you can
spend some time with them this week in your meditations, because
these are important texts. Romans chapter eight. And verse seven. The apostle is is comparing people
who are in the flesh and people who are in the spirit, and in
essence, he's comparing believers and nonbelievers. The believer is a persons in
the spirit, the non-believers persons in the flesh. And it
says in verse seven, for the mind that is set on the flesh
is hostile to God. Just stop right there. I love
it when people tell me, well, I don't I you know, I don't know
about Jesus, but I love God. No, you don't. You don't. The people who say, well, I love
God. No, you love God's blessings. You don't love God's being. You
don't love who he really is. And you don't seek after God
because he goes on to say, for it does not submit to God's law.
Indeed, it cannot. Those who are in the flesh cannot
please God. Notice that it doesn't say may
not, but it says cannot. It speaks of ability, says we
cannot please God if we are in the flesh. Prior to our conversion
to Christ, we are unable to do anything good toward God. Ephesians, chapter two and verse
one, we're all very familiar with. And you were what in your
trespasses and sins dead. That is what we are prior to
God giving us new life. We see two things in this passage
in Romans eight, we see that those who are in the flesh cannot
submit to God, neither can they please God. And beloved, the unsaved person
has a natural inability to do anything good towards God. And
that includes hear me on this because it is so important. The
person who is in the flesh has the inability to do anything
good towards God. And that includes the exercising
of saving faith. Let me ask you this, is saving
faith pleasing to God? Yes, the answer would be yes.
Can the person who is in the flesh do anything to please God?
Not according to Romans eight and verse eight. So can the person
who is in the flesh exercise saving faith on their own? No. It is impossible for the unsaved
person to exercise saving faith. This is because he has a moral
inability to do so. He lacks a desire in and of himself. In fact, the Bible says there's
no God seeker. Romans chapter three and verse
10, as it is written, none is righteous. No, not one. No one
understands. No one seeks for God. That's
why I love when I hear these people talk about I go to a seeker
sensitive church. Well, who in the world are you
talking about? Well, there's all these people out there seeking
God. No, there are not. Well, what about all those people
that go to those big mega churches that talk about health and wealth?
They're seeking health and wealth. They're not seeking God. Is it? I mean, it's very clear. People ask me, well, what about
these people who seem very sincere about seeking God? I say the
answer is this. I say everyone seeks the blessings
of God. No one seeks obedience to God.
And that's what Paul's saying when he says no one seeks for
God. No one seeks obedience. Naturally, we are rebels. Naturally. So the question is, if no one
can exercise faith. And no one seeks for God, then
how can people get saved? That's an important question.
If no one seeks for God, no one can exercise faith. How does
anyone get saved? The answer is that God seeks
us. We have a natural inability to
come to Christ. So God comes to us and enables
us to come to Christ. John six and verse sixty five.
Very important passage. No one can come to me unless
the father who sent me grants it to him. Or it says a little
different ESV. This is why I told you that no
one can come to me unless it is granted him by my father. Very important passage says no
one says you can't come. Why? Because you have a moral
inability to do so. It says the only way you can is if God does
something prior to your coming and that's giving you the ability
to come. In reformed theology, we believe that the work that
God does in our hearts to cause us to come to Christ is a work
called regeneration. God takes a dead soul. He gives
the dead soul new life. And as a result, we believe.
People think and hear this again. Again, I'm trying to I'm teaching
you some things this morning. This is an important one. People
think that they're they believe to get born again. That is backward. You are born again so that you
might believe. We are dead. Dead people cannot
exercise faith. God gives us life. And as a result,
we believe. Think about Lazarus in the tomb.
Did Lazarus believe he could come alive and then came alive?
Did Lazarus get up and walk out before Jesus gave him life? No. What preceded Lazarus's coming
to Jesus? The granting of life. This is an analogy in Scripture.
Jesus says, Lazarus, come forth. And thus he came. So, too, when
we are dead in our trespasses and sins, the Holy Spirit of
God quickens us, awakens us from our spiritual death, not spiritual
lethargy, not spiritual sickness, not spiritual wandering, spiritual
death. And he awakens us from our spiritual
death. He gives us spiritual life. And
as a result, we believe because the very natural thing for a
spiritually spiritually alive person is that he would believe
in Christ. So we believe first. In the complete
sufficiency of Scripture, we believe second. And the utter
and ability of man, and thirdly, We believe in the absolute sovereignty
of God. I imagine some of you probably
already knew that one. We believe in the absolute sovereignty
of God. Now, this is a subject which we have devoted many hours
of study to here at SGFC. Yet in all of our studies, we
have not even cracked the surface of this important doctrine. The
sovereignty of God references his almighty authority of all
things which have ever come to pass. The sovereignty of God
is the Godhood of God. If God is not sovereign, he is
not God. Man has a tendency to rebel against
God's sovereignty because he wants to maintain his own human
autonomy. In fact, reform theology has
been accused of robbing people, robbing men of their free will. Well, allow me to say a word
about free will. Since we're all here and have
nowhere else to go, I'm going to spend a moment on this. This
is very important. We hear all the time about the
declaration of the importance of human free will. Let me say
something about human free will. The Bible does not say that we
have an autonomous free will. In fact, we have already seen
that the Bible says that prior to God opening our hearts, we
have a moral incapability. We have a moral inability. So
if we are completely free, then we don't have a moral inability.
And if we have a moral inability, then we're not completely free.
Jesus said, truly, truly, I say to you, everyone who practices
sin is a slave to sin. In fact, he says prior to conversion,
you're a slave to sin. After conversion, you're a slave
to righteousness. You're never, ever, ever called morally free
ever. However, at the same time, the
Bible does teach that we are not robots and reform theology
does not teach that we're puppets, as some have accused. We believe
that men have moral agency. That's not just a fancy word.
It actually has meaning. It means that we believe that
men And women, of course, but men in general, men, mankind. Has the capacity to make choices,
we just believe that all of those choices will be in accord with
our nature. And so as long as our nature
is enslaved to sin, what will our choices be bound by sin?
As long as our nature is dead in sin, what will our choices
be reflective of? Our death. Likewise, while we do say that
man is free to make choices, we also believe God is more free
than we are. So many people make a big deal
about the free will of man, but they never talk about the free
will of God. Do you know that God is the only creature in the
whole universe that has an absolutely free will? God is the only being. He's not a creature. I call God
a creature. Let me back up and let me reiterate. God is not
a creature. God is the only being. I want to correct myself. If I don't, the elders will.
God is not a creature. We are creatures because that
indicates being created. God is the only being in all
of the universe. That has an absolutely free will.
And I love what R.C. says about this. R.C. Sproul,
he says, you are free and God is more free than you are. And
so when your freedom runs into God's freedom, God wins. So that's what we believe about
free will. Yes, you have the ability to
make choices, but God also makes choices and God's will always
trumps yours. God is sovereign over every area
of life. And the part that about reformed
theology that tends to disrupt most people. Is that we believe that God is
sovereign over every area of life, including salvation. But beloved, that is the natural
extension of man's inability. We do not want to come to Christ
by nature, we rebel against Christ. Because we're enslaved to our
sin. But God elects people from every tribe, tongue and nation
to come to his son to ensure that his son will have a bride. People say, I don't like the
word elect. I don't like the word elect, because that means
God chooses. The word elect means choice. That means that God chooses. Well, I'm going to run through
a few verses. You may just want to write these down and we'll
put them on the screen. I just want to show you that though
you might not like the word elect, the Bible writers, the authors
of Scripture, ultimately the Holy Spirit of God, who is the
ultimate author of Scripture, had no problem with that word.
Matthew 24 and 31. And he will send out his angels
with a loud trumpet call and will gather his elect from the
four winds from one end of heaven to the other. Luke 18 and verse
7. And will not God give justice
to his elect who cry to him day and night? Will he delay long
over them? Romans 8 and verse 33. Who shall
bring a charge against God's elect? It is God who justifies. Romans 1 and 17. What then? Israel failed to obtain what
it was seeking. The elect obtained it. But the
rest were hardened. And then Second Timothy two and
verse 10. Therefore, I endure everything
for the sake of the elect. That they also may obtain the
salvation that is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory. The Bible
uses the word elect many times to describe those who are saved.
And again, the word elect means chosen by God. If you are saved
this morning, It is not because you are better than someone else.
It is not because you were smarter or more spiritually sensitive.
If you are saved, it is because the sovereign God of the universe
saw fit to give you life where you were dead and had no desire
for him. John, six and thirty seven, all
the father gives me will come to me and whoever comes to me,
I will never cast out. When God gives a person to Jesus,
that person comes. As we've already seen in John
6, 65, no one can come unless God gives him, and if God does
give them, give him, he will come. So the natural conclusion
of that is that if we have come, it is because God has given us
to the sun. God has given us something that
we would not do on our own. The Bible says that we love because
he first loved us. First, John, chapter four and
verse 19. If you are a believer, you have
nothing to boast about. You cannot say you were smarter,
more spiritually pliable or more willing to receive the truth.
You were dead in your trespasses and sins. You did not want to
come to Christ because you were a rebel, but God saved you by
his grace. And this is why we say that salvation
is sola gratia, by grace alone, grace from beginning to ending. It is all of grace and none of
you. You contribute not an iota to your own salvation. The great
failure of modern religion is the idea that we in some way,
form or fashion contribute something to our own salvation. Such a
thing is heresy. God gave you as a gift. To his son. So that his son would
have a bride chosen for him. And finally, number four, what
is a reformed evangelical? The complete sufficiency of Scripture,
the utter inability of man. The sovereignty of God and finally.
The perfect atonement of Christ, the perfect atonement of Christ. This is an area that causes some
people to scoff at reformed theology, particularly because of the L
in the tulip, which is the phrase limited atonement. And they say,
well, that limits what Christ could do. It's often a misunderstanding. Because here is what we believe,
and it's very simple. We do not believe that Jesus
died potentially for the sins of all the world. We believe
that Jesus died actually for the sins of His people. We don't believe that Christ's
atonement was a potential thing. We believe that Christ's atonement
actually did something on behalf of believers. The atonement of Christ is sufficient
for anyone. And no reformed theologian has
ever denied that the atonement of Christ is sufficient for anyone. But it was made for believers.
It was made for the elect. And in that sense, it is a perfect
atonement because it actually accomplishes what it set out
to do. Christ's death atoned perfectly
for every person it was ever intended to atone for. That is
why we use the phrase substitutionary atonement. We believe that Christ,
when he was on the cross, actually was substituting for his people. That he was there for them, taking
their sins on himself perfectly. I want to show you a couple of
verses on this. Hebrews chapter 10. I'll ask
you to turn there. Hebrews chapter 10 and verse 12. Talks about Jesus as our high
priest. Priests make sacrifices, priests make sacrifices on behalf
of people, and that's what priests do. Priests intercede for God,
with God, for people. They're mediators. In the Old
Testament, they would sacrifice animals, but Jesus gave himself
as the perfect sacrifice, but still was acting in the role
of priest. This is why he said, no man takes my life for me,
but I give it up in my own accord. I give it up myself. I am the
priest. I'm doing the act of sacrificing here. And this passage
tells us, it says in verse 12, But when Christ had offered for
all time a single sacrifice for sins, by the way stop right there,
that kills any idea of the mass in the Roman Catholic communion.
That just slaps it right in the face because the idea of the
mass in Roman Catholicism is a continual act of sacrifice
that happens every time they come around the table. The bread
and cup become the body and blood of Christ and thus it is an unbloody
sacrifice. This verse on its By itself destroys the idea of
a mass because it tells us this had offered for all time a single
sacrifice for sins and it needs not be represented. But it goes
on. He sat down at the right hand
of God, waiting from that time until his enemies should be made
a footstool for his feet. And then in verse 14, a very
beautiful passage, good one to memorize for by a single offering,
he has perfected for all time Those who are being sanctified. Beloved, who are being sanctified?
Believers. Who are being sanctified? The
elect of God. Who are being sanctified? Those
who have called upon Christ in faith. They are the ones who
were perfected by that one sacrifice. I want to end in or not quite
ready to end. I want to take you to John 10.
I'm close to the end. We get too excited. Go to John
chapter 10, I want to show you one of my favorite sections of
Scripture. From the words of Jesus. In regard, does people make a
big deal about limited atonement as if it's a bad thing? I tell
you this. I think it's one of the most
beautiful doctrines in the world, and I would love to talk to anyone
about it. And sure, there are people, well,
what about this passage and what about that passage? I think that by
by itself, if you simply take the words limited and atonement
and you just take that and you don't seek to understand what
it means, it's easy to sort of rail against it. But what it
means is a perfect atonement. It was made for. Christ's sheep,
and this is what Jesus said in John, chapter 10, verse 14, go
with me there to verse 14, and he says, I am the good shepherd. I know my own, and my own know
me, just as the Father knows me, and I know the Father, and
I lay down my life for the sheep." Who does Jesus die for? Who does
Jesus atone for? He atones for his sheep. And
he goes on to say in verse 25, I'll ask you to jump down a few
verses He's talking to the to those who don't believe he's
Jesus answer them. I told you and you do not believe
the works that I do in my father's name. Bear witness about me.
But you do not believe because you are not part of my flock. I like it the way the King James
says that you don't believe because you're not my sheep. My sheep
hear my voice. I lay down my life for my sheep. Why don't you believe? Because
you're not my sheep. He didn't say you're not my sheep
because you don't believe. He said you don't believe because
you're not my sheep. Now, where I'm going to end Romans,
chapter eight, Romans, chapter eight. Because somebody might ask. Well,
Pastor, you said Jesus died for the elect. How can I know that
I am the elect? How can I know the atonement
was made for me? How can I know that it's me? The answer is simple. It really
is. If you believe on the Lord Jesus
Christ. If you receive him by faith and
repentance, the atonement was made for you. Because if you believe, it is
because God has given you new life to be able to believe. If you believe, it is because
God has opened your heart to believe. God knew you before
you were born. He chose you and He determined
your destiny before you were ever thought of. that you would come to faith
in Christ and would live forever with him. And I want to end in
Romans eight and verse twenty eight to thirty. It says. And we know that for those who
love God, all things work together for good. That's a passage a
lot of people love to quote, but they love to stop right there.
They don't go any further. But we must go further to understand
because he says, for those who are called according to his purpose,
who is who is it that God works all things for good for those
who are called according to his purpose. Verse twenty nine, for
those whom he foreknew, he also predestined to be conformed to
the image of his son in order that he might be the first born
among many brothers and those whom he predestined, he also
called. And those whom he called, he
also justified and those whom he justified, he also glorified. Beloved. Theology. Good, solid theology. Is what drives us in every area
of life. It forms our worldview. It forms
our understanding of right and wrong. It forms our understanding
of who God is and who we are. It should drive our doxology,
which is our worship. It should drive our anthropology,
our understanding of who man is. And finally, it should drive
our ecclesiology. Ecclesiology is our understanding
of the church. One thing we know about the church is that we are not in this alone. The church is a worldwide organization,
God's elect are in every nation, and we should always be seeking
in every way that we can to expand our outreach to those nations
so that we can preach the gospel and God can use that gospel to
open hearts and save souls. One of the ways that we can do
this, I believe, is by entering into a fellowship with other
churches which believe and teach as we do. That is the purpose
of fire. It's about exercising an opportunity
to join together with like minded churches. Being a part of a growing
body of reformed evangelicals, all who are committed to the
principles that you've heard today. So I encourage you in
the moments to come as we come together for our congregational
meeting led by The Chairman of the Elders, Mr. Bunning, I encourage
you to prayerfully consider the need for this move, because we
always need to be reforming. Semper Reformanda. Let's pray. Our Father, I thank you for this
opportunity that we have had to hear your word. And I pray,
O God, That you would use it first and foremost. To convert
sinners. For Lord, if there are those
among us who've never heard the gospel, let it be today that they have
heard that if they believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, they will
be saved. And Lord, let them also know that if they are saved,
it is because you have been so gracious as to open their hearts
to believe. Pray also for every believer that is with me today
so that we might all be better understanding of your word. And I pray, Lord, for our congregation. I pray that as we seek to enter
into a new fellowship with other churches like ours, that you
would bless this endeavor and that we would see our church
not just grow numerically, as if we were so concerned pridefully
that we have more numbers than another, but that we would grow
spiritually. That we would see believers ministering
to believers. edifying one another and speaking
to each other in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs and using
the word of God to minister to one another. And also, oh, God,
that we would see. Sinners. Be saved by your grace,
as we all who are saved know that we are as well. We thank
you and we praise you in Jesus name and for his sake, Amen.
What is a Reformed Evangelical?
An evangelical is a person who believes and promotes the Gospel. But what is a Reformed Evangelical? Pastor Foskey explains...
| Sermon ID | 6221413331510 |
| Duration | 50:52 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | John 10:14-30; Romans 8:28-39 |
| Language | English |
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