The sermon titled "Prophet, Priest, and King" by Greg Elmquist focuses on the offices of Christ as they relate to salvation, highlighting the necessity of having Christ fulfill the roles of prophet, priest, and king for eternal life. Elmquist argues that Christ, as the Word made flesh, reveals God's salvation and intercedes for believers as the ultimate high priest. He uses Judges 12:8-15 to illustrate this, where the judges themselves typify Christ: Ibsen as the prophet signifying holiness, Elon as the priest representing strength and intercession, and Abdon as the king embodying servanthood and governance. The practical significance is profound—believers must rely on Christ's complete mediation to be saved from sin, death, and judgment, affirming the Reformed doctrines of total depravity, unconditional election, and Christ's atoning work.
“If we are to be saved eternally, we’re going to have to have a prophet. We’re going to have to have the Lord Jesus Christ to be for us the Word, the Word that was made flesh and dwelt among us.”
“The Lord is our judge. The Lord is our lawgiver. The Lord is our king. He will save us.”
“We need to be safe from ourselves, don’t we? We need to be safe from our own opinions, from our own devices, from our own thoughts, and the Lord Jesus Christ has done that. He will save us.”
“We need one who is mighty enough to keep us from falling, keep us faithful.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
Comments
Your comment has been submitted and is awaiting moderation. Once approved, it will appear on this page.
Be the first to comment!