In the sermon "The Love and Hatred of God," Chris Cunningham explores the deep theological implications of Romans 9:1, focusing on the themes of divine love, election, and human folly in establishing personal righteousness. He articulates Paul's anguish over the Jewish people's rejection of the gospel, noting that their zeal for God is misguided due to a lack of true knowledge. Cunningham cites scriptures like Romans 10:3-4 and Galatians 3:10-14 to illustrate that the Law was meant to reveal Christ, not to enable self-justification through works. The sermon's significance hinges on the Reformed understanding of salvation by grace through faith alone, emphasizing that true righteousness only comes through Christ and the necessity of being born again by divine mercy rather than human effort.
“The problem is they're lost. They don't know God.”
“The purpose of the law to begin with was not so that we would know what to do, do it, and God would be happy with us. Christ is the goal of the law.”
“You think you have eternal life in your knowledge of the scriptures. And they are they which testify of me. You can't even know what the scriptures say without coming to Christ.”
“It's not a question of how God can love one and hate the other. It's a question of how could God ever love any sinner? That's a vital distinction.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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