In his sermon titled "Why Was He Silent?", Clay Curtis centers on Isaiah 53:7, which portrays the suffering servant of Jesus as a silent lamb before His shearers. The theological focus is on the necessity of Christ's silence during His trials, which underscores His role as the perfect sacrifice and substitute for His people. Curtis argues that Christ's silence illustrates His unwavering commitment to fulfill the covenant between Him and the Father, His willingness to bear the weight of sin, and His manifestation of perfect love. The sermon makes extensive use of Scripture, connecting Isaiah 53 with Genesis 22, Psalm 69, and Romans 10, demonstrating that Christ's silence was not an absence of action but a profound expression of grace and a fulfillment of divine promises. The practical significance lies in acknowledging that believers, through faith, can find salvation and righteousness in Christ alone, emphasizing the core Reformed doctrine of salvation by grace through faith.
“We needed Him to be the holiness, our holiness. We can't remotely imagine that we contribute to our holiness.”
“Everything that He suffered, He's doing it by the will of God. Fulfilling the will of God. He's doing it from a holy heart.”
“He is the only way sinners can be saved. And this is how sinners responded to Him.”
“I need Him to have done all that for me. And that's the only hope I have... of being accepted of God, but Christ my Savior.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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