In Henry Sant's sermon titled "The Living Man's Confidence in God," the main theological topic is the relationship between spiritual life and one's consciousness of sin, as illustrated in Lamentations 3:39-41. Sant argues that a spiritually alive individual, referred to as the “Living Man,” experiences complaints not merely due to external circumstances but because of an acute awareness of sinfulness and the resultant chastening from God. He draws on various Scripture passages, including Romans 7 and Psalms, emphasizing that true believers recognize their affliction as a byproduct of divine discipline, which ultimately seeks their good. The sermon stresses the significance of self-examination, earnest prayer, and sincere devotion as crucial responses to God's chastenings, anchoring these ideas in the unchanging nature and compassion of God as revealed through Christ. The practical application is a call for believers to seek God in their struggles, expressing confidence in His mercy and consistency.
“It's because there is spiritual life in the man's soul. That's the principal reason.”
“Let us search and try our ways and turn again to the Lord; let us lift up our heart with our hands unto God in the heavens.”
“Here is a man who is surely alive in his soul, he's exercised in his soul.”
“He is a compassionate God. What a comfort that is.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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