The sermon titled "Christ Must Be Lifted Up," delivered by Tanner Van Beek, centers on the doctrine of redemption through Christ's crucifixion, as illustrated by the bronze serpent in Numbers 21. Van Beek argues that just as the Israelites were saved from physical death by looking at the bronze serpent, so too does looking to Christ, who was lifted up on the cross, provide eternal life for believers. Key biblical references include Numbers 21:4-9, where the Israelites are healed by faith in the bronze serpent, and John 3:14-15, where Jesus compares Himself to this serpent, emphasizing the necessity of being born again to inherit eternal life. The sermon underscores the vital Reformed belief in total depravity and the need for Christ's substitutionary atonement, highlighting the grace of God in offering salvation to all who believe, thus inviting practical application in the lives of Christians to proclaim the gospel faithfully and trust in the Holy Spirit's work to save.
“I'm so free in Christ. He's set me free. And whatever shameful thing that I'm dwelling on that I've done in the past... it's no longer my weight to bear. It's his to bear.”
“Jesus needs to be lifted up on the cross to save us from our sin. He has to be lifted up.”
“It is said that anyone who comes to me, anyone who is weary and heavy-laden... will find rest. This is a free offer of salvation that Christ gives, whoever.”
“Justice could be rightly done, that my sin could be punished, but I'm not the one that pays for it... but Jesus is the one that pays for it.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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