The sermon by John Reeves titled "The Righteousness of God" focuses on the Reformed doctrine of justification by faith and the believer's dependence on Christ's righteousness rather than their own. Key arguments include Paul's assertion that all human achievements and rites are worthless compared to the surpassing worth of knowing Christ (Philippians 3:8-9). Reeves uses Scripture references, particularly from Philippians 3 and Matthew 5, to illustrate the Beatitudes, emphasizing that true righteousness is not of human effort but is provided through faith in Christ. The practical significance lies in encouraging believers to find their identity and assurance solely in Christ's work, combating self-righteousness and pride—a recurring theme in Reformed theology concerning total depravity and reliance on God's grace.
“Our pride and our self-worth is our thorn in the side. ... But pride, I believe, is the biggest one and the hardest thing to deal with in all of us.”
“We don't stand in the righteousness of our flesh, we stand in the righteousness which is of God. ... or we have no righteousness at all.”
“If God before us, who or what could be against us?”
“I've warned you. Don't look to you. Look to Christ.”
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!