Kevin Thacker's sermon titled "As Moses Lifted Up the Serpent" emphasizes the necessity of looking to Christ for salvation, drawing parallels between the brazen serpent in the wilderness (Numbers 21) and Jesus' crucifixion (John 3:14-15). Thacker articulates that just as the Israelites were commanded to look at the serpent to be saved from physical death, so too must individuals place their faith in the exalted Christ to receive eternal life. He notes that Nicodemus, a knowledgeable Pharisee, struggles with this spiritual truth, illustrating the distinction between being born of the flesh and being born of the Spirit. The sermon underscores God's justice and mercy, stating that Christ’s crucifixion was essential for satisfying divine justice while simultaneously offering salvation to sinners. Thus, the doctrinal significance rests on the recognition that faith in Christ is central to salvation, highlighting radical grace through God's sovereign choice.
“The only way that sinners can be saved from perishing, eternal death, and have eternal life is through faith in Christ, looking to Him, looking to Him exalted, seeing Him high and lifted up.”
“If holy God is going to save guilty sinners, He must do it in a way that's just and right.”
“Look and live. That's all we do.”
“They were not told to produce their own cure to heal their own wounds. You bandage them up real good... No, look to Him. Look and live, that's all He told them.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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