In Paul Mahan's sermon titled "The Gospel of Zephaniah," the central theological topic revolves around God’s sovereignty, judgment, and grace as revealed in the Old Testament prophet Zephaniah. Mahan emphasizes that both the Old and New Testaments convey a unified message about the holiness of God, human sinfulness, divine judgment, and the necessity of salvation through Christ. Key arguments include the notion that God's wrath against sin is consistent and severe, as articulated in Zephaniah 1:2-18, and that true salvation is an act of God's sovereign grace rather than human merit. Specific Scriptural references, like Romans 9 and Matthew 10, support the notion of God’s unchanging character and intention to save a remnant of His people. The practical significance of Mahan’s message lies in the call for believers to understand their sinful state and God's grace, motivating them to seek the Lord earnestly as they await His redemption.
“The Old Testament and the New are one message... the message is of the holy, righteous, just God, our creator, our owner, our sovereign, our judge.”
“If we don't have a substitute, the wrath of God abides on us. Not the love of God.”
“Salvation is up to the Lord... if God hadn’t chosen somebody, he’d have killed them all.”
“He will save. Whoever he purposed to save, he will save. Salvation is up to the Lord.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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