The sermon titled "North, South, East, and West" by Norm Wells explores the doctrine of divine order as demonstrated through the positioning of the Israelites' camp in Numbers 2. Wells argues that God’s precise directives in organizing the tribes illustrate His desire for orderliness and clarity—not only in the physical formation of the camp but also in the spiritual order of worship centered on Christ. Specific Scriptures referenced include Numbers 2:3-25, which details the placement of each tribe, and Hebrews 9:23-28, which highlights Christ as our ultimate High Priest who fulfills the Old Testament sacrificial system. The significance lies in emphasizing that Christ is central to worship and the scheme of redemption, enabling believers from all corners of the globe to gather in faith, furthering the Reformed understanding of the importance of Christ's atoning work and the accessibility of the Gospel.
“God is not the God of confusion. He is not the God that illustrates confusion in anything, and particularly in the gospel.”
“The camp was Christ-centric. If it was a wheel, he is the hub in the middle in this camp.”
“He is not the acting a part. He is Him in the atonement. He is the hymn of the word. He is the hymn of time. He is the hymn of the sinner.”
“As far as the east is from the west, so far have he removed our transgressions from us.”
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