In his sermon titled "Great Advantage Squandered," Walter Pendleton addresses the theological topic of the privileges and responsibilities associated with being part of God's covenant community, as outlined in Romans 9. Pendleton argues that while the Israelites were given significant advantages such as adoption, the glory of God, the covenants, and the oracles of God, many squandered these blessings due to neglect, distortion, pride, and presumption. He highlights key Scripture passages, particularly from Romans 9 and 3, to illustrate that not all Israelites are true Israel, as true inclusion in God's covenant pertains to faith in Christ. The practical significance lies in the warning against complacency in spiritual privileges, emphasizing that true belonging to God is defined not by ethnicity or tradition but by faith in Jesus Christ, underscoring a pivotal Reformed doctrine of election and the necessity of grace.
“They are not all Israel, which are of Israel.”
“Yet Israel squandered these great advantages... by neglect, distortion, pride, presumption...”
“Not a promise has fallen to the ground. Not a promise has fallen to the ground.”
“Even men's utter failure, God Almighty designed for his elect's good.”
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!