In Walter Pendleton's sermon on Romans 7, he discusses the relationship between the Law and those who have experienced Gospel conversion. The main theological topic is the Confession of the Apostle Paul regarding his carnal nature juxtaposed against the spiritual nature of the Law. Pendleton argues that while the Law itself is good and spiritual, the on-going presence of sin in the believer's life manifests in a struggle against this Law, illustrating the doctrine of total depravity and the inability of humanity to fulfill God’s commandments apart from grace. He references Romans 7:14-25, highlighting Paul's internal conflict between the desire to follow God's Law and the reality of sin present within him. The practical significance of this sermon lies in its reformed distinction that true believers recognize their inability to uphold the Law and thus find hope and strength through Christ alone, emphasizing that Gospel conversion does not eliminate sin but changes one's relationship to it.
“The law is not the problem... the law is spiritual.”
“Oh, wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver me from the body of this death? I thank God, through Jesus Christ our Lord.”
“You cannot hate God's law and love God. But you cannot keep God's law.”
“The gospel converted do not hate God's law. They hate their evil flesh.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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