The main theological topic addressed in Wayne Boyd's sermon, "Wrought Out," is the sovereignty of God in salvation and the transformative work He performs in the lives of believers, as articulated in Galatians 2:8. Boyd emphasizes that salvation is entirely the work of Christ—wrought out through His perfect righteousness and sacrificial death—highlighting that no human effort can add to or detract from this divine work. He references Scripture extensively, particularly focusing on Paul's argument in Galatians against the Judaizers who sought to impose the requirements of the law (e.g., circumcision) for salvation, reinforcing the doctrine of justification by faith alone. Boyd illustrates the practical significance of this doctrine by encouraging believers to rely on God's grace for spiritual growth, emphasizing that true transformation is His work within us, paralleling the notion of sanctification in the Reformed tradition. This focus underscores the Reformed belief in the absolute necessity of grace for both salvation and the ongoing process of becoming more like Christ.
“Christ wrought out a perfect righteousness for us in his life, and he wrought out a perfect salvation for us in his death.”
“God's preachers, we got a commission. We're just going to keep preaching the gospel. Oh, until the day the Lord takes our breath away.”
“See how weak we are, beloved? See how weak we are? Oh, my. But God is great, and he's so forgiving, and he's so merciful, and he's so faithful to us.”
“The gospel's a person? It's Christ. The gospel's about a person. It's about Christ. It's about what He's done.”
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