Gabe Stalnaker's sermon on Mark 14:1-9 examines the commonly misunderstood phrase "she hath done what she could," arguing that the passage teaches not human effort but radical submission to Christ's righteousness. Stalnaker contends that Mary's act of pouring costly perfume on Jesus represents not a commendable "good work" achievable through human striving, but rather an act enabled by God's Spirit in which she abandoned all earthly pursuits to cast herself entirely upon Christ. Drawing extensively from Romans 3:10-12 and Romans 10:3, Stalnaker establishes that fallen humanity cannot perform genuinely good works—"there is none that doeth good, no, not one"—and that all human righteousness appears as "filthy rags" before God's holiness (Isaiah 64:6). The sermon employs Matthew 19:16-22 to show that legal obedience cannot satisfy God's demands, concluding that Mary's "good work" consisted of her Spirit-enabled recognition that Christ alone fulfills the Law's impossible requirements and serves as humanity's sole righteousness. This interpretation directly challenges the Reformed doctrine of sanctification being earned through human effort, instead emphasizing the imputation of Christ's righteousness as the believer's only hope before God's judgment.
“She hath done what she could. She literally cast her all on Christ. That was the good work that God wrought in her enabling her to do. It wasn't the good work of the law. It was the good work that God's Spirit wrought in her, causing her to ignore everything and get rid of everything and cast her all on Jesus Christ.”
“If Christ and man, it's not the gospel. Jesus Christ is the gospel. If it has anything to do with man, it's not the gospel.”
“All of my hope of redemption is in the body that you're about to break to make sweet smelling intercession to God for me... His good work is the only good work I have. I cast my all on Him.”
“Every soul that's caused to see Christ as the end of the law for righteousness will say, He's my all. He's my all, He's my only hope.”
The Bible teaches that no one does good works in God's eyes, as all have sinned and fall short of His glory (Romans 3:10).
Romans 3:10, Isaiah 64:6.
Understanding grace clarifies that salvation is a gift, not earned by works, which emphasizes the sufficiency of Christ's sacrifice.
Titus 3:5.
Mary's action represents total devotion to Christ, illustrating a response of love rather than a mere act of duty or law.
Mark 14:1-9.
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!