In the sermon "Man's Lie and God's Truth," Aaron Greenleaf explores the theological distinctions between human fallibility and divine truth, represented through the biblical narrative of Abner and David in 2 Samuel. The sermon emphasizes the notion that individuals, like Abner, often install their own "puppet kings"—false systems of belief or self-righteousness to avoid the submission required by God. Key points are backed by Scripture, particularly focusing on passages that illustrate the rebellion of the natural man against God’s hierarchy (Romans 1:20) and the failure of works-based salvation (Galatians 2:16). The sermon underscores that true salvation cannot stem from human effort or manipulation but only from Christ’s single-minded pursuit of His people, highlighting the essential Reformed doctrine of salvation by grace alone through faith in Christ alone, where all sin is dealt with through His sacrifice. The implications are profound, affirming that one must surrender to God’s truth to receive salvation rather than relying on personal merit or religious performance.
“Man is the lie, but he also has a lie. And God's truth... is pleased to reveal it in this story.”
“He who can make a king is in fact the king.”
“In man's religion... salvation by works never saved one man.”
“The only way I’ll be saved is if Jesus Christ bore my sins in his body and put them away.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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