David Pledger’s sermon titled "The Righteousness That God Requires" focuses on the profound theological theme of God's requirement for perfect righteousness as illuminated in Mark 12:28-34. The preacher outlines three key points: the reality of the man who asked Jesus about the greatest commandment, the strictness of God's holy law, and the necessity of perfect obedience to that law for entry into God's kingdom. He emphasizes that merely being close to the truth, as exemplified by the scribe, does not equate to salvation. Pledger effectively illustrates the absolute standards of God’s law using various Scriptures, referencing Galatians 3:24 on the law as a schoolmaster, Romans 3:19 on the universal guilt of humanity, and Romans 8:1 about the freedom in Christ Jesus. The sermon's practical significance is a call to acknowledge personal guilt and the need for Christ's righteousness, stressing that one must not only recognize their state outside the kingdom of God but also flee sin to find refuge in Christ.
“To be not far is to be outside the kingdom of God. In other words, at this point he did not believe it had not been revealed to him that Jesus, the one he was asking, is the Christ, the very Son of God Almighty.”
“The law of God and it shuts your mouth. You stop excusing yourself and justifying yourself... All the world may become guilty before God.”
“The gate is Christ, and it's a narrow gate. If you bring anything with you, you can't get it through the gate.”
“No one come into this place and we're not making it just as clear as humanly possible how a man might be right with God.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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