In Greg Elmquist's sermon titled "Glorifying God, the Real Miracle," the central theological theme revolves around the essence of true worship and the transformative miracle of God's grace. Elmquist emphasizes that the healing of the ten lepers, recounted in Luke 17:11-19, serves as a metaphor for spiritual cleansing, highlighting that the true miracle is not merely physical healing but the capacity to worship God. He supports his argument by illustrating how only one of the ten lepers, upon realizing his healing, returned to glorify Jesus, which symbolizes a heart transformed by grace. Scripture references, such as John 17:4 and Hebrews 11:1, are utilized to show the relationship between glorifying God through worship and the necessity of divine intervention for faith to flourish. The sermon culminates in the significant Reformed doctrinal assertion that worship is a miracle of grace, inherently tied to God's sovereignty, and devoid of any merit from human efforts.
“The real miracle was not the healing of their leprosy. The real miracle was this one man's ability to come into the presence of the Lord Jesus and worship him and glorify him.”
“Never are we more godly than when we are made through a miracle of grace in the heart to glorify God, to worship him.”
“What honors God? Faith honors God. Setting your affections on things above where Christ is seathd at the right hand of God.”
“Worship is what we're going to be doing in heaven for all eternity. Pure, unhindered, unencumbered by sin, perfect worship.”
Worship is to glorify God, an act enabled by the Holy Spirit in the hearts of believers.
John 17:4; Luke 17:11-19
Sovereign grace is evidenced by God’s initiative in salvation, as He chooses whom to save.
Romans 9:15-16, Ephesians 1:4-5
Glorifying God is the ultimate purpose of human existence and reflects the transformed heart of a believer.
Ephesians 1:12; John 4:24
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