The theological topic addressed in Marvin Stalnaker's sermon "Remember Lot's Wife" centers around the themes of disobedience, worldliness, and the call to faithfulness to God. Stalnaker argues that Lot's wife serves as a cautionary example of the dangers of longing for worldly pleasures and failing to heed God's commands, referring to her act of looking back at Sodom as indicative of a heart still tied to sin. He supports his argument through Scripture, primarily Genesis 19:26 and Luke 17:32, highlighting how Lot's wife's gaze back towards Sodom reveals her lack of faith and compliance with God's directive to flee. The practical significance of the sermon emphasizes the necessity for believers to hold loosely to the things of this world, redirecting their focus towards Christ, who is the source of salvation and hope, rather than the perishing values of worldly life.
“The lesson taught by the Lord unto his disciples was this. May we all be found holding loosely to the things of this world that are perishing.”
“What she did was she had no heart for Christ. She wasn't looking to Christ. She was looking back to this world and the love of it, the hunger of it.”
“Looking to anything except Christ is looking back to Sodom and God's going to destroy it.”
“There's one hope. Looking unto Him. Looking unto Christ. Looking away from me.”
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