The sermon titled "The Law Written in Stone" by Jim Byrd primarily addresses the relationship between God's law and His grace, highlighting the theological necessity of upholding God's justice while being gracious and merciful. Byrd emphasizes that before God can reveal His grace to sinners, His law must first be honored—reflecting the Reformed doctrine of the necessity of justice in salvation. Scripture references from Exodus 34:1-4 illustrate God's command to Moses to prepare new tablets, symbolizing the unbreakable nature of His law that must be upheld. Byrd articulates that none can be justified by their own works of the law, as no one can achieve the perfection demanded by God, reinforcing the doctrine of total depravity and the need for Christ as the sole means of righteousness and reconciliation with God. The sermon underscores the significance of recognizing humanity's helplessness and the need to depend on Christ's perfect obedience and sacrificial death to satisfy divine justice, a core tenet of Reformed soteriology.
“Before grace and mercy can ever be shown to guilty people like you and me, God's holy law has got to be honored and it's got to be upheld.”
“The bridge is out. Nobody can bridge the distance between a sinful wretch and a holy God, nobody can bridge that chasm by anything that they can say, think, or do.”
“God's law demands satisfaction. Satisfaction. And so we read, the soul that sins shall die.”
“It's not what you've got to do for God, it's what God's got to do for you.”
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!