In the sermon "Why the Son of Man Came," Cody Henson focuses on the pivotal theological theme of salvation, centering on Luke 19:10, which states that the Son of Man came to seek and save the lost. Henson argues that Christ's mission was not merely to provide a superficial remedy for humanity’s predicament but to actively seek out the lost, emphasizing the personal nature of salvation as seen in the encounter with Zacchaeus. He reinforces this by exploring various Scripture passages such as Psalm 8 and Matthew 16, illustrating Christ's dual nature as both fully God and fully man without compromising His divine sovereignty. The significance lies in the assurance that Christ does not fail in His redemptive purposes — those whom He seeks will be found and saved, illustrating the Reformed doctrine of the perseverance of the saints and Christ's sovereignty in salvation.
“Jesus means Savior. Jesus means Jehovah is salvation. When Jesus came to Zacchaeus, Jehovah came to Zacchaeus. Salvation came to Zacchaeus.”
“The Son of Man has come to seek and to save that which was lost... He came to seek and to save the self-existing three-in-one God who has need of nothing.”
“Our Lord successfully finds those He seeks. He successfully saves those He came and purposed to save.”
“Zacchaeus could sing that because Christ came to him. Christ saved him. Salvation came to him.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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