In Rick Warta's sermon titled "God's Sermon to the Unclean," the main theological topic addressed is the concept of spiritual uncleanness and its resolution through faith in Christ. Warta emphasizes the plight of the woman with a flow of blood for twelve years, highlighting her desperation and the futility of her attempts to heal herself through physicians, which mirrors humanity's inability to rectify its own sinfulness (Luke 8:42-48; Mark 5:27). He draws on Levitical law (Leviticus 15:25-27) to show how the woman's condition symbolizes the broader human condition of sin and guilt before a holy God, underscoring that true cleanness comes through Christ's atoning work. The sermon illustrates the significance of Christ’s sacrificial death and his role as the High Priest who offers the ultimate sin offering on behalf of humanity, which gives hope to the spiritually unclean. The practical significance of Warta's message is that, regardless of an individual's state of uncleanness, faith in Christ can lead to redemption and peace.
“God has given us this account in scripture of this woman. And so we know that scripture shows how this unclean woman under God's law can be made clean.”
“What a mercy that is. Like her, we try to make ourselves clean. And what happens? We try everything.”
“When she touched his garments, it's showing that Christ, the son of God, who was son of man, who gave himself for our sins to God... to make us holy.”
“Now there is no condemnation for us in Christ Jesus.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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