In the sermon "Loving Christ and His Sheep," Bill Parker addresses the pivotal theme of love in the relationship between Christ and His followers, illustrated through John 21:15-17. He emphasizes Jesus' restoration of Peter, highlighting the significance of agape love—a divine, self-sacrificing love—as contrasted with Peter's phileo love, a more human, brotherly affection. Parker points out that true love for Christ manifests in caring for others, supported by Jesus’ commands to "feed My lambs" and "feed My sheep." The sermon underscores the practical implications of this love, particularly within the Reformed understanding of salvation by grace, where genuine love for Christ results in love for His people and His truth, as meditated through Scripture.
“If you love Christ, you love the truth of Jesus. You cannot say you love Jesus and hate or deny His truth, and especially the truth of the gospel, the truth of God's grace, sovereign grace.”
“The only way that you and I or any sinner can have this kind of love shed abroad in our hearts, that's our minds, our affections, our wills, our conscience, is by the Holy Spirit bringing us under the preaching of the gospel.”
“He said, 'Peter, if you love me, then you love my sheep. Feed my sheep.'”
“Salvation...is something that I did not earn and do not deserve. Salvation was not and is not conditioned on me. That's what grace is.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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