The sermon titled "Keeping Christ's Commandments" by Bill Parker addresses the Reformed doctrine of the believer's relationship to the commandments of Christ in light of the covenant of grace. Parker emphasizes that the "if" passages in Scripture are not conditional for salvation, as in the old covenant, but evidential of a true relationship with Christ under the new covenant. He references John 15:10 to illustrate that abiding in Christ's love is intrinsically linked to keeping His commandments, which, in the context of salvation, are rooted in grace and gratitude rather than works-based righteousness. By discussing the transformative power of love in the believer's life, alongside Scripture passages like 1 John 3, Parker highlights the significance of true faith evidenced by love, rather than the legalistic adherence to the law, which ultimately cannot save. The doctrinal takeaway underscores that salvation is accomplished entirely through Christ's work, and genuine obedience flows from recognition of that grace.
“Keeping His commandments...is to believe His truth, is to walk in His truth, is to seek to be like Him, not in order to be saved, but because we already are.”
“You've not chosen me, but I've chosen you... salvation is not based upon our choosing Him, but upon His sovereign choice of us.”
“Our efforts...to love our neighbor and a believer's efforts to love his brother or sister in Christ will not save them, but as motivated by grace, love, and gratitude, they evidence that we've been born again.”
“If the world hates you, know that it hated me before it hated you...the world hates God's people because of their message.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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