In the sermon "Impossibility of Preaching," Jack Shanks addresses the theme of man's spiritual deadness and the divine necessity of God’s grace for regeneration, aligning with Reformed doctrines of total depravity and irresistible grace. Shanks emphasizes that apart from God's intervention, preaching to spiritually dead individuals is utterly impossible, as illustrated by Ezekiel's vision of the dry bones in Ezekiel 37:1-10. He highlights that while humanity is incapable of seeking God, evidenced by Romans 5:12 and Ephesians 2:1, divine power through preaching and the Holy Spirit is essential for bringing new life to the spiritually dead. The sermon underscores the necessity of recognizing human inability and the sovereign work of God in salvation, promoting a reliance on God's authority and grace in preaching, which signifies the heart of the Gospel.
“God takes real crooked sticks and strikes a straight blow with a crooked stick and takes little old boys and allows them to live in this world and sin and get into all kinds of foolishness.”
“We are dead in sin, graveyard dead. And if God ever shows you your condition, wouldn't that be wonderful?”
“Thou knowest, Lord, and I say to the Lord this morning, these people out here, Lord, that I'm speaking to right now, there's not one thing I can do except tell them the truth.”
“The only one who knows whether they can live is the one who has the power to make them live.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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