In Wayne Boyd's sermon "Hewed and Broken Cisterns," the main theological topic revolves around the contrast between reliance on human works and the sufficiency of Christ as the "fountain of living waters," as expressed in Jeremiah 2:13. Boyd argues that humanity tends to forsake God, trying to achieve righteousness through self-made cisterns that ultimately fail to provide spiritual nourishment. He emphasizes that these efforts are comparable to creating "broken cisterns" that cannot hold water, referencing Scriptures such as Jeremiah 2:13 and John 4:13-14 to illustrate the futility of works-based salvation versus the life-giving power found solely in Christ. The doctrinal significance points to the Reformed understanding of total depravity and grace, affirming that true salvation is a divine act of mercy, accessible only through faith in Christ's atoning work, not through human merit.
“For my people have committed two evils. They have forsaken me, the fountain of living waters, and hewed them out cisterns, broken cisterns that can hold no water.”
“Those works are like broken cisterns. They won't hold water. You fill them up by their works, and they're dry. The water's gone.”
“Salvation is in Christ alone. He is the fountain of living waters.”
“If you're trusting in your own works, if you're trusting in another god, if you're trusting in another religion, you're trusting in a broken cistern.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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