The sermon "The God of David" by Gary Shepard concentrates on the theme of God's grace as illustrated through the life of David, particularly in Romans 4:6-8. Shepard emphasizes that true blessedness comes from God's act of imputation, where righteousness is credited to believers without works—a key Reformed doctrine. He argues that both David's blessings and his forgiveness of grievous sins are manifestations of God's unmerited grace, as seen in Romans, where Paul highlights that God does not impute sin to His people. The sermon asserts the significance of grace by portraying it as essential for salvation and highlighting humanity's natural inclination to oppose the concept of grace, which contradicts self-righteousness. Shepard's central message reinforces that salvation is entirely a gift from God, upholding that it is through grace alone that individuals, like David, can be counted righteous despite their sins.
“Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity, and in whose spirit there is no guile.”
“God did not forgive David because he repented, though he did. But David repented because God forgave him in the only way a sinner can be forgiven, and that is by grace in Christ crucified.”
“You see, God did not impute David's sin to him. He did not deny his sin. He did not sugarcoat his sin. He did not condone his sin.”
“Every sinner that He brings to believe on Christ. That's David's God. Thank God He's my God. Amen.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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