In the sermon "Brands Plucked From The Fire," Gary Shepard expounds on Zechariah 3:1-5, focusing on the themes of divine grace, justification, and the active role of Christ as the mediator for sinful humanity. He discusses the figures present in the text—specifically Joshua, the high priest representing all sinners; Satan, the accuser; and the angel of the Lord, a representation of Christ. The sermon illustrates that like Joshua, all believers stand guilty before God, clothed in "filthy garments" of sin, but through Christ’s intercession, they are justified and clothed in His righteousness. The sermon's practical significance lies in emphasizing the assurance of salvation and the necessity of relying on Christ alone for redemption, urging believers to remember the grace in their calling as "brands plucked from the fire."
“Every sinner that God saves, every one of His people is very clearly represented in this picture.”
“If God leaves us to ourselves, if He leaves us to our own devices... we won't make it till three o'clock.”
“The only way that any person ever knows truly and believes that they are a sinner is when God enables them to believe what He says about them.”
“It is to strip us of that false hope so that we might look outside and away from ourselves to the one who is the true hope.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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