In the sermon titled "Man's Rights or God's Rights," Gary Shepard addresses the sovereignty of God in salvation and the futility of human free will. He argues that the belief in free will undermines the authority of God, highlighting how Pilate's misplaced notion of power exemplifies humanity's spiritual blindness. Shepard employs Scripture references, particularly from John 19:10-11, to illustrate that any power men think they possess is granted by God alone, asserting that true spiritual life and salvation depend entirely on God's grace rather than human effort or choice. The doctrinal significance lies in affirming that salvation is rooted in God's mercy and sovereignty, effectively removing human autonomy from the equation and emphasizing the glory of God's actions in the salvation narrative.
“You see, the truth is that salvation, spiritual life, is not a matter of right at all. It's a matter of grace. It's a matter of God's grace.”
“If you stop and think about it, if we're talking about free will, cannot we just even logically think and understand that there can only be one free will in the universe?”
“The only power The only right, if you want to call it that, that any sinner has, has to be given to him.”
“It is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that shows mercy.”
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