In Gary Shepard's sermon titled "Noah's Gospel For A Day Like Noah's," he addresses the doctrines of God's judgment and mercy, drawing a parallel between the days of Noah and the present age. He emphasizes that, as Peter notes in 2 Peter 2:5, God did not spare the ancient world, but saved Noah, highlighting that true righteousness is found in God's grace, not in human merit. The sermon further references Matthew 24:37-39, illustrating how the people of Noah's time were unaware of impending judgment until it was too late, mirroring contemporary indifference to divine warnings. Shepard underscores the significance of Noah as a "preacher of righteousness," who, despite his shortcomings, preached the importance of faith in God’s provision of salvation as represented by the ark—symbolizing Christ. The message serves as a call to acknowledge the urgency of repentance and to seek refuge in Christ, the only true source of salvation in an age that reflects the moral decay of Noah's time.
“Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord... It means that God looked upon him, and as the sovereign God he is, he purposed and determined to be gracious to Noah.”
“Noah was a preacher, and for something like a hundred years as the ark was a building, this man Noah was also a preacher proclaiming a message to his generation.”
“The only thing that's going to count is what God thinks. And when you look down in chapter 7, you have this testimonial of God Almighty Himself.”
“What did Noah preach? He preached that the ark was the one way of salvation from the coming judgment.”
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