In Gary Shepard's sermon titled "What God Hath Wrought," he addresses the profound theological doctrine of substitutionary atonement, grounded in Isaiah 53:6. Shepard articulates that God Himself has accomplished salvation through the person of Jesus Christ, highlighting that human effort is insufficient for redemption. He cites various Scriptures, including Isaiah 53:6 and references from the New Testament, to emphasize that the Lord laid upon Christ the iniquities of His people, asserting that this act is both divinely orchestrated and unilateral, with no cooperative effort from humanity. The sermon underscores the Reformed doctrines of total depravity, unconditional election, and the sovereignty of God in salvation, affirming that faith is a response to divine grace rather than a condition for salvation. The practical significance lies in the assurance it provides believers that their sins are imputed to Christ, ensuring their justification and peace with God.
“The preaching of the gospel is simply a declaring, or as it is called, the testimony of what God has done, what God has wrought.”
“The gospel is not a message telling men what to do, and neither is it a message telling them how they are to live in order to be saved.”
“If God laid on Christ my sins, they're not on me. God being just, He would never punish my sins in Christ and then at some point in the future punish them in me.”
“Trust Him and there's peace. You'll never have hope in anything you’ve done, or anything you’ve felt, or anything you know, but in what He’s done.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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