In the sermon "Payday That Day," Gary Shepard examines the significance of Christ's forsakenness on the cross as portrayed in Matthew 27:45-50. The primary doctrinal theme is the atonement of Christ, emphasizing that on that specific day, Christ bore the judgment due for His people as their surety, thereby accomplishing their salvation. Shepard argues that the darkness that enveloped the land represented God's judgment, affirming that Jesus, who knew no sin, was made sin for humanity. He references Isaiah 13 and reiterated themes in Proverbs to illustrate the foundational principle of suretyship, demonstrating that Christ was responsible for the debt owed by God's elect. The sermon underscores the Reformed doctrine of substitutionary atonement, highlighting that in Christ's death, the payment for sin was fully satisfied, thus negating any future "payday" for believers. The teaching culminates in the affirmation of Christ as the one who ultimately reconciles believers to God, bringing assurance of salvation.
“The gospel is the good news to God's people that payday was that day. That day in our text. That's when payday was for the Lord's people.”
“He was made sin for us. He's the one that was made a curse. He is here being wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities.”
“If His death is a ransom, then they are released. If His death is a redemption, then they are redeemed.”
“This cross death is God getting his son, dealing with him justly... therefore payday was that day.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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