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James Smith

The day of judgment is coming, burning like a furnace!

Malachi 4:1; Revelation 22
James Smith • January, 16 2015 • Audio
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James Smith
James Smith • January, 16 2015
Choice Puritan Devotional

The sermon titled "The Day of Judgment is Coming, Burning Like a Furnace" by James Smith addresses the doctrine of divine judgment, focusing on the eschatological reality of Hell as depicted in Scripture, specifically Malachi 4:1 and Revelation 22. Smith argues that the day of judgment will bring an inescapable and eternal punishment characterized by the imagery of unquenchable fire, emphasizing its intensity and permanence. He asserts that this judgment is just, as every individual will face consequences that align with their deeds, with no one being able to challenge God's righteousness. The sermon underscores the fate of the proud and wicked, who will face total consumption and despair due to their rejection of God's grace and law, serving as a stark warning for humility and repentance in the face of divine authority.

Key Quotes

“Behold, the day of judgment is coming, burning like a furnace. The element of punishment is fire, the fiercest, most powerful, most penetrating, and most destructive of the elements.”

“Pride is the root, and wickedness is the fruit. The proud are always wicked, and therefore the proud, even all who do wickedness, are doomed to suffer the vengeance of eternal fire.”

“It shall leave them no root, no hope remaining. While there is a root, there is hope, but when the root is gone, there is no hope.”

“How fearsome is divine majesty stripped of mercy! How dreadful is omnipotence when there is no pity!”

What does the Bible say about the day of judgment?

The Bible describes the day of judgment as a time when the proud and the wicked will face eternal punishment like stubble in a furnace.

The day of judgment is vividly described in Malachi 4:1, where it is said to come 'burning like a furnace.' On that day, those who are proud and wicked will be consumed entirely, leaving no trace of their existence. The imagery reveals a fierce and devouring fire, emphasizing the absolute nature of divine judgment that awaits unrepentant sinners. This is not a temporary punishment but an everlasting one, where the fire is unquenchable and its effects eternal, further articulated in Revelation 22, which gives an account of the final judgment.

Malachi 4:1, Revelation 22

How do we know eternal punishment is justified?

Eternal punishment is justified because God ensures that every sufferer receives a consequence that perfectly matches their deeds.

Eternal punishment, while fearsome, is recognized as just within the context of God's perfect justice. As outlined in the sermon, each individual's conscience will confirm that their punishment is a direct result of their actions. No one will be able to claim that God is unjust; instead, every soul will have an acute awareness that they are receiving what they truly deserve. This uncompromising justice serves to highlight God's holiness and the severity of sin, ensuring that the punishment is both appropriate and deserved, upholding God's righteousness. His majesty and wrath are fully manifested in judgment, emphasizing that divine justice does not overlook sin but rightfully confronts it.

Malachi 4:1, Revelation 22

Why is the concept of pride important for Christians?

Pride is crucial for Christians because it leads to resistance against God and ultimately results in damnation if unrepented.

In the context of Christian faith, pride is a significant barrier to salvation. The sermon emphasizes that the proud cannot be saved, as their arrogance blinds them to their need for God's grace. Pride, according to Scripture, exalts man while insulting God, leading individuals to resist the truth of the Gospel. Those who remain proud are marked for destruction, as they reject the righteousness of God and refuse to humble themselves before Him. The call to humility is foundational for genuine faith, as James 4:6 articulates, 'God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble.' Thus, understanding and combating pride is essential for believers to live in a manner pleasing to God and to avoid the consequences described in Scripture.

James 4:6, Malachi 4:1

Sermon Transcript

Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors

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. The day of judgment is coming, burning like a furnace. James Smith, Gleams of Grace, 1860.

The Lord Almighty says, Behold, the day of judgment is coming, burning like a furnace. On that day, the proud and the wicked will be burnt up like stubble. They will be consumed, roots, branches, and all. Malachi 4.1.

1. The terrible fact.

Behold, the day of judgment is coming, burning like a furnace. The element of punishment is fire, the fiercest, most powerful, most penetrating, and most destructive of the elements. Fire, and plenty of it, for it is a lake of fire, fire glowing with fearness, fire strengthened, contracted, and fed, for it shall burn as a furnace. This will be more dreadful than Nebuchadnezzar's burning fiery furnace, more than the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. It will be so terrible that no words can set it forth, no imagery can represent it, no mind can conceive it.

The punishment will be irresistible. It is devouring fire. There will be no standing against it. As when the prairie is on fire and floods of flame come sweeping along, there is no resisting, no escaping it. In the same way, none can resist or escape from the devouring fire with which the day of judgment shall be ushered in.

The punishment will be eternal. It is everlasting burnings. It is unquenchable fire. It will feed on sinners, but never consume them. It will punish, but never annihilate them. It will begin, but never end. It is forever, forever, forever, everlasting punishment, eternal fire.

Yet the punishment is just. No one will suffer more than he deserves. Every sufferer's conscience will be satisfied that his punishment is his just due. No one will be able to charge God with cruelty or injustice, for God will have a witness in every man's bosom that he is doing right. Every sufferer will be silenced with a conviction that he is only receiving the just reward of his deeds.

2. The Characters Doomed

On that day, the proud and the wicked will be burnt up like stubble. The proud, proud professors and proud worldlings, all who unduly value themselves and despise others, all who are too proud to submit to the righteousness of God or to bow to be saved in the same way, by the same grace as the thief on the cross or the immoral woman, all who in the pride of their hearts reject the gospel, put away the invitations of the Savior, and refuse to be reconciled to God. all who despise the poor saints on account of their poverty, or any of the Lord's little ones on account of their infirmities.

The proud always exalt man, insult God, yield to Satan, and grieve the Holy Spirit. God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble. A proud sinner cannot be saved. Pride is the root, and wickedness is the fruit. The proud are always wicked, and therefore the proud, even all who do wickedness, are doomed to suffer the vengeance of eternal fire.

the wicked, that is, all who will not observe God's law, to walk by it, all who will not embrace Christ's gospel, to be saved by it, all who will not fly to the refuge, provided for the guilty.

3. The doom.

They will be burnt up like stubble. They shall be a stubble dried by the eastern sun, on which the flame seizes, feeds and strengthens. They shall be fuel for everlasting burnings. They shall be utterly consumed with terrors. Their destruction shall be complete. They will be consumed, roots, branches, and all. It shall leave them no root, no hope remaining. While there is a root, there is hope, but when the root is gone, there is no hope.

it shall leave them no branch, there shall be no beauty left, all will be gloom, misery, and woe. This is certain, for God Himself speaks. He speaks as the God of war. Behold, the Lord Almighty says, Here is majesty, but not mercy. power but not pity, judgment but not compassion. How fearsome is divine majesty stripped of mercy! How dreadful is omnipotence when there is no pity! How direful is judgment when there is no compassion!
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