In A. W. Pink's sermon "God's Jewels," the main theological topic is the extraordinary value that God places on His people, depicted metaphorically as jewels. Pink argues that God's "jewels" are those who fear Him and think upon His name, as identified in Malachi 3:16-17. He emphasizes that these jewels are not the exalted beings like angels but fallen sinners redeemed by grace, referencing Isaiah 55:8-9 to illustrate the disparity between human and divine assessments of value. The practical significance of this doctrine highlights the dignity and worth of believers, encouraging them that their value is inherent in God's creation, redemptive work, and the eternal destiny awaiting them.
“Yet that is the very thing which we find God doing in our text; it is not the unfallen angels... but lost and ruined sinners, saved by amazing grace.”
“The value of a thing, in the eyes of its possessor, may be gauged by the price he was willing to pay for it.”
“Because of their lowly origin... Behold, I was shaped in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me.”
“But infinitely more wonderful is it, that poor lost sinners, saved by sovereign grace, should be among the crown-jewels of the Son of God.”
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