In the sermon "Love of the Brethren #2," Albert N. Martin addresses the critical Reformed doctrine of brotherly love as an essential expression of genuine faith. He argues that the Apostle Paul's emphasis on faith and love (Ephesians 1:15) highlights brotherly love as the "queen" of Christian graces in horizontal relationships, drawing from numerous New Testament passages to support this claim. Martin identifies key principles, including that a lack of brotherly love equates to gross sin, growth in love reflects growth in grace, and that love is demonstrated through actions rather than mere feelings. The Scriptures discussed primarily include 1 Peter 4:8, Matthew 5:23–24, and Mark 11:25, illustrating practical implications for worship and relationships, such as the necessity of reconciliation and forgiveness, which Martin meticulously exhorts believers to practice actively. The practical significance of this sermon lies in its call for believers to embody fervent love, which serves to obscure the multitude of sins and foster healthy community life within the church.
“The presence, development, growth of faith and love are the two great evidences of the presence and growth of the grace of God in the hearts of his people.”
“Brotherly love is the queen of all Christian graces...love to Christ is supreme, but as far as the graces of a horizontal nature, brotherly love is queen above them all.”
“If there is not fervent love, we will magnify those sins...but fervent love will veil them. Fervent love will hide them.”
“No acts of worship are acceptable to God if they come from a heart in which there is willfully unconfessed wrong to another brother or sister.”
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