Albert N. Martin's sermon titled "Christian Benevolence," anchored in Hebrews 12, emphasizes the fundamental Christian doctrine of benevolence rooted in a proper understanding of sin, redemption, and the commands of Scripture. He establishes that genuine Christian benevolence arises out of a relationship with the triune God, a transformation through the Gospel, and should extend primarily to the needs of fellow Christians. Citing biblical texts like Isaiah 58 and 1 John 3, Martin argues that acts of kindness and support are not merely optional, but essential expressions of faith and obedience to Christ. Practically, he challenges believers to actively engage in benevolence while acknowledging the dangers of liberalism that prioritizes social action devoid of Gospel foundation, and a form of evangelicalism that neglects physical needs in favor of purely spiritual pursuits. This teaching highlights the significant impact of Christian benevolence within the church and its alignment with God’s blessing and the mission of the church.
“Only true Christians can engage in true Christian benevolence. For Jesus said, make the tree good and the fruit good, or the tree corrupt and the fruit corrupt.”
“If you wrench [benevolence] loose from those two foundational aspects, you have no true Christian benevolence. All you have is social kindness, or some measure of social justice.”
“Let us not love in word, neither with the tongue, but in deed and in truth.”
“You see, one of the things that God in His providence does is so to order even famines and material prosperity and economic stability, that the Church will feel something of His own heart.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
Comments
Your comment has been submitted and is awaiting moderation. Once approved, it will appear on this page.
Be the first to comment!