Kent Clark's sermon titled "Abraham Justified By Faith" addresses the Reformed doctrine of justification by faith alone, emphasizing that salvation is a product of God's grace rather than human works. He illustrates this by referencing Romans 4, particularly noting that Abraham was justified not by works but by his faith in God (Romans 4:2-3). Clark argues that if salvation were based on works, God would owe individuals something, but instead, it is a gift of grace (Romans 4:4-5). The sermon highlights the importance of believing God’s promises, asserting that true faith comes from trusting in Christ alone for righteousness, which is imputed to believers without any works on their part (Romans 4:6). The doctrinal significance lies in reaffirming that reliance on faith rather than sacramental acts or personal merit is the hallmark of the Christian faith, providing assurance of forgiveness and righteousness before God.
“If Abraham were justified by works, he hath where to glory, but not before God.”
“It doesn't say anything about him being baptized... He believed God. And it was counted or accredited to his account for righteousness.”
“God imputes righteousness to your account without any works of your own.”
“Blessed is the man to whom the Lord will not impute sin.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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