In this sermon titled "Great Faith Weak Faith," Kent Clark explores the theological concepts of faith, particularly contrasting "little faith" with "great faith" as depicted in the Gospel of Matthew. He uses Matthew 14:23-33 and Matthew 15:21-28 to illustrate how faith, regardless of size, is essential for salvation and spiritual growth. Clark emphasizes that even "little faith" is significant in God's economy, as it distinguishes a believer from the unbeliever, pointing to the biblical truth that salvation is by grace through faith (Ephesians 2:8-9). The sermon highlights that while weak faith can lead to doubt and fear, great faith perseveres, deeply trusts in Christ, and impacts not only the believer but those around them. This reinforces the Reformed doctrine of total depravity and the necessity of faith as a means through which God works to save His people.
“Between little faith and no faith, there's a great gulf. The man who has little faith is a living man... The one is a justified man.”
“Your faith may be little today... But you're on the same road with those who have strong faith.”
“True faith begins and ends with Jesus... Great faith prays and always prevails because great faith never gives up.”
“Faith without works is dead. My faith is a working faith.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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