In Kent Clark's sermon titled "God's Grace Is Sufficient," the main theological topic is the sufficiency of God’s grace, particularly as it pertains to salvation and the transformative power of the New Covenant. Clark emphasizes that believers are transformed from hearts of stone to hearts of flesh through God’s grace alone, citing 2 Corinthians 3:1-6 to illustrate that true ministry and conversion come not from human effort but through the instrumentality of God working through believers. He discusses the apostle Paul's recognition of his own insufficiency in matters of salvation, underscoring the idea that human beings are ineffective without divine assistance. This sermon holds practical significance for the Reformed view of grace, where salvation is celebrated as purely an act of God's sovereign grace, prompting believers to rely entirely on God's sufficiency, rather than their own works or merits.
“Not that we are sufficient of ourselves to think anything as of ourselves, but our sufficiency is of God.”
“The marvelous grace of God that gives people life. [...] God came to your cemetery where you were inactive toward God.”
“If you've never seen yourself a big sinner, that's why you have such a puny little Savior, that you and Jesus did something for yourself.”
“Our sufficiency is of God. It's not natural. It doesn't come naturally.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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