The sermon "The Law and the Gospel" by Mark Webb addresses the critical distinction between the law and the gospel, emphasizing the concept of liberty in Christ as it relates to Christian living. Webb argues that believers cannot seek justification before God through their works but must rely fully on the grace of God manifested through Christ. He cites Galatians 5, which warns against both legalism and libertinism, highlighting that true Christian freedom is not a license to sin but a call to love and serve others. The sermon underscores that the Holy Spirit empowers believers to live righteously, producing the fruit of a transformed life as a response to God's grace. This distinction is significant in Reformed theology, where salvation is viewed as wholly dependent on grace, not human effort, and the transformative work of the Spirit in a believer’s life.
“We are not producers, folks. We are consumers. We are consumers of the grace of God... We do not produce righteousness. We receive righteousness.”
“Having begun in the Spirit, are you now made perfect in the flesh?”
“His purpose is to put men in heaven who once were sinners, but have now been glorified and perfected. Freed not only from the guilt of sin, but the power of sin and the presence of sin.”
“The spiritual man is all concerned about lifting the... He's not judging his brother. He's not condemning his brother in a spirit of meekness...”
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