Albert N. Martin's sermon addresses the doctrine of divine judgment by providing specific biblical descriptions of those who will be consigned to hell, emphasizing that damnation results from habitual, unrepentant sinful character rather than isolated transgressions. Drawing primarily from Revelation 21:8, Galatians 5:19-21, and Matthew 7:21-23, Martin systematically categorizes the types of sinful lifestyles that exclude individuals from God's kingdom: sexual immorality, false religion, interpersonal sins of ill will (enmity, strife, jealousy, faction, envy, division), intemperance, and—most distinctively—outwardly successful religious practice devoid of sanctifying grace. Martin argues that the Galatians passage makes a crucial contribution by revealing that sins against fellow humans rank equally with gross moral deviations in God's judgment, challenging evangelical churches that tolerate generational feuds and interpersonal conflicts while maintaining Christian profession. The Matthew 7 passage proves particularly sobering, depicting highly gifted prophets and miracle-workers condemned because they "worked iniquity"—they never experienced the radical transformation of heart that evidences true regeneration. Martin insists this doctrine must function pastorally: believers must treat all sin categories with equal seriousness, recognizing that spiritual gifts prove nothing about salvation, and that only sanctifying grace evidenced by genuine mortification of sin and pursuit of holiness demonstrates true knowledge of Christ. The sermon's practical force challenges nominal evangelicalism's presumption that external religious success or past conversion experience guarantees eternal salvation apart from transformed character.
“It is one thing to commit an act of murder. It is another thing to be a murderer as the dominant disposition of the heart and expression of moral conduct.”
“Do we really believe the Word of God? Do we believe God means what He says in this passage? That if these things characterize your life, enmity, strife, jealousy, wrath, you living and dying in that condition, will they surely be sent to hell as an idolater, a sorcerer, and a whoremonger?”
“No gift of whatever nature, no gift however much it may appear to be owned and blessed of God is the proof of grace. It's only grace that is the proof of grace. It's only a holy heart that shows you are truly known by a holy Savior.”
“Listen, no gift However much it may appear to be owned and blessed of God is the proof of grace... I know standing here, if I'm not one of the worst liars who's ever lived on the face of the Earth, Almighty God will have to say, enter, enter, enter. Your faith is no sham faith.”
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