Albert N. Martin's sermon establishes that the crown jewel of heaven is the direct sight of and immediate communion with God and the Lamb, presenting this doctrine as the culminating blessing of redemption and the true reward of grace. Martin systematically demonstrates from Scripture—particularly Matthew 5:8, Hebrews 12:14, 1 John 3:2, and Revelation 22:3-4—that the beatific vision constitutes the supreme aspiration of the redeemed, with accompanying passages from John 14 and 1 Thessalonians 4 emphasizing that personal communion with Christ surpasses all other heavenly blessings. The preacher characterizes this sight as accurate (contrasting with present knowledge "through a glass darkly" per 1 Corinthians 13:12), uninterrupted by sin and spiritual struggle, and eternally expanding rather than static, given God's infinite nature and humanity's finite but eternally developing capacity. Martin's application critiques man-centered evangelicalism for failing to cultivate heavenly-mindedness, arguing that true Christian satisfaction cannot rest in temporal blessings but must be directed toward the eschatological reality of beholding Christ himself, making this doctrine essential to Reformed understanding of both the ultimate purpose of redemption and the proper orientation of the believer's affections.
“Heaven is the realization of the direct sight of and immediate communion with God and of the Lamb. And if there is one jewel amidst the vast array of those jewels that constitute the inheritance of the saints, a jewel that we might properly identify as the crown jewel of our inheritance, then surely it is this jewel that we shall see Him and that we shall be with him.”
“For now we see through a glass darkly...but then, face to face. Now I know in part, but then I shall know fully, even as also I was fully known.” [on the transformation from present limited knowledge to accurate heavenly sight]
“A Christianity that is man-centered fails to make people heavenly-minded. Because once you've gotten your goodies from God, He's not an essential element of the whole religious picture anymore...one of the tragedies of present evangelicalism is that it is so little marked by heavenly-mindedness.”
“As for me, I shall behold your face in righteousness. I shall be satisfied when I awake with beholding thy form.” [Psalm 17:15, cited as the summary of true Christian satisfaction]
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