Albert N. Martin's sermon addresses the critical doctrine of who qualifies for heaven according to Scripture, presenting a thoroughly Reformed understanding grounded in divine election, substitutionary atonement, and progressive sanctification. Martin develops four biblical categories describing heaven's inhabitants: those whose names are written in the Lamb's Book of Life from the foundation of the world (Revelation 3:5, 20:11-15, 21:27, 17:8); those washed in Christ's blood through saving faith (Revelation 7:9-14, 22:14); those morally and ethically transformed into holy, obedient subjects of Christ (Matthew 5:8, Hebrews 12:14); and those who persevere and overcome through sanctified struggle (Revelation 2:7, 2:10, 3:5, 21:7). The sermon synthesizes Reformation theology with urgent pastoral application, emphasizing that while salvation originates entirely in God's sovereign electing grace and Christ's vicarious work, it necessarily produces transformed disciples who actively pursue holiness and resist worldly compromise. Martin's exegetical method draws particular attention to Revelation's language of the redeemed as those who both acknowledge their salvation as wholly God's work and simultaneously "wash their robes"—indicating the paradox of divine sovereignty and human responsibility. The practical significance lies in his insistence that nominal Christianity, moral respectability, and emotional attachment to Christian ideals cannot substitute for the radical internal renovation of the heart and the demonstrated willingness to overcome fleshly desires at any cost, making the sermon a piercing challenge to self-deceived profession within the church.
“Only those whose names are written in the Book of Life shall enter. It is nothing less than the full role of God's elect... And there will be no soul in heaven who is not an elect sinner... You'll find no one in heaven reaching around and patting himself on the back saying, 'I'm so glad I made good use of my free will to get here.'”
“Those who go to heaven were at one time vile, polluted, undone, laden with guilt and hell-deservedness. And by the grace of God, they were brought to see that they were indeed laden with guilt and vile and polluted... they were brought to throw the whole weight of their guilty, sin-sick, sin-sane, stained souls upon Christ and Christ alone.”
“Every time a sinner gets a Savior, the Savior gets a servant. Mark it down. Every time a sinner gets a Savior, the Savior gets a servant... If the Savior doesn't have a willing servant in you, you don't have a Savior in Him. Oh, but I trust in His blood! You'll go to hell with that kind of trust. That's the faith of demons.”
“You either overcome or you burn... If you, like Bunyan's Christian, are determined to cross the river and enter the celestial city, you don't play games and strike treaties with Apollyon. You don't sit around and have sparring sessions with the things that drag you into the world... You go hacking and hewing and plucking and casting out.”
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