Albert N. Martin's sermon on Trinity Church's history, message, and ministry establishes three foundational theological principles before addressing the church's identity and calling. The sermon articulates a distinctly Reformed understanding of God's jealous preservation of His glory (Isaiah 42:8; Acts 12:20-23), God's active manifestation of glory through His works (Psalm 145:8-12), and God's unique scriptural revelation of those works. The central message of the church, according to Martin, encompasses three doctrinal pillars: Creation (Genesis 1-2), Fall (Genesis 3), and Redemption (Genesis 3:15 through Christ's incarnation, death, and resurrection). The sermon emphasizes that the local church functions as "the pillar and ground of the truth" (1 Timothy 3:15), obligated to declare the whole counsel of God without editorial adjustment or compromise. Martin grounds the church's ministry in Christ's Great Commission (Matthew 28:18-20), defining it as making disciples through preaching, baptizing believers, and teaching comprehensive obedience. The practical significance lies in establishing that doctrinal fidelity and evangelistic urgency are inseparable from authentic ecclesiastical ministry, rejecting both theological minimalism and social gospel reductionism in favor of integrated proclamation and compassionate action rooted in biblical authority.
“God is a jealous God who will not share His glory with any of His creatures... I am the Lord, that is my name, and my glory will I not give to another, neither my praise unto graven images.”
“The heart of the message of the Bible is summed up in those three words: Creation, fall and redemption. The opening words of the Bible are the most important words of the Bible, not John 3:16. Without the perspective of Genesis 1:1, John 3:16 can be made into nothing but religious slush and nonsense.”
“We are no longer free to determine our message; we are not free to determine our ministry. Christ has commissioned us with an explicit task: to make disciples of all the nations by preaching the gospel, baptizing believers, and teaching them to observe all things whatsoever He commanded.”
“There is always that direct line from the loftiest doctrine to the most mundane duties... the lofty doctrine of Christ's distinguishing love for His church is the framework of Paul's instruction on how husbands ought to love their wives.”
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