Albert N. Martin's communion meditation expounds 1 Peter 2:24 to articulate a Reformed understanding of Christ's atoning death, demonstrating how profound doctrinal truths undergird practical Christian ethics. The sermon identifies four essential dimensions of the cross: its exclusively personal nature (Christ alone accomplished redemption), its strictly sacrificial character (employing Old Testament sacrificial imagery), its genuinely penal quality (God the Father imputing the curse of sin to the Son), and its radically effectual purpose (transforming believers from lives of sin to lives of righteousness). Martin anchors these truths in careful exegesis of Peter's text alongside supporting passages from Hebrews, Galatians, Deuteronomy, and Isaiah 53, emphasizing that the cross represents God the Father pouring out upon God the Son the divine wrath and curse justly deserved by human sin. The sermon's practical significance lies in its insistence that true appropriation of Christ's penal substitutionary atonement necessarily produces sanctification; Martin argues vigorously that intellectual assent to the gospel coupled with continued worldliness represents a contradiction of the cross's transforming power, making the pursuit of holiness not optional but essential to genuine faith.
“He bore our sins in his body upon the tree. And when the guilt of our sin was imputed to Jesus Christ, the sin-bearer, He took nothing less than our accursedness. He experienced nothing less than the anger of the Almighty.”
“There is no way to a life of holiness but the way of full and free pardon based on the death of Christ... There is only one way that men and women cease to exist, to live unto sins, and begin to live unto righteousness. And that is when they see the full and free pardon of sin extended to them in the death of Jesus Christ.”
“If you have any reservations and you've never seen a crucified Savior, with the saving eye of faith...may God the Holy Ghost help you to behold Him tonight and embrace Him as your own.”
“God have mercy on this assembly if with a beautiful new building we have a fashionable Christianity that has no cutting edge of radical holiness...if you don't want radical holiness, my friend, you better find another church.”
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