Albert N. Martin's sermon addresses the doctrine of divine wrath as a critically neglected element in contemporary evangelical preaching, arguing that the absence of this doctrine from gospel proclamation represents a fundamental distortion of biblical Christianity. Martin establishes his thesis through careful examination of New Testament preaching, particularly in John the Baptist's ministry and Jesus Christ's own teachings, demonstrating that divine wrath is not a periphery concern but a dominant note woven throughout the gospel message. He supports this contention with extensive scriptural analysis, including Matthew 3:7-12 (the winnowing fan imagery), Matthew 5-7 (the Sermon on the Mount's presentation of divine judgment), and Matthew 13 (the parables of the kingdom depicting final judgment). The sermon's practical significance lies in Martin's conviction that understanding divine wrath is essential for genuine conversion: apart from recognizing God's holy anger against sin and the reality of judgment, sinners cannot comprehend either the necessity of repentance or the preciousness of Christ's atoning work on the cross, reducing the gospel to mere "dickering with Jesus" rather than a transformative encounter with the God who is "a consuming fire" (Hebrews 12:29).
“If the Bible is God revealing himself through human authors, its content will have a basic unity, for God is the God who says, 'I am the Lord, I change not.' But if the Bible is simply a record of the religious consciousness of men, that consciousness grows, develops, and many times undergoes radical changes.”
“It is only when the love of God is viewed in the context of the reality and magnitude of the wrath of God that that love is understood for what it really is. And apart from that, it is nothing but divine indulgence and some kind of saccharine sentiment and not the love of an infinitely holy and an infinitely pure God.”
“My friend, that cross will never become precious until you begin to take seriously the wrath of God against you in your sin. God is angry with the wicked. He is angry with those who break his law, who flaunt the rules by which he has determined to govern us.”
“A Jesus stripped of his winnowing fan is an idol who is as powerless to save as any stone idol before which an idolater bows in heathen ignorance.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
Comments
Your comment has been submitted and is awaiting moderation. Once approved, it will appear on this page.
Be the first to comment!