Albert N. Martin addresses the critical doctrine of saving faith as a missing emphasis in contemporary evangelical preaching, arguing that widespread confusion about faith's nature has resulted in numerous false conversions and nominal Christianity. Martin establishes two foundational premises: (1) Jesus Christ Himself—not merely facts about His work—is the proper object of saving faith, and (2) unreserved self-commitment to Christ constitutes the essence of saving faith. Drawing extensively from John 1:12, John 3:16, Acts 16:31, and Matthew 11:28, Martin demonstrates that Scripture consistently calls sinners to believe upon or in the person of Christ rather than in doctrinal propositions about His death and resurrection. From these premises, he derives three inescapable conclusions grounded in Reformed soteriology: it is impossible to receive Christ as Savior while refusing Him as Lord; becoming a believer and becoming a disciple are synonymous, not sequential experiences; and saving faith necessarily presupposes the miracle of regeneration, since the natural human will remains in rebellion against God until sovereignly renewed by the Holy Spirit. Martin's critique addresses the practical erosion of Christian discipleship and moral transformation that results when the gospel is presented as merely transactional forgiveness divorced from Christ's lordship and the believer's submission to His authority.
“The Lord Jesus Christ Himself is the object of saving faith... It is not any facet of the work of Christ that is made the object of saving faith, but it is the person himself who accomplished the work.”
“It is morally and spiritually impossible to receive Christ as Savior while refusing to bow to Him as Lord... You can't receive a half Christ. You can only receive a whole Christ.”
“The nature of saving faith is to be understood in the terms we've expounded tonight. Unreserved self-commitment to Him is of the essence of saving faith... The Lord Jesus Christ Himself is the object of saving faith.”
“Unless the Father grants something that they do not have by nature, they'll never come... It is morally and spiritually impossible to exercise saving faith without a miracle of regeneration.”
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