Albert N. Martin's sermon addresses the critical missing note of obedience and holiness as indispensable evidence of genuine saving faith. Martin argues that contemporary gospel preaching has tragically omitted the biblical insistence that true believers necessarily manifest a pattern of obedience to God's will and increasing conformity to Christ's holiness. While carefully distinguishing between justification (grounded in Christ's imputed righteousness received through faith alone) and sanctification (the inevitable fruit of genuine faith), Martin contends that the absence of a principled commitment to obedience and holiness indicates the absence of true saving faith itself. Drawing from Matthew 7:21, John 10:27, Hebrews 5:8-9, 1 John 2:3-4, and Revelation 14:12, Martin demonstrates that Scripture consistently identifies obedience as the identifying mark of Christ's sheep and a requirement for salvation's blessing. Similarly, passages including Matthew 5:8, Romans 8:8-13, 1 John 3:7-10, and Hebrews 12:14 establish holiness as non-negotiable for seeing God. Martin directly attacks the "carnal Christian doctrine"—the notion that believers may live essentially disobedient lives while retaining salvation—as an "unscriptural and damning delusion" that contradicts explicit biblical teaching. The sermon's practical significance lies in its recovery of the doctrine that salvation necessarily produces holiness; any gospel that permits the comfortable coexistence of claimed Christian faith with habitual disobedience misrepresents the transforming power of redemption.
“Not every one that says unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he that doeth the will of my father who is in heaven... The only people who are going to heaven are those who are doing the will of God.”
“Unless God has given his word deliberately to deceive us instead of to instruct us in the way of life, these five texts teach with unmistakable clarity that only those who obey Christ have any grounds to claim they are saved in the righteousness of Christ.”
“The popular carnal Christian doctrine is nothing less than an unscriptural and damning delusion... that the evidence must be you are on the way. What way? The way that is constricted and narrow and compressed. The way of gospel holiness without which there is no entrance to life.”
“Follow after holiness without which no man shall see the Lord... Without holiness, no man shall see the Lord. If we say that we know Him and do not obey Him, we lie, and the truth is not in us.”
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