Pastor Albert N. Martin presents a historical and theological account of Trinity Church's founding and development, grounded in the conviction that God's sovereign providence orchestrates the church's existence and ministry. The sermon establishes that the church was "conceived" in 1962 when Martin, then an itinerant evangelist, preached at a discouraged congregation in Essex County, New Jersey, developed through years of "gestation" (1962-1967) during which core Reformed doctrines were recovered, and formally "born" in January 1967 when the congregation voted to separate from its evangelical denomination rather than compromise scriptural convictions. Drawing extensively from Ephesians 5:17 (understanding God's will) and Romans 15:5-6 (glorifying God with one accord), Martin argues that understanding corporate identity and historical providence equips the congregation for faithful stewardship. The sermon exemplifies Reformed ecclesiology by emphasizing the regulative principle of worship, the regulative principle of Scripture, the centrality of systematic biblical exposition, elder-led church government, and the sovereignty of God in salvation. Martin's theological significance lies in demonstrating how doctrinal conviction—particularly regarding election, the nature of true conversion, and biblical church order—should drive practical ecclesiastical decisions, including difficult separations from institutional structures that compromise scriptural fidelity.
“History is the transcript of God's decree. The providence of God is the visible commentary of the secret purposes of God.”
“Wherever the hand of Scripture leads us, we must follow.”
“We dare not bring to God in worship anything that He has not required... God calls that will-worship. And He says in the language of the prophet, Who hath required this at your hands?”
“Every man as he purposeth in his heart... They don't operate by the pressure of psychological manipulation, brainwashing, no. The principles of the Word of God are that every man as he purposeth in his heart.”
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