Albert N. Martin addresses the doctrine of God's sovereignty and providence as the foundation for Christian confidence entering a new year, grounding his exposition in Reformed theology's understanding of God's eternal decrees and special providence toward the elect. The sermon argues from Scripture that believers may know three absolute certainties: God's sovereign rule over all events (macro and microcosm), His special care for His covenant people through providence ordered for their good, and His saving purposes that delay Christ's return until the fullness of His elect is gathered. Martin carefully distinguishes biblical predestination from pagan fatalism through an extended illustration of a Dutch boy and a windmill, demonstrating that God's decrees express the loving purposes of a living Father rather than the cold determinism of an impersonal machine. The doctrine rests on key passages including Psalm 47 and 103 (God's universal kingship), Romans 11:36 (all things from, through, and unto God), Ephesians 1:11 (God working all things after the counsel of His will), and 2 Peter 3:15 (God's long-suffering as salvation). This theology directly addresses the pastoral concern of how God's people should think Christianly about uncertainty, teaching that personal sanctification flows from renewed minds that grasp God's comprehensive control, covenant faithfulness, and redemptive purposes, yielding both security for believers and urgent evangelistic motivation.
“The decrees of God are His eternal purpose, according to the counsel of His own will, whereby for His own glory God hath foreordained whatsoever comes to pass.”
“In a moment, he understood the difference between falling into the grinding power of a machine and into the loving hands of a father. That's the difference between fate and predestination and all the language of men cannot tell the immensity of the difference.”
“Account that the long-suffering of our Lord is salvation. That's it. We're to know why history goes on... the saving purposes of God must go on until they are fulfilled, and then the day of the Lord will come.”
“Behind a frowning providence he hides a smiling face... because I believe this truth, that having brought me within the orbit of His special love and His distinguishing affection, everything in my life is ordered for my good and for His glory.”
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