Ian Potts's sermon on Job 25:6 presents a profound contrast between legalistic and grace-centered understanding of divine justice and human salvation. The preacher traces the theological trajectory of Bildad's question—"How then can man be justified with God?"—demonstrating that while Bildad arrives at the correct inquiry, he can only perceive God through a legal framework of judgment and condemnation, seeing humanity as mere worms before an austere, mighty Creator. Potts argues that Job, conversely, possessed faith that transcended his wretchedness, looking beyond his sinfulness to hope in a Redeemer, embodying what the Reformed doctrine of justification by faith alone requires. The sermon emphasizes that God's answer to the apparent hopelessness of human salvation comes through Christ's substitutionary atonement and resurrection—Christ himself became "a worm" (Psalm 22) to deliver worms from their sins. Potts underscores that throughout Job's narrative, God typologically preaches the gospel to Bildad through Job's sufferings, which prefigure Christ's passion, yet Bildad remains spiritually blind, much like contemporary sinners who ignore Scripture's recorded revelation. The sermon's doctrinal significance lies in its defense of Reformed soteriology: salvation cannot be attained through works or human merit but only through grace apprehended by faith in Christ's finished work, wherein the believer's guilt is imputed to Christ and His righteousness imputed to the believer.
“How can man be justified with God? For Bildad, really the question's hopeless, and he's using it to condemn Job, to say, you can't stand Job before this God... Yet when Job asked the question, Job had a hope that there was a way, that wretched sinners, that nothings could be justified, could be just before God.”
“If Bildad knew what Job knew, if Bildad had been brought to hear the truth, if God had revealed himself to Bildad in the way he'd revealed himself to Job, he'd know that despite his sin, despite his rebellion, despite his worthlessness, despite how small he is, That God is merciful towards those who are wretched... That God delivers the worm.”
“Oh, if Bildad knew what Job knew, he would know that salvation cannot be by our works and it cannot be through any merit in us... it must be by grace... God must have a means of making dead lost sinners righteous.”
“There's one, there's one who was made a worm to deliver worms from their sins... That He who was made a worm might take worms and make them righteous, make them princes, make them to reign in him.”
The Bible teaches that justification is an act of God's grace where sinners are declared righteous through faith in Christ.
Romans 3:28, Romans 5:1
Grace is essential for salvation, as it is by grace alone that we are saved through faith, not by our works.
Ephesians 2:8-9
Understanding our sinful nature is crucial for recognizing our need for God's grace and the salvation offered in Christ.
Romans 3:23, 1 Timothy 1:15
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