Eric Lutter addresses the account of the rich young ruler (Luke 18:18-27) to expose the spiritual bankruptcy of self-righteousness and the absolute necessity of faith in Christ for justification and eternal life. The sermon argues that this man, though morally upright and religiously sincere, fundamentally lacked Christ because he approached God through works of the law rather than through faith in Christ's righteousness. Lutter uses multiple scriptural references—including Romans 3:20, Galatians 3:10-12, and Romans 10:1—to demonstrate that the law was given to reveal sin, not to justify sinners, and that Christ alone is "the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth." The sermon's practical significance lies in its confrontation of a subtle but deadly spiritual condition present in many professing Christians: the tendency to trust in personal moral achievement and religious activity rather than submitting entirely to Christ's imputed righteousness. Lutter emphasizes that justification requires not partial reformation but total abandonment of self-confidence and absolute faith in Christ as one's sole hope of acceptance before God.
“He yet stands in need of the blood and righteousness of the Lord Jesus Christ.” And this is the fundamental problem: external morality and religious observance cannot substitute for genuine faith in Christ's atoning work.
“No sin is more deadly than the sin and more likely to keep you from Christ and trusting Christ for all your righteousness than the sin of self-righteousness. Because it's the thing that blinds us from seeing just how wrecked we are, how ruined we are, how corrupt we are.”
“It's either all of him and nothing of us, or we have nothing.” This encapsulates the sermon's central claim that justification admits no middle ground—believers must relinquish all confidence in their own works and rest entirely upon Christ's righteousness.
“If you're looking to anything that you've done, anything you once did or are doing, nothing else is gonna save you. Nothing else justifies. It's Christ alone.”
The Bible teaches that eternal life is received through faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, not by our works.
Luke 18:18-27, John 3:16
Scripture consistently affirms that salvation is found only through Jesus Christ.
John 14:6, Romans 10:9-10
Grace is essential for Christians as it signifies God's unmerited favor and salvation.
Ephesians 2:8-9
Faith produces works as a response to God's grace and salvation.
Ephesians 2:8-9, James 2:17
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