In the sermon "There Hath Not Failed One Word," Jonathan Tate addresses the theological concept of God's unbreakable promises, highlighting the parallels between God's promises to physical Israel and spiritual Israel today. He elaborates on five critical points regarding God's promises: what was promised, to whom it was promised, who promised it, when the promise was fulfilled, and the appropriate response to these promises. Tate draws extensively from Scripture, primarily 1 Kings 8 and Exodus 6, to demonstrate that God's promises encompass a land of belonging, freedom from bondage, and the intimate knowledge of Him, all fulfilled in Christ. The doctrinal significance lies in the assurance that God's faithfulness is unwavering, which brings comfort to believers as they acknowledge that they are thoroughly redeemed through Christ's work, thus possessing an inheritance as children of God.
“There hath not failed one word of all his good promise which he promised by the hand of Moses his servant.”
“God's people are made to stand in the land, not as slaves, but again as children who belong.”
“The value of any promise is 100% dependent on who's making the promise.”
“When God purposed it, it was fulfilled. Time can't change that because the God who purposed it is irrelevant to time.”
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