In his sermon "God Sent Me Before You," Luke Coffey explores the story of Joseph and his brothers in Genesis 45:1-11, highlighting its profound Christological significance. The key argument presented is that Joseph serves as a type of Christ, illustrating God's providential plan to save His people from spiritual famine, just as Joseph preserved his family during a physical famine. Coffey utilizes Scripture, particularly Genesis 37-45, to demonstrate how Joseph's experiences parallel Christ's suffering, the betrayal by His own, and His redemptive role as Savior. The sermon emphasizes that, despite humanity's sinfulness and failure, God’s grace prevails, providing salvation through Christ. This underscores the Reformed doctrines of total depravity, unconditional election, and the sufficiency of Christ’s atonement, reflecting the practical significance of believers resting in God’s sovereign provision for both temporal and eternal needs.
“So this morning what I want to look at is I want to briefly go through this story and look at it as the spiritual application. As these brothers who are us, and it's not comfortable to see what we do and what we say and the way we act to our Savior.”
“If we had not sinned, He would not have had to endure all this trials and tribulations. He went through all of this... all because of our sins, what we did, our evil, our hatred towards Him.”
“The Lord Jesus Christ will provide for His children for all of their days. This application applies to us here while we're still in this sinful body.”
“The provision He provides is eternal... that we do not have to pay for the sins we've committed. His sacrifice on the cross meant that we get His righteousness.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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