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Tom Harding

Grace Brings Salvation

Titus 2:14
Tom Harding • October, 19 2008 • Audio
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Titus 2:11-15
For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men,
12 Teaching us that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present world;
13 Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ;
14 Who gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works.
15 ¶ These things speak, and exhort, and rebuke with all authority. Let no man despise thee.
What does the Bible say about grace and salvation?

The Bible teaches that grace is God's gift that brings salvation to His people through faith in Jesus Christ.

The grace of God is foundational to salvation, as expressed in Titus 2:11, where it is said that 'the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men.' This grace teaches believers to deny ungodliness and live righteously. It emphasizes that salvation is not earned by works but is a gift given through mercy and the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. The gospel reveals how grace and glory are manifested in Christ, making it essential for Christians to understand that redemption and justification come solely through this divine grace.

Titus 2:11, Ephesians 2:8-9, Romans 3:24

How do we know God's grace brings salvation?

Scriptures affirm that it is by God's grace alone through faith that we experience salvation, as seen in numerous biblical passages.

The certainty of God's grace bringing salvation is derived from Scripture, particularly in Titus 2:11, which states that this grace has appeared to all men. Additionally, Ephesians 2:8-9 emphasizes that salvation is not from ourselves but is a gift from God, underscoring that it is by grace that we are saved through faith. The apostle Paul makes clear that no one can be justified apart from this grace. The consistent biblical witness supports the doctrine that it is God's sovereign grace that effectually calls and saves His people.

Titus 2:11, Ephesians 2:8-9, Romans 3:24

Why is Jesus Christ important for our salvation?

Jesus Christ is essential for salvation because He is both God and man, who provides redemption through His sacrifice.

In historic Reformed theology, Jesus Christ is central to salvation as He is the God-man. As outlined in Titus 2:14, He gave Himself for us, which reveals His dual nature as fully God and fully man. His divinity is crucial because only God could make the perfect atonement for sin. His humanity is essential because He can represent us and sympathize with our struggles. Therefore, the union of both natures in Christ is why He alone can redeem us from all iniquity and make us a peculiar people, purified for good works.

Titus 2:14, John 10:11, Hebrews 2:10

What does it mean to adorn the doctrine of God our Savior?

To adorn the doctrine of God our Savior means to live out and exemplify the truths of the gospel in our daily lives.

Adorning the doctrine of God our Savior involves not just intellectual acceptance of the gospel but also a heartfelt response that manifests in our behavior and actions. As mentioned in Titus 2:10, believers are called to show good loyalty, embodying Christ-like virtues. This includes living soberly, righteously, and godly in this present world. True faith results in a life that reflects the teachings of Christ, making the gospel attractive to others and glorifying God through obedience and good works.

Titus 2:10, 1 Peter 2:12, Philippians 1:27

Why is God's sovereignty important in salvation?

God's sovereignty ensures that salvation is entirely the work of grace and not dependent on human effort.

The doctrine of God's sovereignty is critical in understanding salvation, as it reveals that God alone initiates, executes, and completes the process of saving His people. According to Scriptures, our salvation is rooted in God's eternal plan and purpose. As noted in Romans 9:16, it is not by human will or effort, but by God's mercy that we are saved. This point reinforces the truth that salvation is a divine act rooted in grace, illustrating the profound difference between sovereign grace and the belief in human autonomy in matters of salvation.

Romans 9:16, Ephesians 1:4-5, 2 Timothy 1:9

Sermon Transcript

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Today I would like you to turn
your Bible to the book of Titus, the book of Titus chapter 2.
The book of Titus chapter 2, and I'll be speaking from these
verses this morning. Let's read verse 9 down to verse
14 of Titus chapter 2. The Apostle writes, exhort servants
to be obedient unto their masters and to please them in all things,
not answering again or not contradicting, not stealing, but showing all
good loyalty. that they may adorn the doctrine
of God our Savior in all things. For the grace of God that bringeth
salvation hath appeared to all men, teaching us that, denying
ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously,
and godly in this present world, looking for that blessed hope
and the glorious appearing of our great God and Savior, Jesus
Christ. who gave himself for us that
he might redeem us from all iniquity, all sin, and purify unto himself
a peculiar, a purchased people who are zealous of good works."
Now, upon reading this short epistle, the very clear statement
of basic fundamental truth, Jesus Christ is God, God our Savior. Three or four times throughout
this epistle, Paul uses this phrase, God our Savior. Paul believed in a divine Savior
who was not just a mere man, although He was God manifest
in the flesh, but He was also God Almighty come to save His
people, who being in the brightness of His glory and express image
of God's person, who also accomplished the salvation of His people by
the sacrifice of Himself. We read in verse 14, "...who
gave Himself that He might redeem us." He shed His blood that He
might bring us unto God. Now, if you take away the deity
of Christ, the Godhead, the Godhood of Christ, you have no gospel.
You have no good news to preach. It's not that some important
man died, but rather, He who died is God. It's just not that some important
man died, but the Lord Jesus Christ who died to put away sin,
He Himself is God Almighty. None but God could be our great
Savior. That's why Paul said in Acts
20, it's recorded, that God purchased the church with His own blood.
He could not be God our Savior unless He is God's Christ. He
could not reveal the way of salvation except He be God's prophet. He could not work out salvation
except he be the priest of God. And he could not bestow salvation
except he be the king of the universe, God Almighty. He could
not be prophet, priest, and king except he be God our Savior and
God's Christ. Now, we're exhorted in this portion
of Scripture to adorn the doctrine of God our Savior in all things."
What is this doctrine of God our Savior? My friend, it's nothing
less than the gospel. The gospel of God, Paul said
in Romans 1, he was separated unto the gospel of God concerning
his Son, Jesus Christ. To adorn the doctrine of God
our Savior is to believe, love, to receive, to profess, to submit
to the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ, to appreciate To identify
with it and to bow to it and receive it and believe it in
all things. To earn the doctrine of God our
Savior in all things. This is God's gospel. This is
God's message. This is God's salvation. Now
receive it, believe it, and bow to it. And then he says in our
text here in verse 11, the grace of God that bringeth salvation,
and this is what the grace of God does, it brings salvation. to God's people, the grace of
God. Now what is this grace of God?
It's the gospel of God. It's called the gospel of His
glory, the gospel of His grace, the gospel of His glory, the
gospel concerning the Lord Jesus Christ. So called because in
salvation God's grace and God's glory and mercy are revealed
in Jesus Christ and they're magnified. were saved, how? By the grace
of God. Were redeemed, how? Through the
mercy and the blood of Jesus Christ. Not by works of righteousness,
which we have done, but according to God's mercy, He saved us by
the washing of regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Spirit,
which He shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Savior. There's God our Savior again.
Redemption is by the grace of God through the blood of Jesus
Christ. God has never saved, redeemed,
or justified any sinner apart from the grace of God. You go
all the way back through the scripture, and everyone who has
been saved and justified, they were all justified by grace.
Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord. God's people are
chosen by grace. There's a remnant according to
the election of grace. We're called by grace. We're
saved by the grace of God. were justified freely by His
grace through the redemption that is in the Lord Jesus Christ,
and believing. How does a guilty, vile sinner
believe this gospel? Well, believing is all of grace.
It's the work of God. We believe according to the working
of God's mighty power. And my friend, it's the gospel
of the grace of God. Now watch this. The gospel of
the grace of God that brings salvation. It brings salvation. The preaching of the gospel is
a means God has been pleased to use to put in the hands of
men and in the hands of the Holy Spirit to convey grace to the
heart of the guilty sinner. The gospel message not only brings
grace to the sinner, but also brings the sinner to the grace
of God in Christ Jesus. It was free, sovereign grace
when at first thought of the sinner in the covenant of eternal
grace It was the free grace of God when it found and laid hold
of the sinner, and it's the free grace of God that brings the
sinner home to glory. Christ suffered once for our
sins, just for the unjust, that He might, do what? Bring us unto
God. He's the captain of our salvation.
In Hebrews 2, 10 we read, He was bringing many sons unto glory,
and will never be brought any other way. He said, now, adorn
the doctrine of God our Savior in all things. How do we do that?
By believing the gospel of God's grace. And then he said, it's
the grace of God that brings salvation. Salvation is all of
God. Salvation is of the Lord. And
then it says here in our text in verse 11, Titus 2.11, it says,
hath appeared to all men. Now what does that mean? Well,
the grace and the gospel of Christ was never intended to bring nor
to appear in a saving way to all men everywhere without exception. The gospel to some is a stumbling
block. The gospel to some is an offense. The gospel is hidden to the natural
eye and must be revealed. However, I believe he's talking
here about preaching the gospel. We're commanded to preach the
gospel unto all people. Go into all the world and preach
the gospel to every creature. but it only appears and brings
salvation to God's people, to God's elect. We're commanded
to preach the gospel unto all men everywhere, but it only appears
in a saving way and brings quickening, revealing grace unto God's elect. I'll give you a good example
of that. Over in John chapter 10, when our Lord preached to
those Jews and those Pharisees over and over and over again,
And it says in John 10, 24 that the Jews came round about him
and asked him, they said to him, how long do you make us to doubt
if you be the Christ? Tell us plainly. And the Lord
said, I told you and you believe not. The works that I do in my
Father's name, they bear witness of me. Now watch this verse here.
You believe not because you are not of my sheep. As I said unto
you, my sheep hear my voice. I know them, they follow me,
and I give unto them eternal life, and they shall never perish,
neither shall any man pluck them out of my Father's hand." To
some, the message of grace, and to some, the gospel is a stumbling
stone, a rock of offense. However, to God's sheep and to
God's elect, it's a savor of life unto life, and it appears
unto God's elect in a saving way that brings salvation to
their heart and brings them to Christ in faith. And then it
says in verse 12, Titus 2, 12, teaching us this grace of God
not only brings salvation, but it's teaching grace. It teaches
us, listen to this verse, teaching us that denying ungodliness,
worldly lust, that we should live soberly, righteously, and
godly in this present world. This is teaching grace. The gospel
and the grace of God not only reveals the beauty and glory
and necessity of Jesus Christ to our heart, but it also teaches
us to reject and deny all former idolatry and religious experience
as rubbish. That's what Paul said in Philippians
3. He counted all his religious
background and his religious experience, his religious tradition.
When he met Christ, he counted it all but lost. that he might
win Christ and be found in him. And this is what the grace of
God teaches us. It teaches us that salvation
is in Christ. And it teaches us to deny and
reject all former idolatry and religious experience as rubbish. Does God save his people with
a false gospel? No. Were you saved by listening
to a false gospel? No, not at all. How do you identify
a false gospel? Anything that's contrary to the
grace and glory of God. God uses a message of grace,
the message of sovereign grace, the message of free and sovereign
grace in Christ Jesus to call out His sheep. And His sheep
hear that voice. His sheep hear that gospel and
they follow Him. The grace of God in the gospel
gives the strongest, clearest motive and argument for obedience,
His glory. It's the grace of God that brings
salvation, and not only brings salvation, it doesn't only appear
in a saving way to His people, but it teaches us. In verse 13
of our text we read this, looking for that blessed hope and the
glorious appearing of our great God. Here's that phrase again,
our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ. The believer has a blessed
hope, and my friend, that blessed hope, that this grace of God
brings us to and teaches us is Christ. The Lord Jesus Christ
is our hope. And we live in a state of looking. Notice it's teaching. It's a
continuing process. And it's a state of looking for
that blessed hope and the glorious appearing of our great God and
Savior Jesus Christ. We're looking for His appearing.
Believers are not taken up with a day and a time and a place
and looking for all the signs and different things. They're
taken up with the Lord God Almighty who is coming. And we're exhorted
in Scripture to look for Him, looking for the glorious appearing
of the great God and our Savior Jesus Christ. Now, it describes
Him who's coming in verse 14. Now, let me give you this in
closing. Who gave Himself for us that
He might redeem us from all iniquity and purify unto himself a peculiar."
That means they purchased people who were zealous. Zealous of
God's glory, zealous of the gospel, and zealous of good works. Now
in verse 14 we see four things. The first thing we see is this.
The one who purchased salvation. The one who purchased our salvation. The Lord bought us with His own
blood. It says in verse 14, He gave
Himself. Who gave Himself? And it refers
back to what is said in verse 13. Our great God and Savior. So the one who purchased salvation
is God Himself. Our Lord was both God and man
in one person. Man that He might obey, suffer,
and die, and God that He might satisfy, honor, and honor His
own law and justice. The God-man. He thought it not
robbery to be equal with God. He said, you've seen me, you've
seen the Father. He must be the God-man in order to redeem. This is who purchased our salvation,
our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ, both God and man and
one blessed person. Notice, secondly, the price of
our redemption. The one who purchased salvation
got our Savior. The price of our redemption It
was real expensive. He gave Himself. What a gift! And what a price! God gave Himself
for our sins. He appeared once in the end of
age to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself. We read over in 1
Timothy 2, verse 5, there is one mediator between God and
men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave Himself a ransom. What a price! We didn't merit
such a sacrifice. We didn't merit such a gift of
God's love. God so loved that He gave. God
sent His own Son to be the propitiation for our sin. We merited His wrath,
but He gave us Himself. It must be grace, not merit,
nor our deserving. The One who purchased our salvation? God Himself. The price? Himself. He gave Himself. We see also
the persons who He redeemed. He said He redeemed us. Who gave
Himself for us. Perishing sinners, lost, undone,
ungodly rebels. Christ died for the ungodly. He suffered the just for the
unjust that He might bring us unto God. Our blessed Lord died
for His sheep. He said that in John 10. I lay
down my life for the sheep. Now, contrary to popular opinion
of the day, Most people preach and believe universal atonement,
that Christ died for all the sins of all men. My friend, that's
just not so. It's just not according to the
scripture. For the transgression of my people, he says, for us,
laid down his life for his sheep. He redeemed us. Can it be for
the transgression of my people he was stricken? Can it be? Now,
I want you to think about this. Can it be that he died for those
in hell the same as he died for those in heaven? Even common
sense won't allow such a thought. My friend, all those given to
Christ in the covenant of grace, all those for whom He stood as
surety and representative, all those for whom He died at Calvary
must be saved by His blood and by His grace. And then notice
this in closing. Verse 14, He gave Himself for
us that He might redeem us from all iniquity. Here's the glorious
result of Christ's atonement, Christ's blood perfected forever
them from all iniquity. He said, their sin and their
iniquity will I remember no more. Jesus Christ has accomplished
all our salvation, a justifying work for us with his blood and
a sanctifying work within us, purifying unto himself a peculiar
people, a purchased people who were zealous of God's glory,
zealous of good work. If you'd like a copy of this
message today, you call or write to me. I'll send it to you absolutely
free. You can call me at 631-9053 or
you can write to me at Zebulon Baptist Church, 6088 Zebulon
Highway, Pikeville, Kentucky.
Tom Harding
About Tom Harding
Tom Harding is pastor of Zebulon Grace Church located at 6088 Zebulon Highway, Pikeville, Kentucky 41501. You may also contact him by telephone at (606) 631-9053, or e-mail taharding@mikrotec.com. The website address is www.henrytmahan.com.

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