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Psalm 2:7-8

Anatomy of a Man of God: His Knees #2

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In 'Anatomy of a Man of God: His Knees #2,' Pastor Albert N. Martin continues his series on the spiritual characteristics of a man of God, focusing on the 'bent knees' as a symbol of constant prayer. Expounding primarily on Psalm 2 and numerous New Testament passages, Martin establishes prayer's unique and indispensable role in the advancement of God's kingdom, even for Christ himself. He then applies this truth to the man of God, detailing four categories of prayer: for personal godliness, for ministerial tasks (preaching, teaching, counseling), for the spiritual well-being of the flock, and for the conversion of the unsaved. The sermon concludes with a call for pastors and all believers to cultivate a life of earnest, persistent prayer.

Primary Texts

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Psalm 2:7-8 This passage is expounded to demonstrate that even the Messiah, Jesus Christ, received his inheritance and possession of the nations through asking, establishing prayer as an indispensable principle for the kingdom's advancement.

Outline 9 sections · 70 min

  1. Introduction: The Anatomy of a Man of God and the Bent Knee 0:00
  2. Review: Knees Bowed Before Creator and Incarnate God 5:31
  3. The Unique Place of Prayer in God's Kingdom (Psalm 2) 8:23
  4. Christ, the Perfect Man of Prayer 18:30
  5. Prayer for Personal Godliness: The Foundation of Ministry 35:22
  6. Prayer for Ministerial Tasks: Public and Private 48:32
  7. Prayer for the Flock: Intercession for Believers 60:33
  8. Prayer for the Lost: Seeking Converting Grace 64:49
  9. Conclusion: A Call to Be Men of the Bent Knee 67:39

Key Quotes

“There is no substitute for godliness. It is the best thing that can be said of any man when it can be said of him that he is God. A man of God.”
“Ask of me, and I will give thee the nations for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession.”
“Nevertheless, not my will but thine be done. That is not a statement, thy will be done to me, but thy will be done by me.”
“The knees of a man of God, are constantly bowed before God his Father to seek the things which needs to be thundered from the rooftops in our days. The man, in other words, it is what a man as a Christian stability that is the foundation on which his function as a minister is built and never the other way around.”
“Because his fundamental business doesn't have to do with what he does with his tongue it's what he is as a man in the eye of God what he is before his own conscience in the light of God's countenance”
“who is sufficient for these things any man who has anything that approaches a one-tenth accurate perspective of what the work of the ministry is I don't care what his IQ is I don't care what his formal education is I don't care what his natives gifts are if he were Edwards and Whitfield and Spurgeon and Augustine and the courage of Athanasius and Luther all rolled into one assessment of the ministry and even a superman like that would cry out I am not sufficient for these things”
“And I'm personally convinced that perhaps the greatest reason we have so little earnest passionate gospel pleading and preaching today. Is that it is an echo of a closet where there's little pleading with God.”
“Forgive us when our own shriveled souls are the monument of our prayerlessness. Our unanointed preaching, our frustrated pastoral endeavors, and our lack of fruit bearing in the conversion of sinners.”

Applications

Believers

  • Know what it is you are praying for when you pray that God will mold and fashion these men into men of God.

Pastors & those called to ministry

  • Have a clear vision of the goal to which you are pressing, and know what you are praying for when you pray that God will mold and fashion men into men of God.

All listeners

  • Review some of the fundamental elements of personal godliness, which are requisite of all the people of God, regardless of their gifts and functions in the body of Christ.
  • If that does not become a conviction wrought into the fibers of your soul by the Holy Ghost by which you are prepared to lop off right hands and pluck out right eyes the mark of a man of God.
  • God plants the cross of his son between you and the hell you deserve and says look and live. He only asks you to forsake that which will damn you. And embrace him who will take you into his presence forever.
  • We plead that you be saved because we know it's not in our power to save you.
  • Pray for the men in the academy, for your elders, for our missionaries, for the men who've left us, cry to God that we will be men of God, men of the bent knee.
  • Ask your forgiveness that it has to be said so often of us we have not because we've asked not. Forgive us for our sinful silence in prayer.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 82 paragraphs, roughly 70 minutes.

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