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1 Peter 1:6-7

Submission to His Ways/Apprehension of Promises

layers Part 5 of 5 menu_book More on 1 Peter lightbulb 12 illustrations in this sermon

In this sermon, Pastor Martin continues his exposition of 1 Peter 1:6-7, focusing on how present trials serve as God's 'smelting furnace' for faith. He argues that trials test the depth of our believing attachment to Christ's person, the extent of our believing submission to Christ's inscrutable ways, and the reality of our believing apprehension of Christ's promises. Martin uses examples like Lazarus's sickness, Paul's thorn in the flesh, and Abraham's faith to illustrate how believers must trust God's sovereign control and promises even when circumstances are baffling or seem contradictory to His love.

Primary Texts

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1 Peter 1:6-7 This passage introduces the theme of trials as a test for faith, serving as the overarching framework for the sermon.
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Ephesians 1:19-23 This passage is expounded to establish Christ's supreme authority over all things, especially for the church, which undergirds the call to submission to His ways.
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2 Corinthians 1:20 This verse is expounded to affirm the certainty of God's promises in Christ, forming the basis for the third point on apprehending promises.

Outline 9 sections · 57 min

  1. Introduction: The Continuation of the Sermon's Theme 0:03
  2. Testing Believing Submission to the Ways of Christ 4:26
  3. Christ's Inscrutable Ways: Lessons from Lazarus and Paul 12:20
  4. The Inscrutability of God's Ways and Corporate Submission 23:47
  5. Testing Believing Apprehension of Christ's Promises 28:54
  6. Apprehending Promises for the Church's Endurance 33:53
  7. Abraham: A Model of Apprehending Promises Against Hope 40:31
  8. The Emmaus Disciples and Spurgeon's Encouragement 44:45
  9. God's Goodness in Affliction and Call to Intelligent Faith 51:26

Key Quotes

“He is testing the extent of our believing submission to the ways of Christ. Ways that are often to us for a period of time utterly baffling, confusing, disturbing, and seem to contradict the revelation of his heart to us in his word.”
“Well, who did it? God? Yes. Wicked murderers? Yes. How can you fit that together? It's not my responsibility to fit it together.”
“No we are not submitting to blind faith. But to a sovereign omnipotent wise Christ. Whose ways are above our ways. And who does all things well.”
“There cannot be resentment to the human instruments involved in the ways of Christ. There cannot be cynicism and bitterness to Christ.”
“The promises of God are little more than pious slush. Until we are thrown into a crucible where they become the handles by which we are kept from sinking into despair.”
“Brethren may I speak very frankly. I long to hear. I long to hear more promises pleaded in our prayer meeting by you my brethren. I want to hear more Bible going back to God in our prayers.”
“Our weapon is the torch of the old gospel, flashing through the breaking of our earth in vessels. To this we add the trump sound of an earnest voice. Ours is the midnight cry, behold, he cometh.”
“Some of you floated in on the fruit of all the exercise of faith of your spiritual forefathers. And God said, that's not good for you. They're like crutches and you're not developing the strength in your own mind.”

Applications

All listeners

  • Listen to the tape of this morning's message to get the full exposition of the themes.
  • Submit to the ways of Christ even when they are inscrutable, baffling, confusing, and disturbing, trusting that He knows what He is doing and has not ceased to love us.
  • Walk by faith, not by sight, seeing that Christ orders all affairs of individual believers and the church, maintaining His absolute authority.
  • Do not harbor resentment towards human instruments involved in Christ's ways, nor cynicism and bitterness towards Christ Himself, but find liberty in His sovereign control.
  • Believe, plead, and apprehend the promise that Christ will build His church and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.
  • Do not act as though Christ's promise 'I am with you always' is suspended during dark, testing, or discouraging days.
  • Plead more promises in prayer meetings and let prayers reflect the apprehension of God's promises in secret.
  • Apprehend promises like 'All power is given unto him in heaven and on earth' and 'Whatsoever things you ask in faith believing, you shall receive,' laying hold of Christ's strength for His redemptive purposes.
  • Read Hebrews 11 to see examples of people who believed God as He revealed Himself.
  • Forgive us for not searching the Scriptures more diligently, for not apprehending God's promises, for being slow of heart to believe, for walking by sight, and for dejection and despondency.
  • Pray for God to continue purifying, strengthening, and deepening faith, attachment to Jesus, conviction of His rule, and confidence in His promises.
  • Pray that unbelievers, seeing Christians respond to trials, would be saved and desire to know the 'no fair-weather God'.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 272 paragraphs, roughly 57 minutes.

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