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Ep. 2:5-10

What Constitutes a Man a Christian?

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Pastor Albert N. Martin expounds Ephesians 2:1-10, addressing the question, "What Constitutes a Man a Christian?" He argues that true Christian transformation is authored by God, motivated by His rich mercy and great love, and effected through a method where Jesus Christ is central, God's grace is dominant, and the transformation itself is an experimental, radical, and pervasive reality. Martin challenges listeners to examine their own professed Christian experience against these three touchstones, warning against superficial or human-centered understandings of salvation.

Primary Texts

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Ephesians 2:1-10 This entire passage is the foundation for the sermon, contrasting humanity's natural state with the transformative work of God's grace in Christ.

Outline 9 sections · 50 min

  1. Introduction: The Confusion Surrounding 'What Constitutes a Christian?' 0:03
  2. Review: Man's Natural Condition and God's Initiative 4:22
  3. The Method of Transformation: Three Major Strands 7:46
  4. Strand 1: Jesus Christ is Central in the Transformation 10:03
  5. Application: The Acid Test of Christ's Centrality 20:05
  6. Strand 2: The Biblical Concept of Grace is Dominant 28:11
  7. Application: The Uniqueness of Grace in Christianity 33:23
  8. Strand 3: The Experimental and Radical Nature of Transformation 38:22
  9. Conclusion: Three Questions for Self-Examination 44:24

Key Quotes

“And most of the misconceptions with relationship to that question, what is a Christian, are rooted in misconceptions of a previous question, namely, what is a sinner?”
“we are not thinking biblically unless Jesus Christ is central in all of our conceptions concerning that work of transformation.”
“That Jesus, that Jesus who is the Christ, the anointed prophet, priest and king whose word is law, whose word is final, whose sacrifice is complete, whose intercession is all prevailing, whose kingship is all-embracing. That's the question you ask. What place is given to Jesus Christ?”
“And the whole thrust of the biblical notion of grace that is why grace is always set in opposition to merit and to works Romans 4 is if it is of works Paul says it is no more of grace why because if what God gives is conditioned by what man does then the reason for the gift is in the man the focus is on the man and whenever the focus is on the man it is a matter of debt God just gives the man what he has worked for and it is no more of grace you cannot think grace parallel to equal to standing alongside of anything that the sinner can perform that is why the apostle Paul described him as dead if dead people get life they didn't cooperate if sick people get well they may have cooperated in the process of healing if the dead man are giving medicine will bring life that is why he says you must think of grace you must put the attention upon the donor not upon the recipient grace is always contrasted with works grace is always contrasted with human works human merit human performance”
“In all the religions of the world, it is the creature who by his performance and attainments in one way or another brings himself into the favor of the deity. Whereas the pervasive emphasis of the word of God is that it is the offended God himself who removes every obstacle in his way. His own character and then in the sinner to bring the sinner into his favor purely by grace.”
“It is not merely changing a man's ultimate destiny and here and now redirecting a few of the grosser forms of his sinful patterns. I'm sad to say that's the average concept of the transformation of grace.”
“And my third question is, is your experience 16 ounces to the pound biblical? Has it been radical, experimental, pervasive?”

Applications

All listeners

  • Don't be deceived by life-changing experiences outside biblical Christianity; they are not the same as transformation centered in Jesus Christ.
  • Apply the acid test to your own so-called experience of transformation and to all teaching and preaching: What place does Jesus Christ (the historic God-man, anointed Prophet, Priest, and King) have in it?
  • If Jesus Christ is central in the transformation wrought in your heart, then feed upon Him, love Him, serve Him, and pray to live to His praise.
  • Your only hope is Jesus the Christ; look to Him who receives the vilest of sinners and cleanses them.
  • When listening to preaching, ask yourself: What place does grace have in it all? Is it dominant, or merely a cover-up for human works?
  • Your hope is to be found in the fact that God is a gracious God; if you are ever to be saved, it will be by grace and grace alone.
  • What place does grace have as you profess to be transformed by the gospel and by God? Is grace dominant?
  • When a peddler of religious thoughts comes to your door, ask them: 'What place does the grace of God have?'
  • Pity those who know nothing of grace (like Jehovah's Witnesses) and seek by God's grace to show them the glories of sovereign mercy.
  • Don't be content with a so-called Christian experience where Jesus Christ is peripheral and sacraments, church, or your own activity are central. If He's not central, question if it's true Christian experience.
  • Constantly evaluate all things central to you and all ministries by the touchstone of Christ's centrality, not just mouthing His name, but setting forth His biblical person and work.
  • Do you self-consciously bask in the wonder that God conferred grace upon you instead of justice?
  • Is your experience '16 ounces to the pound biblical'? Has it been radical, experimental, and pervasive, resulting in a new heart and a new creation?
  • Your only hope is Christ, your only hope is grace, and when Christ operates in grace, you'll know it because you'll be a new man in Him.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 123 paragraphs, roughly 50 minutes.

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