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Romans 1:16-18

Importance; Context

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Pastor Albert N. Martin introduces a three-part series on justification by faith, focusing this first sermon on its importance and biblical context. He argues that a clear understanding of justification is crucial for God's glory and the good of all people, both unconverted and converted. Martin emphasizes that justification must be understood within the broader context of God's holy and just character, man's fallen and accountable state, and God's ultimate redemptive purpose to conform His elect to the image of Christ, drawing heavily from Romans 1-8 and the Westminster Larger Catechism.

Primary Texts

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Romans 1:16-18 Introduces the gospel as the power of God revealing His righteousness, immediately followed by the revelation of God's wrath, setting the stage for the need for justification.
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Romans 8:28-30 Expounded to show God's ultimate redemptive purpose of conforming believers to Christ's image, placing justification within this broader teleological framework.

Outline 10 sections · 59 min

  1. Introduction to the Doctrine of Justification 0:01
  2. Purpose and Audience of the Lecture Sermons 1:21
  3. The Importance of Justification: To God's Glory 3:51
  4. The Importance of Justification: To the Good of Men (Unconverted) 13:37
  5. The Importance of Justification: To the Good of Men (Converted) 20:22
  6. Justification as a Central Principle of Reformation Theology 27:48
  7. The Context of Justification: God's Character and Position 31:37
  8. The Context of Justification: Man's Character and Position 42:18
  9. The Context of Justification: God's Ultimate Intention in Salvation 50:36
  10. Recapitulation and Conclusion 56:40

Key Quotes

“It was Luther who first said, that this doctrine is the article of the standing or the falling church. If you want to know where a church is in relationship to spiritual health and life, you examine the understanding and the experimental acquaintance with the doctrine of justification by faith.”
“Now nowhere, nowhere is the delicate balance of all the divine perfections operating in perfect harmony more fully displayed and more gloriously demonstrated than in the gospel method of declaring sinners righteous.”
“In our very legitimate reaction against easy believism and cheap grace, I fear there may be in some of us as Reformed Baptists, the leaven, the leaven of a works right, the righteousness that is acting like termites at the foundation of this biblical doctrine, God justifieth the ungodly who believes on His dear Son.”
“If you're never accused of preaching the gospel in such a way as to give people the impression that they can go out and live like the devil, I wonder if you're really preaching the gospel that Paul preached.”
“And then he goes on to say that this doctrine is like Atlas, and upon the shoulders of this doctrine rests the whole Christian system. And if Atlas falls, all falls with him.”
“Let me take you by the hand and bring you before the burning throne of infinite holiness. The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodly. Because Paul begins there, wise is the man, the woman, who would understand the doctrine who begins where he began.”
“Until men know themselves better, they will care very little to know Christ at all.”
“This being true, God never justifies a man without bringing him under the power of and within the orbit of all the other facets of his saving work, all of which have as their goal likeness to Christ.”

Applications

All listeners

  • Be better equipped to go back to your own people and have this doctrine spelled out not only explicitly, perhaps in a series of messages on the doctrine of justification, but when in the regular course of expounding, the word of God, you come to any strand of truth that touches this doctrine, you will be able, as a result of our time together, to speak forth the truth of God in this area with greater precision and with greater unction of the Holy Spirit.
  • Unless you have distinct and biblical views upon this subject, unless you can articulate those views to your people, you are in some measure robbing God of glory that is due him in this doctrine that is the heart of the gospel of free grace.
  • If you would give God the glory due his name, don't be content with dim, vague, and indistinct views of justification.
  • If there's a lack of zeal and holy joy and sacrificial service in our own lives and in that of our people, could it be that part of the answer may be found right here? That this doctrine is not being preached with sufficient clarity and biblical power to our people?
  • Do not tamper with the freeness of justification, or with the fact that it is by faith that we are justified. Nowhere is it said we're justified by faith plus surrender, or faith plus our devotion.
  • Let us cry to God for a renewed sense of the depth of our apostasy from God, a renewed sense of the awfulness of guilt, the glory and majesty of God's holiness and justice, so that this truth... may come with freshness and unction and power upon our own sin-smitten hearts.
  • Whenever we preach the doctrine of justification, whenever we think of it, let us never rinse it loose from that larger context [of God's ultimate intention to conform us to Christ].

A full transcript is available on the tab. 122 paragraphs, roughly 59 minutes.

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