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Acts 2:36

Kingship of Christ in The Acts, Part 2

layers Part 13 of 21 menu_book More on Acts lightbulb 2 illustrations in this sermon

Pastor Martin continues his series on the Kingship of Christ, focusing on its centrality in the Book of Acts. He demonstrates that apostolic preaching consistently proclaimed Jesus as the enthroned Messiah, Lord of all, who grants repentance and remission of sins from His position of sovereign rule. Martin argues that any preaching omitting or denying Christ's present kingship is a serious error or 'another gospel,' leading to deceived converts. The sermon concludes with a direct challenge to the unconverted: to bow before Christ's throne in repentance and faith, embracing His scepter as gladly owned Lord and Master, or face His judgment.

Primary Texts

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Acts 2:36 The climactic statement of Peter's Pentecost sermon, declaring Jesus as both Lord and Christ, setting the tone for apostolic preaching.
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Acts 17:1-3 Describes Paul's customary evangelistic pattern, emphasizing proving Christ's suffering, resurrection, and identity as Messiah from the Scriptures.
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Acts 20:21 Paul's summary of his ministry, stating his consistent message to Jews and Greeks was 'repentance toward God and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ,' which he equates with the 'gospel of the grace of God' and 'preaching the kingdom'.

Outline 11 sections · 56 min

  1. Introduction: The Kingship of Christ in Salvation 0:03
  2. The Language of Apostolic Preaching: Christ and Lord 3:20
  3. Kingship at the Threshold and Conclusion of Acts 5:17
  4. Christ's Exaltation as Prince and Savior (Acts 5) 7:12
  5. Proclaiming the Christ and the Kingdom to Samaritans (Acts 8) 10:05
  6. Jesus, Lord of All, to the Gentiles (Acts 10) 15:00
  7. The Davidic Covenant and Christ's Throne (Acts 13) 23:34
  8. Paul's Customary Preaching: Suffering, Resurrection, and Kingship (Acts 17) 30:10
  9. The Unified Gospel: Repentance, Grace, and Kingdom (Acts 20) 34:20
  10. Three Conclusions on Apostolic Preaching 41:01
  11. Is Jesus Christ Your Gladly Owned Lord and Master? 48:13

Key Quotes

“It is an answer that comes to us from the Old and the New Testaments, that the Savior of sinners is truly God. As much God as though he were never man, the Savior of sinners is truly man. As much man as though he were never God. And yet this glorious Savior who is God and man is but one person in two natures forever.”
“And I would underscore again that the emphasis that we are finding in the Word of God is that his kingship is not to be understood primarily in terms of some future activities of the Redeemer, but to be understood. It is to be understood as the role, the office within which the Redeemer saves his people.”
“It is sheer biblical and theological rubbish.”
“All preaching which omits this note of an enthroned Savior is guilty of serious and crippling error.”
“The Christian church in America and around the world is full of deceived people who think they are under the saving mercies of Christ who are as lost as the devil because they have never reckoned with the throne.”
“All teaching which deliberately denies this note is another gospel.”
“A Christian is someone who believingly embraces the word of Christ. He trustingly embraces the cross of Christ and he lovingly and without reservation embraces the scepter of Christ.”
“And hell is basically the place to which God consigns those who would rob him of his throne rights.”

Applications

The unconverted

  • If you are ever to find forgiveness and mercy, it will be at the footstool of a throne. You either bow in repentance before that throne or you will be crushed by the scepter of judgment.
  • You're determined that you're going to sit on the throne and do your own thing. And the problem is you still want to go to heaven when you die. You want to sit on the throne while you live and still go to heaven when you die. Can't do it.
  • Until Jesus Christ does [occupy the throne of your heart], you ought to be filled with holy dread and terror because that scepter which so sweetly and lovingly governs his saints is the rod of iron with which he'll break every impenitent sinner.
  • Kiss the sun. Abdicate your throne. Bow before him. Embrace his scepter.
  • What but the moral insanity of sin would keep any sinner in this place this morning from hugging his chains... when Christ says come and I'll break your chain. Put heaven in your heart now and then take you to heaven with me hereafter. All for free.
  • Oh embrace this wonderful savior as your prophet, your priest, and your king.

All listeners

  • Is Jesus Christ your gladly owned Lord and Master? Do you lovingly embrace his scepter as well as trustingly embrace his cross and believingly embrace his word?
  • Either he reigns or sin reigns. If he reigns, then he reigns with power and he has broken the chains of sin. If sin reigns, you're the slave of sin.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 117 paragraphs, roughly 56 minutes.

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