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Mark 13:1-37

Gleanings from the Olivet Discourse, Part 1

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In "Gleanings from the Olivet Discourse, Part 1," Pastor Albert N. Martin returns to Mark 13, having previously expounded it verse-by-verse, to extract two crucial pastoral applications. First, he argues that despite all disruptive events—false teaching, wars, natural calamities, persecution, and apostasy—the church must never be moved from the primacy of preaching the gospel of Christ's atoning blood to the ends of the earth. Second, he provides immense comfort and confidence from the doctrine of election, asserting that whatever distressing events occur, all of God's elect will be effectually called, sovereignly kept, and ultimately glorified at Christ's second coming, a truth that both consoled Christ and empowers His servants.

Primary Texts

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Mark 13:1-37 The sermon is a 'gleaning' from a prior verse-by-verse exposition of the entire Olivet Discourse, extracting overarching themes and applications.
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Mark 13:10 This verse is central to the first 'gleaning,' emphasizing the primacy of gospel proclamation despite all disruptions.
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Mark 13:20, 22, 27 These verses, using the term 'elect' three times, form the core of the second 'gleaning,' highlighting God's preservation, keeping, and glorification of His chosen people.

Outline 9 sections · 67 min

  1. Introduction: Returning to Mark 13 for 'Gleanings' 0:03
  2. Review of Mark 13's Structure and Content 5:50
  3. Gleaning 1: The Primacy of Gospel Preaching Amidst Disruption 14:18
  4. Application of Gleaning 1: Don't Be Paralyzed, Intimidated, or Diverted 23:51
  5. Gleaning 2: The Security of God's Elect 39:54
  6. Elaboration on the Preservation of the Elect in Mark 13 45:17
  7. Application of Gleaning 2: Consolation, Comfort, and Confidence 51:22
  8. Application of Gleaning 2: Constraint for the Unconverted 60:34
  9. Conclusion and Prayer 63:57

Key Quotes

“I desired that we should grasp the basic structure and major thrust of the chapter, since this whole subject of the Olivet Discourse and the issues of the Second Coming have been made issues of such confusion in our day.”
“I'm not up here earning a living. I want you to get hold of the Word of God and have the Word of God get hold of you.”
“Whatever disruptive events occur in the world, we must never be moved from the primacy of preaching the gospel to the ends of the earth. Or more simply stated, come what may, preach Christ.”
“Answer to the problem of human sin and alienation from God. Resolved in the distinctive redemptive. Acts of Jesus Christ. Concentrated in his cross. And his throne.”
“Whatever distressing events may come to the world or our country in general or to the people of God in particular all of God's elect will be called kept and glorified. At the second coming.”
“Dear people the doctrine of election is not sunk. The kind of foreboding meaty evil horrible thing that's been imported by dusty musty narrow hearted theologians.”
“And because you are chosen of my father there is nothing that will keep you from being brought home safely at last into the father's presence. Do not be afraid.”
“Oh my unconverted friend the doctrine of election is no barrier to your salvation. It is the very framework of him treating you to go to Christ. Go to Christ as you are.”

Applications

Believers

  • Commit as a church to the proclamation of the gospel to the ends of the earth, no matter the cost.

The unconverted

  • Recognize that your preservation of life and exposure to the gospel are grounds for constraint, urging you to go to Christ as you are, for election is not a barrier but a framework for God's gracious call.

All listeners

  • Grasp the basic outline of Mark 13 to avoid being vulnerable to deception regarding eschatological issues.
  • Don't be paralyzed into non-activity by fear of events around us (e.g., militant Islam, Roman Catholicism, political shifts).
  • Don't be intimidated into silence by suffering and opposition, but be willing to go to the stake for Christ.
  • Don't be diverted into secondary issues (e.g., political activism, ecumenical movements that compromise the gospel) from the primacy of gospel proclamation.
  • Draw comfort from the doctrine of election amidst disruption and uncertainty, knowing that nothing will keep God's chosen from being brought home safely.
  • Find confidence in ministry from the doctrine of election, knowing that earthquakes, wars, famines, opposition, and martyrdom cannot frustrate Christ's purpose to call, keep, and glorify his elect.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 184 paragraphs, roughly 67 minutes.

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