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Luke 18:9-14

Justification, Part 6

layers Part 10 of 13 menu_book More on Luke lightbulb 5 illustrations in this sermon

Pastor Martin continues his series on justification, focusing on Luke 18:9-14, the parable of the Pharisee and the Publican. This sermon, 'Justification, Part 6,' expounds on the instrumental means of justification: faith alone. Martin explains why faith is the sole instrument, emphasizing its receptive nature and its role in uniting believers to Christ. He then outlines four crucial qualifications for understanding justifying faith: it is by faith alone, yet never alone; it is exercised in time, not from eternity; and it is effective whether weak or strong. The sermon concludes with a pastoral call to self-examination regarding the nature of one's faith.

Primary Texts

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Luke 18:9-14 This parable of the Pharisee and the Publican is the overarching text for the entire sermon series on justification, providing the context for the Publican's justification.
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Romans 1:16-17 This passage sets forth the theme of the book of Romans, emphasizing the gospel as the power of God for salvation to all who believe, revealing God's righteousness from faith to faith.
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Ephesians 2:8-10 This passage is a classic text defining salvation by grace through faith, clarifying that faith is a gift of God and that good works are the result, not the cause, of salvation.

Outline 10 sections · 63 min

  1. Introduction: The Fundamental Question and the Parable's Answer 0:04
  2. Review of Justification's Components (Parts 1-6) 4:45
  3. Justification by Faith Alone: The Instrumental Means 12:23
  4. Biblical Ground for Justification by Faith Alone 14:56
  5. Why Faith Alone? Its Receptive Nature and Union with Christ 23:23
  6. Principle 1: Faith Alone Appropriates Christ's Righteousness 35:09
  7. Principle 2: Justifying Faith is Never Alone 41:48
  8. Principle 3: Faith Exercised in Time, Not from Eternity 47:55
  9. Principle 4: Faith is Effective Whether Weak or Strong 54:17
  10. Conclusion: Self-Examination on the Nature of Faith 60:37

Key Quotes

“Our Lord is setting before us two specimen men who are a picture of all men who would be concerned about the issue, how can I find acceptance with God?”
“So then when the scripture says we are justified by faith it does not mean that there is something in the faith which justifies us. It is simply the means by which we come.”
“Well you see the simple answer is that faith is the only grace which is totally receptive.”
“God embraces us in electing and renewing love we embrace him in faith and it's when there's that responsive embrace of the sinner already embraced in God's electing love and in his renewing love it's when the sinner having had that response elicited from him in the effectual call of God voluntarily embraces the Lord Jesus that union with Christ is effected in time and space”
“And that little word alone, that little word alone, was the whole basic difference between the teaching of Rome that held men in bondage for centuries and the liberating message that God brought once again into the life stream of his church at the time of the Reformation.”
“It is by faith alone that we are, that we appropriate the righteousness of Christ, but it is by a faith which is never alone that we appropriate Christ and His righteousness.”
“As you sit here tonight and you do not believe on the Lord Jesus Christ with a true and a living faith, you're under the wrath and the condemnation of God.”
“Stop looking at the strength of your hand and look at the object of your faith.”

Applications

All listeners

  • If you do not believe on the Lord Jesus Christ with a true and living faith, you are under the wrath and condemnation of God.
  • Rejoice that your salvation is not by accident but by God's eternal purpose, humbling you in the dust that it is all of grace.
  • Be simple-hearted believers, willing to leave the unresolved implications of logic to God's infinite wisdom, rather than drawing inferences that move you away from clear Christian duty.
  • Resist the temptation for logical consistencies that lead to conclusions contrary to clear biblical teaching, just as you would resist a sinful impulse.
  • If troubled by the weakness of your faith, stop looking at the strength of your hand and look at the object of your faith: the Lord Jesus Christ.
  • Examine yourself: Do you believe on the Lord Jesus Christ with faith alone, like the Publican, acknowledging your sin and His righteousness?
  • Examine yourself: Is your faith a living faith, producing humility, repentance, obedience, and holiness in your life, or is it a dead faith?
  • If your faith is alone (not producing good works), jettison it tonight and cry to God to work in you that faith which is unto salvation.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 159 paragraphs, roughly 63 minutes.

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