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Ep. 2:5-10

What Constitutes a Man a Christian?

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Preaching from Ephesians 2:1-10, Martin presses the question that exposes widespread confusion: what actually makes a person a Christian? He begins by establishing that misconceptions about Christianity are always rooted in prior misconceptions about sin -- the before picture of spiritual death, bondage to Satan, and divine wrath must be grasped before the after picture makes sense. The body of the sermon traces three dominant strands in Paul's answer to how God transforms dead sinners into living saints: Jesus Christ must be central (not the church, sacraments, or human decision), the biblical concept of grace must be dominant (kindness to the undeserving, pointing wholly to the giver), and the transformation must be experimentally real and radically pervasive -- a new creation from the inside out, not a surface adjustment. Martin applies each strand with sharp diagnostic questions and vivid contemporary illustrations -- including the Unification Church, Herbert W. Armstrong, secular life-change stories, and a personal testimony of grace in worship -- pressing every listener to examine whether their own experience fits the biblical pattern.

Primary Texts

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Ephesians 2:1-10 The entire sermon is an expository survey of this passage, treating it as one of Scripture's clearest and most comprehensive answers to what it means to be saved and what constitutes a person a Christian.

Outline 9 sections · 50 min

  1. Introduction: The Question and the Text 0:02
  2. The 'Before' Picture: Sin, Bondage, and Wrath 4:22
  3. Review: God's Authorship and Motive 6:36
  4. Overview: Three Strands Before the Detail 8:37
  5. First Strand: Jesus Christ Is Central 10:23
  6. Application: Testing All by the Centrality of Christ 20:36
  7. Second Strand: Grace Is Dominant 28:20
  8. Third Strand: Experimentally Real and Radically Pervasive 38:41
  9. Conclusion: Three Diagnostic Questions and Final Appeal 46:05

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.”
“He's had a life-transforming experience but it had nothing to do with Jesus Christ.”
“the biblical notion of grace well it is kindness to the undeserving it is blessing upon the non-qualified and the whole thrust of the biblical notion of grace is simply this it points away from the recipient to the giver”
“I must not think of faith as something I present to God that triggers the whole process no I must think of it as something that flows from God in the process of saving me and there's all the difference in the world”
“we must never think of the transformation of grace as a surface transformation we must never think of it in terms of a mere juggling of the legal records of heaven”
“don't be content with a so-called christian experience to which jesus christ is merely peripheral and the sacraments or the church or your own activity are central if he's not central you have reason to question if it's true christian experience”
“this is our only message and God giving us strength we shall never change it that 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”

Applications

All listeners

  • Before you can accurately assess whether someone is a Christian, you must first reckon seriously with what the Bible says a sinner is -- spiritually dead, enslaved to Satan, and under divine wrath. Shallow views of sin produce shallow views of salvation.
  • Apply the Christ-centrality test to your own experience: is Jesus the Christ -- God-man, anointed prophet, priest, and king, who died, rose, and ascended -- actually central in what you call your Christian life, or is something else (the church, a sacrament, your own decision) occupying that central place?
  • When evaluating any preacher, teacher, or religious system, apply the acid test: what place is given to Jesus Christ? Not just the name of Jesus, but the full biblical person -- his deity, humanity, atoning death, resurrection, and ascension.
  • If you are an unbeliever under divine wrath, your only hope is not to reach within yourself for something -- it is to look to Jesus the Christ who in his measureless grace receives the vilest of sinners, cleanses them, liberates them, and makes them his own.
  • Examine how you think about your own faith. If you conceive of faith as your contribution that triggers God's saving response, your understanding of grace is defective. Faith must be understood as something that flows from God in the very process of saving you.
  • When a Jehovah's Witness or any other door-to-door religious canvasser comes to your home, disrupt their prepared presentation and do genuine evangelism by asking one question: 'What place does the grace of God have in all you want to teach me?'
  • Do not settle for a Christianity that merely adjusts a few outward behaviors or secures your eternal destiny while leaving you essentially unchanged. The new creation is not a few new activities tacked onto the old thing; it is new from the inside out -- a new wellspring of hope, desire, and longing.
  • Evaluate every ministry you support or attend by whether it sets forth the biblical Christ or merely promotes a preacher's name and face. Sinners are transformed by encounter with Christ, not with celebrity preachers.
  • Ask yourself whether grace is genuinely dominant in your Christian experience -- not just intellectually affirmed, but felt as the living wonder that you who were once dead are now alive, that what was once drudgery is now delight.
  • Is your transformation sixteen ounces to the pound -- experimentally real, radical, pervasive? Is there any reason to call you a new creature, not just a person with some new activities but someone with a new heart?

A full transcript is available on the tab. 69 paragraphs, roughly 50 minutes.

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