Skip to content

Revelation 14:12

A Christian: Keeps the Commandments of God

layers Part 1 of 2 menu_book More on Revelation lightbulb 7 illustrations in this sermon

Pastor Martin expounds on Revelation 12:17 and 14:12 to define what a Christian is, focusing on the mark of keeping God's commandments. He argues that true obedience is evangelical in motive (love), universal in scope (respecting all commandments), purposeful in nature (aiming for perfection), persevering in the face of opposition, and empowered by God. The sermon applies these truths by urging listeners to self-examination, distinguishing genuine Christian obedience from legalism or hypocrisy, and encouraging believers to embrace God's grace in their pursuit of holiness.

Primary Texts

menu_book
Revelation 14:12 This verse is the central text, defining a Christian as one who keeps the commandments of God and holds to the faith of Jesus.
menu_book
Revelation 12:17 This verse is presented alongside Revelation 14:12, describing the seed of the woman as those who keep God's commandments and hold the testimony of Jesus.

Outline 20 sections · 49 min

  1. Defining a Christian: Not How, But What 0:02
  2. The Christian as God's Marvelous Workmanship 0:45
  3. The Core Definition: Keeping Commandments and Holding Testimony 2:10
  4. Objective Belief and Subjective Evidence 4:36
  5. The Indispensable Nature of Both Marks 5:47
  6. Defining 'Keep' and 'Commandments of God' 7:34
  7. The Indispensable Characteristic of Obedience 12:32
  8. Scriptural Witness to Obedience 13:55
  9. The Weight of the Phrase and the Danger of Qualification 15:15
  10. The Basis of Obedience: Evangelical, Not Legal 16:27
  11. The Spirit of Obedience: Filial and Joyful 20:21
  12. The Extent of Obedience: Universal, Not Partial 22:50
  13. The Mark of the Hypocrite: 'No Man's Land' 23:47
  14. The Nature of Obedience: Purposeful, Though Not Perfect 28:22
  15. The Purposeful Intent and Its Conflict 33:03
  16. Conscious Refraining and Commitment 35:24
  17. The Nature of Obedience: Persevering, Not Accommodating 39:29
  18. The Power of Obedience: Divine Enablement 42:48
  19. Distinguishing True Obedience from Hypocrisy 45:26
  20. Final Exhortation and Application 47:49

Key Quotes

“A Christian is someone who keeps the commandments of God and who holds to the faith of Jesus.”
“Two words need definition, keep and the commands of God.”
“All of the seed of the woman are described here as those who keep his commandments. All of the saints are described as those who keep the commandments of God.”
“What I mean by legal, is this, an obedience that is rooted in fear alone or merely has the hope of reward is legal obedience.”
“No evangelical obedience, the motives for this obedience spoken of by John in the book of the Revelation, has love as its subsoil.”
“The mark of the hypocrite is that he has marked out certain areas and said, no man's land as far as God's commandments are concerned.”
“He could say, I do always, and the child of God says, I would always do.”
“No hypocrite can ever render this kind of obedience.”

Applications

All listeners

  • Examine yourself: Do you fit the description of a Christian who keeps God's commandments and holds to the testimony of Jesus?
  • Do not claim to be a Christian if your life is not characterized by careful attention to, guarding, and firm holding of God's revealed will.
  • Do not qualify the meaning of 'keep' God's commandments in such a way that it negates the command itself.
  • Ask yourself if your obedience to God is marked by love, a filial spirit, and joy, rather than fear or mere duty.
  • Identify and surrender any 'area of no man's land' in your life where God's commandments do not impinge upon your desires or thinking.
  • If you do not obey the Lord perfectly, but say so without sorrow, you have no grounds to claim you are a Christian.
  • Make conscious attempts to apply God's precepts heard in sermons to your life and relationships.
  • Confirm your commitment to doing God's will in every area of life, vowing before God that this is your purpose.
  • Recognize that true obedience risks death and personal loss rather than deviating from God's precepts.
  • Acknowledge God's power and enablement in your obedience, thanking Him rather than congratulating yourself on your own effort.
  • Understand that the specific kind of obedience described (evangelical, universal, purposeful, persevering, divinely empowered) cannot be rendered by a hypocrite.
  • If your heart does not agree with the Word of God, it is not to be trusted as a basis for claiming Christianity.
  • If you exhibit aspects of true obedience, bless God for His work and rejoice that He will complete it.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 116 paragraphs, roughly 49 minutes.

More from the archive