Hallelujah. Let’s turn to the book of Romans. We want to pick up where we’ve been in our study concerning the grace of God. How many of you are thankful for that grace today? Do you realize that’s what got you through the day? Amen. Without it you wouldn’t be here tonight. We’ve been talking about the different aspects of the grace of God, how it manifests itself in our lives. We mentioned, of course, that this grace is understood from the two primary perspectives. We realize that grace, as it relates to our justification, is the unmerited favor of God—while we were sinners He loved us and died for us. Amen? That declaration of us being righteous because of God’s mercy, because of the free gift of the redemptive work of Jesus, we understand that that grace has affected us and, as we’ll see as we survey a couple of the Scriptures again tonight, that it has nothing to do with our ability.
Look at Romans, the 3rd chapter, verse 20: “Therefore by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified…” Amen? You can’t do anything in response to the law of God—[not] the ceremonial laws of man or the laws that we’ve established throughout history, not only from the time of the Judaizer but also into our twentieth-century little dos and don’ts lists—that can cause you to be holy before God. There’s not anything you can do in the natural man that’ll make you holy before God. We saw over in the 24th verse it says we were justified (or pronounced righteous) how? “…freely [How? Say it with me.] by his grace…” Say it again: “by his grace.” Okay, it was done freely by the grace of God, and no man, then, by the deeds of the law can be justified before God...
The Goodness of Grace, Part 5
January 6, 1993 • Pastor Star R. Scott
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The Goodness of Grace