The Urgency and Greatness of Salvation

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Therefore we ought to give the more Earnest heed to the things which we have heard, lest at any time we should let them slip. For if the word spoken by Angels were steadfast, and every transgression and Disobedience received a just recompense of reward, how shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation? [00:01:23]

The trouble with these people was that they were tending to forget the things they had heard and tending to do so to such an extent that some of them were even looking back to their old Jewish religion. And so he calls them back to this, exalting them to give them more Earnest heed to this. [00:03:23]

We invite the world to listen to us. Why do we do so? It is because we are preaching to it so great a Salvation. This is our message. That's why we should hold on to it. That is why everybody else should listen to it and receive it. Well, now let's look at this statement. [00:05:12]

The very picture which is given to us always of this salvation in the New Testament is its greatness, its Grandeur, its largess. Take the Apostle Paul, for instance, in the second chapter of his epistle to the Ephesians. Language seems almost to fail him. He talks about Grace, but he isn't content with that. [00:07:31]

The really great hymns always do the same thing. Now there are, you know, hymns and hymns. We've been singing great ones tonight, thank God for that. But all the hymns in this book and other books are not great hymns. There are sentimental ditties that were mostly composed about the middle of the last century. [00:09:07]

The object and the intention of the men who put up those magnificent edifices was this: with their great vaults and Headroom, what were they doing? They were trying to give an impression of the bigness, the exalted character, the magnificence of this great great salvation that was being preached in the building. [00:11:41]

Why is this so great a Salvation? Here's the first answer: it is something that has been produced by the Blessed Holy Trinity. That's why you and I should hold on to it. That's why we should ask the whole world to listen to it. Look at the world in its terrible trouble. [00:20:54]

How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation? You measure the greatness of the Salvation by measuring the greatness of the Calamity from which it saves us. Now, we are familiar with calamities these days, are we not? But these are nothing compared with the Calamity that faces the soul that doesn't accept and believe this gospel. [00:23:21]

This is a great salvation not only because of the greatness of what it saves us from. It seems to be still greater when you notice what it saves you to, what it saves you for, not only what it rescues you from, but that to which it brings you and that to which it gives you. [00:29:58]

Having reconciled us to God and having given us pardon and forgiveness of our sins, it then goes on, you know, to do something which is almost incredible. It actually makes us children of God. We are not merely introduced to God and enable to speak to him. God adopts us into his family. [00:34:44]

The greatest thing of all is the thing that he describes in verses 5 to 8. Listen: For unto the Angels hath he not put in subjection the world to come, whereof we speak. And then he goes on to quote the eth psalm. Now, this is an unfortunate translation here in the King James version. [00:39:20]

If you really want to know its greatness, you've got to understand the way in which it has ever been made possible for us, how it's ever come into being. And this is the thing that this man elaborates. The point of the whole epistle, in the sense, is just to do this: to show us the preeminence of the Lord Jesus Christ. [00:43:24]

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