Transformative Power of the Gospel in Daily Living

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The Apostle here in these words continues the series of particular and special injunctions which we have seen he is giving to these Ephesian Christians. He's illustrating what he meant when he said that now because they have been born again, they must put off the old men and put on the new men. [00:50:55]

What we believe, what has happened to us, has got to be thought out, worked out, and carried out. We are not just to sit down admiring Doctrine; we are to put it into practice. And if we fail to put it into practice, the doctrine is of no value to us. [00:01:46]

The Gospel of Jesus Christ is not for good people; it's for Sinners. It was while we were yet sinners and without strength Christ died for us. It is for people who are guilty of all those terrible horrible things I've just been reading to you in that list in 1 Corinthians 6. [00:06:11]

The Gospel I say saves from all kinds of sins, yes, but it is important that we should observe the way in which it does so. Now here we have an injunction that has often surprised many people. They say, are you telling us that the Apostle rarely has to tell a number of Christian people that they must give up stealing? [00:07:30]

In regeneration, a man is delivered completely from certain particular sins without making any effort at all, but that isn't a universal rule. Men can be equally truly regenerate and still need this instruction and still find a certain element of struggle in his life. [00:11:01]

Stealing rarely means taking possession of and using as your own something that does not belong to you, appropriating something that isn't yours to serve your own ends and your own gratification. So you see, it applies to many things besides actual material things. [00:16:29]

Stealing is rarely, is it not, the desire to have without effort? That's the peculiar thing about it, isn't it? It is the self and the desire that self may possess and have, but yes, there is this additional factor: it is the desire to have without putting any effort into it. [00:26:25]

The moment you begin to regard work as something degrading, you're on the slippery slope. The moment you fail to see the Dignity of work and the essential rightness of work, the moment you begin to think in terms of having rather than truly and honestly obtaining, I say you're beginning to open the door that will lead to some form of dishonesty. [00:28:40]

The Apostle tells us to work and to labor with our hands, and it may be, my friends, that you and I as Christians in a generation such as this perhaps to teach people this above everything else and so testify to Christ and to his grace. [00:38:50]

Work because work's a good thing. If you make money, yet it will then hold it as a custodian and give to those who are in need in any shape or form or any good that you can do. It is more blessed to give than to receive, says the Lord Jesus Christ. [00:42:25]

Ye know the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, how that though he was rich, for our sakes he became poor. He not only didn't steal that which didn't belong to him, he didn't even hold on to that which was his. The richness of Christ, the Everlasting, how he was so rich yet for our sakes he became poor. [00:44:27]

Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus. You see, moral teaching simply stops at saying don't steal, don't steal, don't touch it. That's morality, but it stops there. And oh, what a poor thing morality is. This is Christianity: labor working with your own hands that which is good that you may have to give to others. [00:46:02]

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