NHPBC Sermons
You can spend your whole life staring in the rearview mirror or living on promises about “someday.” Titus 2:11-15 pulls us back to something sturdier: what God has already done in Jesus Christ and what He will do when Christ appears again in glory. That past grace and future hope are not abstract doctrines for a shelf. They are fuel for the present, especially when obedience feels ordinary, slow, and costly. We walk through how the grace of God “appeared” in the incarnation, why grace is more than leniency, and how salvation reaches all kinds of people across every background and season of life. Then we slow down on verse 14: Jesus gives Himself to redeem us from lawlessness and to cleanse us, making us a people who belong to Him. Redemption means we are bought back. Cleansing means grace goes beyond forgiveness and actually washes what sin has stained. The conversation turns practical with what Titus calls the training power of grace. Grace does not excuse worldliness; it teaches us to say no to ungodliness and yes to a sensible, righteous, godly life right now. If you care about Christian sanctification, good works, and what godliness truly looks like in daily decisions, this message lays out a clear gospel order: not saved by good works, but saved for good works. If this encouraged you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it. What is one “no” you need grace to help you say this week, and what is one “yes” you want to practice?
208 episodios
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