Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life - Confident in Hope

Episode Date: April 24, 2026

Trouble will come. And because we’re going to have trouble, Jesus says he wants to give us something so that our hearts are not troubled by the trouble. John 14 begins and ends with Jesus saying, �...�I don’t want you to be troubled.” So what is it that Jesus does to give us confidence and strength to face life as it is?  The first thing Jesus gives us to help us deal with the troubles of life is the knowledge of a real home for us. Jesus tells us 1) there’s a real home he’s preparing for us, 2) it’s in heaven, and 3) the road to it is through hell. This sermon was preached by Dr. Timothy Keller at Redeemer Presbyterian Church on January 8, 2017. Series: Jesus, Mission, and Glory: New Confidence. Scripture: John 14:1-3. Today's podcast is brought to you by Gospel in Life, the site for all sermons, books, study guides and resources from Timothy Keller and Redeemer Presbyterian Church. If you've enjoyed listening to this podcast and would like to support the ongoing efforts of this ministry, you can do so by visiting https://gospelinlife.com/give and making a one-time or recurring donation.

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Starting point is 00:00:01 Welcome to Gospel in Life. What keeps your faith from unraveling when trouble comes your way? On the night before his crucifixion, Jesus told his disciples to not let their hearts be afraid. Today, Tim Keller shows us how Jesus offers a new kind of confidence that is rooted in something far more secure than our circumstances. John chapter 14 verses 1 through 3. Do not let your hearts be troubled. You believe in God, believe also in me. My father's house has many rooms.
Starting point is 00:00:45 If that were not so, would I have told you that I'm going there to prepare a place for you? And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come back and take you to be with me that you also may be where I am. This is the word of the Lord. Now, Christians want to represent Jesus Christ to the world and Redeemer people. We want to represent Jesus Christ, their city. And on the night before Jesus died, he gave his disciples this long, intensive training session. John chapter 13 to 17 is the longest piece of teaching we have in the Bible from Jesus.
Starting point is 00:01:31 And that's exactly what he was doing. He was getting them ready to represent him in the world, and that's why we're studying it this year. And when we get to John 14, which we just have done, and now we are just entering into the chapter 14. The chapter 14 starts at the beginning with this, I don't want you to be troubled. Don't let your heart be troubled.
Starting point is 00:01:54 It ends, by the way, John 14 ends saying, I don't want your heart to be troubled or afraid. Now, why is Jesus in chapter 14 saying, I want to give you something so that your hearts aren't constantly trouble and afraid? And the answer is because trouble comes. John 1633, we're going to get to it later. In John 1633, Jesus says, in this world, you will have trouble. There it is.
Starting point is 00:02:23 So because you're going to have trouble all the time, I want to give you something so that your hearts are not troubled all the time by the trouble. I want to give you something that will give you confidence and strength so that the normal trouble that life gives you is not going to overthrow you. Now, what is it that Jesus does? to give us this confidence and strength so we can face life as it is. And the answer is he actually gives us a few things. That's why we're going to have a series of sermons on John 14. But in these verse, verse three verses,
Starting point is 00:02:54 he gives us one of the things without which you cannot face life in an untroubled way. And that is, he says, I go to prepare a place for you. The first thing he gives us to help us deal with the troubles of life is the knowledge of a place. In fact, let me,
Starting point is 00:03:12 tell you what he's going to tell you here in verses one through three he's going to say i want to talk to you about home i want to talk to you about heaven and i want to talk to you about hell see when he says i'm going to prepare a place for you i'm twice he says i'm going to prepare a place for you that's home there's a real home i'm preparing for you secondly it's in heaven it's in my father's house it's there right now but thirdly the road to it is through hell Let's take a look at this. Home, heaven, hell. He's going to tell us, if you understand this, your hearts don't have to be troubled when you face the troubles of life. So first of all, what do we mean by home? Well, the word place, he says, in my father's house, there are many rooms, and I'm preparing a place for you there. I'm preparing a place for you, a home. Let me, let's think about the power of the idea of home.
Starting point is 00:04:16 You know, in the movie Up, remember, it's how it starts, Carl Fredrickson refuses to sell his home. And there's all these big high rises going up all around, and they're offering them zillions of dollars, and he refuses to sell it. Actually, it's, I'm a cartoon, but he represents thousands of people every year who creates such headaches for developers. and for governments. It's the reason why they have all kinds of rules.
Starting point is 00:04:43 I got a son who's an urban planner. He says there's all these laws in which, you know, governments and developers can actually kind of force people to sell their land or their home because generally it doesn't matter how much you offer them. Millions and millions of dollars. They're set for life, but they won't sell. Why? This is my home. This is my place.
Starting point is 00:05:07 why why is that so powerful why is it by the way that homelessness for both adults and children is so uniquely psychologically devastating i'm not talking about the hunger that goes with homeless i'm not even talking about the the bad health that comes from exposure you know to the elements no they say it's homelessness itself is devastating uh paul tournier who is a swiss counselor and doctor years wrote a book called A Place for You based on these verses. And he actually said that children who do not have a good sense that they ever had a home, they have no good memory of a place where they were completely safe and completely loved, a great home. Children who have not experienced a safe home, he says develop an inability to attach,
Starting point is 00:06:02 a restlessness, an inability to settle down and attach that goes with them throughout life. You know, why is homelessness so wounding? Why is home so powerful? One of the best movies with the simplest plots you could ever see in your life is a 1985 movie, A Trip to Bountiful with Geraldine Page, for which she won the Academy Award, by the way. And it's simply a story about a woman named Carrie Watts, old woman who's living with her son and daughter-in-law
Starting point is 00:06:38 in a little apartment in Houston. and she thinks about Bountiful, which was the town, a little rural town on the Gulf, on the Gulf Coast of Texas where she grew up. And she decides, things will be better
Starting point is 00:06:51 if I can get back to Bountiful. And the whole movie, it says, here's the plot. First, she finds out there are no trains that go to Bountiful anymore. So she can't use a train. Then she finds out
Starting point is 00:07:02 there are no buses that go to Bountiful anymore. Then she finds out there's no post office there anymore. And she can't even send a letter. So finally she kind of runs away and finds a way to get a bus to a town and then finds somebody who would drive her over there. And finally she gets to Bountiful, and there's nobody there.
Starting point is 00:07:18 The person she's hoping to visit and live with, even, the last person living in Bountiful died. And she goes and she sits down on the porch of her ruined home where she grew up, and her son finally comes and finds, and she looks around and he takes her back to Houston. That's the plot. And the reason it's such a great movie is it gets at something, that's hard to describe. We have a longing for home that is so powerful. And even those of us who have
Starting point is 00:07:49 got memories of a great home, the memories always exceed how good the place really was. And that you can never, not only can't go home, but the fact is there's nothing on earth that actually satisfies the desire for home. There is no earthly home that can satisfy or desire for home. because home isn't just a house home is a place where everything fits where things suit you where you're accepted
Starting point is 00:08:19 where you belong where you come as you are always or you don't have to put on a face and you don't have to adopt a role it's a place of deep rest it's a place of deep well-being and peace it's harbor
Starting point is 00:08:36 it's home Now, Jesus Christ knows that the men that he is talking to are apostles. You know what the word apostle means? Sent out. That's what the word means. And he knows that every single one of them is going to start to wander. They're going to wander. They're never going home again.
Starting point is 00:09:00 And they're going to be wandering just ahead of danger. And eventually all but one of them is going to die, a horrible death. They're going to be thrown to wild animals or, sawed in half and things like that, except one, the author of this epistle, of this gospel, John the Apostle, who died in exile away from home. And what is he going to do that will enable them to go into that kind of life untroubled? Untroubled. And here's what he says.
Starting point is 00:09:29 He says, even if you had a wonderful home with a big fire and a window looking at the mountains or the sea, that would never satisfy your longings with home, but this will. I'm going to prepare that place for you right now. He doesn't say, we're going to get back this, he doesn't say, and if you live a good enough life, maybe I'll let you come to my home, my place. No, he says, I'm going to prepare your place right now. If you're a disciple of mine, you've got that place. The place you've been longing for all your life.
Starting point is 00:10:01 It's there. It's reserved. It's guaranteed. I've got it ready for you. and you can live your life knowing, oh, don't worry so much about, oh, I don't have a home. Well, here's your home. And no home here would ever satisfy what you're looking for anyway. And when you get there, you're going to say what that character said at the end of the Narnia Chronicles,
Starting point is 00:10:25 I've come home at last. I belong here. This is the country I was looking for all my life, though I never knew it. By the way, did this work? Jesus Christ is getting. getting these guys ready for terrible, the rest of their lives are going to be terrible. And he says, I'm going to give you something that will enable you to be able to face life untroubled. Did it work?
Starting point is 00:10:49 Yes, of course it worked. The knowledge that there really is a place for you. And Jesus has it in his keeping. Now, secondly, where is this place? And the answer is, it's heaven. Now, the reason why we say that is the word doesn't come up here, but he says, my father's house has many rooms in it. and I'm preparing a place for you there.
Starting point is 00:11:11 Now, the father's house exists now. Where is it? It's with the father. The father, you know, our heavenly father. It exists now. He says, I'm going to it now. So he's not talking about just something in the future, though, of course, we get to it in the future.
Starting point is 00:11:26 It's something that exists right now, and that's heaven. Actually, we learn two things about it. One is, it's heaven. It's the father's house, but two is it's a place of love. because he doesn't just say I want you to go to heaven and I'll be traveling but every so often I'll see you there oh no what makes it heaven is
Starting point is 00:11:45 that you may be with me where I am so what he's telling us two things about this home it's heaven and it's a world of love because that's what makes a home a home is the love so first of all what do you mean by heaven well it means when you die
Starting point is 00:12:05 you go to heaven You know, this passage is read. In fact, I don't think I've ever done a funeral without reading this passage. This passage is read at funerals, and it should be. And what Jesus Christ is saying here is, I don't just want you to be untroubled at the prospect of my death. I don't want you to be untroubled at the prospect of your death. And that's one of the great things I give to my disciples.
Starting point is 00:12:30 Be able to not be afraid of death. See, Jesus is saying this. if you are my disciple, and this is a guaranteed thing, he doesn't say, well, at the end of your, we'll get back to this, at the end of your life, you know, if you've lived a good enough life, I might you let you come to my place? No, no, he says, if you're my disciple, the minute you believe in me, I've got your place ready for you.
Starting point is 00:12:56 It's guaranteed, it's there, and it's in heaven. So it means when you die, here's the thing. The worst thing that can happen to you on this earth is actually the best thing. thing. The darkest thing that could happen to you, which means you get killed or you die, will make you, the darkest thing that could happen is actually the most brilliant thing. This is why the great, you know, the great Chicago preacher, Dwight Moody, when he was dying, once said or wrote, he says, pretty soon you're going to read the newspapers that Dwight Moody is dead. Don't believe it, I'll be more alive than I've ever been.
Starting point is 00:13:33 See, what Jesus is saying here is that when you die, you do not leave the light. and go into the darkness. No, you leave this relatively dark world and go into the real world of light and love. The great poet, George Herbert, what a line. He says, death used to be an executioner, but the gospel makes him just a gardener. You see, what does a gardener do?
Starting point is 00:13:58 It takes seeds, plants these little seeds, but then they become flowers. Little seeds, and they becomes fruit. And see, all death can do to a Christian, is make you infinitely greater than you are now, infinitely greater than you are now. Now, this particular promise is one of the main things,
Starting point is 00:14:25 one of the main benefits of being a Christian and one of the main things that differentiates Christians from the people in the rest of the world. And we actually don't talk about it enough in churches, I don't think, anymore. Why not? Well, look, if you don't understand the gospel,
Starting point is 00:14:39 you don't believe the gospel, then how do you look at death? I guess there's only two possible ways, though I'm sure they break into subdivisions, you either can believe in an afterlife or you don't. So there's some people who say, well, after death, I believe there's something. I believe there's an afterlife.
Starting point is 00:14:56 But of course you're going to be nervous. Why? Because you don't know what it's like. See? Apart from what Jesus is telling us, you don't know what it's like. Or you're not sure. Your afterlife is going to be a good one.
Starting point is 00:15:10 What is my purpose in life? What is a good life? And why does the world feel so broken? In the Gospels, Jesus meets people who are asking these very questions. And when Jesus responds, their lives are changed in unexpected ways. In his book, Encounters with Jesus, Tim Keller explores several of these conversations. Looking at Jesus' interactions with everyone from a skeptical student to a religious insider to a social outcast, Dr. Keller shows how these encounters with Jesus can uniquely address the big questions and doubts we still face today.
Starting point is 00:15:48 Encounters with Jesus is our thank you for your gift this month to help Gospel in Life share the hope of the gospel with more people. Request your copy today when you make a gift at gospelandlife.com slash give. That's gospelonlife.com slash give. Now, here's Tim Keller with the remainder of today's teaching. I must tell you, as a minister over the years, having gone to hospitals and gone to places and talk to people who knew they were dying many, many, many times. Unless you're a doctor, you probably don't see more, you don't talk to more dying people who know they're dying than ministers. And I just know that when they start to get closer to, when you start getting
Starting point is 00:16:34 closer to death, even if you believe in an afterlife, you'll look back at your life and say, I haven't lived the life I should have lived. You know you haven't. And so you do not come up to death, you know, with a good feeling at all. If you believe in an afterlife, you're not sure. You're good enough to have a good afterlife. Or let's say you don't believe in an afterlife. That's the other possibility.
Starting point is 00:16:58 If you don't believe in after life, that's it. You're just gone. You're just nothing. Well, some people, put it this way, some people, find that very upsetting because you lose yourself, you lose love. Other people say, no, no, no,
Starting point is 00:17:17 it's perfectly natural, but you're not happy about it. See, Rousseau said, any man who says he doesn't face death with dread is a liar. A liar.
Starting point is 00:17:34 Well, now, I want you to know that from a Christian point of view, Rousseau is 20% right. because 1 Corinthians 15 says death is an enemy. And Genesis 3 shows us that we were not built for death, but it came in afterwards because we turned away from God. And what that certainly means is Dylan Thomas is right. We should rage against the dying of the light.
Starting point is 00:17:58 It's not right. We know it's not right. We're not made for this. And therefore, if death is an enemy, and if we're not made for this, of course, to some degree, when you face death, you're going to feel sick in your stomach. and you should. But it's only 20%, because a Christian does not face death with dread,
Starting point is 00:18:18 or you don't have to, nor even just the indifference. The best I see out there is people say, well, when you die, that's it. And so, you know, then you won't know anything. That's indifference. But Jesus says, no, no, no, that's going to trouble you too.
Starting point is 00:18:30 Let not your heart be troubled. Because when you go through that dark door of death, you come into a world of love. See, nobody else understands. it that way, go on to the internet and find Jonathan Edwards sermon, heaven is a world of love. It's not an easy sermon to read. It's so incredibly rational, but it is wonderful if you're willing to be patient with it. Because he starts off right by saying, well, what is heaven? He says, well, think about what makes any place great. It's love. He says, stop thinking about
Starting point is 00:19:09 thrones and harps. Maybe there's Thrones and harps. And streets paved with gold. Forget that stuff. He says, is that what makes a home a home? No. There's plenty of castles and places in the world where there's thrones and harps and maybe even, you know, cobblestones paved with gold. Doesn't make it a home. What makes a home a home is love and uniquely Christians believe in a triune God. a God who in one person, in one God has had three persons from all eternity, knowing, loving each other. And this is what Edward says, you know, bear with the slightly older English. Listen to what he says about heaven.
Starting point is 00:19:50 He says, God is one of three persons who, quote, are united, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are united in infinitely dear and incomprehensible mutual love. they are then an eternal mutual holy energy there is then an eternal mutual holy energy between the father and the son a pure holy act whereby the deity becomes nothing but an infinite and unchangeable act of love he goes on to say pouring love into one another in degrees of unimaginable joy
Starting point is 00:20:22 and power makes God this three and one God into quote a fountain of love So what makes heaven a home? Why does the Bible say, it doesn't say heaven's a stadium where God addresses us, or even an auditorium where you hear God preach to us. Heaven is a home where you get God's embrace.
Starting point is 00:20:43 And Edwards goes on and says, In heaven, this fountain of love is set open without any obstacle to hinder access to it. So it overflows in streams and rivers of love and delight, enough for all to drink at, and to swim in, yay, so as to overflow the world as it were, with the deluge of love. love. We cannot imagine how our joy and our glory will multiply exponentially forever with inconceivable art or of heart. Heaven's a world of love. I want you to be with me where I am, Jesus says. Not I want you to go to this great place. It's got great views and it's got a throne and it's got
Starting point is 00:21:18 gold and it's got harps. He says, I want you to be with me. So heaven is a world of love. And that's the reason why, oh my goodness. Look, you can say, I believe in an afterlife, but I don't know, you know, whether I'm good enough for a good afterlife. I don't believe in an afterlife. I think when you die, that's just it. Or you have the way to St. Paul spoke. In 1st Corinthians 15, O death, where is thy sting? Oh, grave, where is thy victory? The Christian taunts death.
Starting point is 00:21:52 Do you see that? Paul is not just peaceful in the face of death. He's making fun of it. The Christian attitude toward death is like that. Here's something else you can find online. George Herbert, a dialogue anthem. George Herbert did a poem. We often printed in the bulletin at Easter. George Herbert wrote a dialogue anthem means a poem, which is basically a dialogue between death and a Christian. And it's based on 1st Corinthians 15. Oh, death, where is thy sting? I love reading it.
Starting point is 00:22:28 It won't be that hard for you to tell who's the Christian and who's death. Listen. Alas, poor death, where is thy glory? Where is thy famous force? Thy ancient sting? Alas, poor mortal, void of story, Go and see and read how I have killed thy king. Poor death, and who was hurt thereby? Thy curse being laid on him makes thee accursed.
Starting point is 00:22:56 Let losers talk, yet thou shalt die. These arms shall crush thee. Spare not. Do thy worst. I shall be one day better than before. Thou so much worse that thou shalt be no more. Don't you love that? Here's death.
Starting point is 00:23:18 Death says to the Christian, you loser. I'm going to get you. And Christian says, spare not. Do thy worst. You will only make me better than before. and you will be so much worse that you will soon be no more. That's a taunt.
Starting point is 00:23:35 Do you have anything like that in your life? You know, the older you get, the more you're going to see people go down. Loved ones go down, family members go down, people your age go down. That's an interesting experience. Not so much when you're in your 20s and more in your 30s and more in your 40s and more in your 50s and on and on. Have you got this in your heart? Or are you troubled? Okay, lastly, but here's the most important thing.
Starting point is 00:24:03 Yes, there's a home, and yes, it's in heaven, but the road to it is through hell. Not for you, though. Because what Jesus says is twice, I go to prepare a place for you. It's so easy to read this, forgetting the context, which is the night before he's about to die, and forget what he's saying. He's not just saying I'm going to prepare a place. It was just a minute. I'm going to just pop over to heaven and get your bed. bed ready.
Starting point is 00:24:30 When he says, I go, what does he mean? I'm going. And what is he talking about? I'm going to the cross. I'm going to the cross. I'm going to die for you. That's what it means when he says, I'm going. And that's the reason why he doesn't say, if you live a good enough life, maybe I'll let you come and stay with me in my place. No, he says, I'm going to secure a place for you. I'm going to secure a place for you. Now, why does Jesus have to die to do that? I'll tell you why. Adam and Eve. What was their punishment?
Starting point is 00:25:06 Adam and Eve, turned away from God. So we want to be our own saviors. We're going to be our own lords. We're going to be our own masters. Turn away from God. What was their punishment? What was the greatest punishment? Homelessness.
Starting point is 00:25:18 They were cast out, right? Of their home. He said, that was terrible. That's terrible. Well, yes, but it's also perfectly just. fact is even natural. You know why? The wages of sin is loneliness. You not know that about yourself? The more selfish you are, the more proud you are, the more sinful you are, the more alienated you are from other people. That's just natural. The more you sin, the more it tends to push you
Starting point is 00:25:47 away from people and push people away from you. And therefore the natural consequence, the natural and right punishment for sin is homelessness. is loneliness. And that's what Jesus took. Jesus says, foxes have holes, birds have nests. The son of man has nowhere to lay his head.
Starting point is 00:26:09 He was a wanderer. And when he died, he was crucified outside the gate, outside his home. And was he embraced by the father? No. He said, my God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?
Starting point is 00:26:20 He took the exile we deserve, the homelessness we deserve, so that we could get a home, so we could be brought in. And of course, we still die. We do still die. And you say, well, that's still pretty hard.
Starting point is 00:26:40 That's why Rousseau was right, 20%. We still see it coming up. But the difference is, of course, we know that he really bore the real weight of death, the real separation. Now death only means reunion, not really separation. You know this story that,
Starting point is 00:27:03 it's kind of too hard to not keep using because I can't think of a better one. Donald Gray Barnhouse, he's a preacher at 10th Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia for a number of years, on his way to his wife's funeral with his children, supposedly. He was in the car
Starting point is 00:27:22 and he was trying to talk to his children who were not that old yet about death and about the Christian view of death. And at one of the one, point he looked over because he was driving and he looked over and he says to his son we just passed through the shadow of that truck next to us you know he was they passed by a truck and he said would you rather pass through the shadow of the truck would you rather be hit by the shadow of the truck or would
Starting point is 00:27:50 you rather be hit by the truck and his son said I'd rather be hit by the shadow of the truck he says well you said Jesus Christ was really hit by the truck he really experienced what death is all about the homelessness the exile you know And now, when we die, when your mom died, she just experienced the shadow of the truck because she's with God and she's with everyone else. I had a, let me just finish like this. When Jesus says, don't let your heart be troubled because of what I'm telling you about suffering and what I'm telling you about death and what I'm telling you about heaven, don't be troubled.
Starting point is 00:28:29 I, in some ways what he's saying is I'm giving you a watchtower. Now a watchtower was something that you would put people up in to see the lay of the land. And let's just say you're up in the watchtower and there was a battle going on in the city below you. And if you were down in the city, it looked really bad. But up in the watchtower, you see reinforcements coming and you realize we're going to win. And Jesus is basically saying, I want you every so often, you're down here. And it just looks terrible. Every so often I want you to read John chapter 14 verse 1, 2, and 3, and get up in that wash tower
Starting point is 00:29:11 and realize it's going to be fine. I remember that one of the very first people I actually, in a sense, pastored into death was an older woman. I was 24 years old. I had just taken this church in Virginia, and she was dying. And she was an older woman in my congregation. And she'd had a terrible life. She'd had children die on her.
Starting point is 00:29:34 She'd had an evidently, I was told, she had an abusive tyrannical husband. But she had a wonderful attitude. She taught me. Because when I talked about all the things that had happened wrong, people had abused her, and she says, well, you know, God knows what people will deserve. Someday he will judge the earth.
Starting point is 00:29:50 And if those people need, they deserve something, that's God's job. And I would talk about the suffering she'd been through. Well, you know, God's going to come and take me, and he's going to make everything right. someday he's going to make the whole world right. It was like she would get up in that tower. And she was telling me, come on, come on up.
Starting point is 00:30:08 The air is fine up here. You know, you're all as bothered, you know, young man. Come on up here. It's really good. And I do remember when just the day before she died, she actually had a collapse. And I went to the hospital, and she was on the respirator. It's a horrible thing there.
Starting point is 00:30:23 And, you know, her eyes were closed, and I couldn't tell when she could hear me, but her face looked terrible. She was all frowning, and seemed to be in a lot of, pain. And I do remember I sat down next to her and I read her. I said, Alice, listen, and I read her, John chapter 14, one, two, and three. Don't let your heart be troubled. Don't let it be afraid. I go to prepare a place for you. So you'll be with me where I am. And her, the frown went away.
Starting point is 00:30:52 And she nodded. Her eyes never opened. And I think what I did was I just helped her back up in the tower. And she was able to die peacefully. you got that tower, do you know what it's like to get up there? And don't forget, since Jesus says, what makes heaven heaven is I'll be there. Don't you realize that even now, to a great degree, Jesus is saying, have fellowship with me, know my love, I am your shelter from the stormy blast and your eternal home. So the more you were able to know him, the more you get up in that tower, and you realize everything's going to be all right. Don't let your heart be troubled.
Starting point is 00:31:37 Let's pray. Our Father, we just are meditating on something that is supposed to be a great, great comfort to us, and it is. But we pray, Lord, in a midst of a lot of suffering and death and trouble that you would teach us how to take this medicine, to get this vantage point, to remember all these promises so that we, too, would live our life in comfort, and strength, and not let the troubles trouble us. So we pray, Lord, that you would enable us
Starting point is 00:32:07 to do that and make yourself real to us now as we participate in your supper. We pray in Jesus' name. Amen. Thanks for listening to today's teaching. It's our prayer that you are encouraged by it and that it helps you apply the gospel to your life and share it with others. For more gospel-centered resources from Tim Keller, visit gospelandlife.com. There, you can subscribe to the Life in the Gospel quarterly journal. When you do, you will also receive free articles, sermons, devotionals, and other helpful resources. Again, it's all at gospelonlife.com. You can also stay connected with us on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and X. Today's sermon was recorded in 2017. The sermons and talks
Starting point is 00:32:55 you hear on the Gospel and Life podcast were recorded between 1989 and 2017, while Dr. Keller was senior pastor at Redeemer Presbyterian Church.

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