Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life - Love Before the World (Part 2)
Episode Date: June 29, 2026This sermon was preached by Dr. Timothy Keller at Redeemer Presbyterian Church on May 3, 1992. Series: Four Ways to Live, Four Ways to Love. Scripture: Ephesians 1:1-5. Today's podcast is brought to y...ou 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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Does what you believe about God really matter?
Many people say that what matters most is simply living a good and loving life.
But the Bible says something very different,
that the way we live flows directly from our beliefs about God.
Starting this month and extending through the end of September,
we're going to go through one of Tim Keller's most extensive sermon series
in which he explores the core of the Christian faith.
As we go through the series, Dr. Keller will teach from the first two chapters of Ephesians
to look at how the Bible's central truths about salvation and grace
are meant to shape even the most practical parts of our everyday life.
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,
who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ,
for he chose us in him before the creation of the world
to be holy and blameless in his sight.
In love, he predestined us to be adopted
as His sons through Jesus Christ,
in accordance with His pleasure and will
to the praise of His glorious grace,
which He has freely given us in the one he loves.
In Him, we have redemption through His blood,
the forgiveness of sins,
in accordance with the riches of God's grace
that He lavished on us with all wisdom and understanding.
And he made known to us the mystery of His will,
according to the good pleasure which he purposed in Christ
to be put into effect when the times will have reached their fulfillment
to bring all things in heaven and on earth together under one head even Christ.
In him we were chosen having been predestined according to the plan of him
who works out everything in conformity with the purpose of his will
in order that we who were the first to hope in Christ
might be for the praise of his glory.
and you also were included in Christ
when you heard the word of truth,
the gospel of your salvation.
Having believed you were marked in him with a seal,
the promised holy spirit,
who was a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance
until the redemption of those
who are God's possession to the praise of his glory.
This is God's word.
Now, remember, when we began chapter one,
we said that Ephesians, chapter 1, 2, and 3, is about salvation.
We said last week that in New York City, you talk about being saved, or if you ask somebody
else if they're saved, the average New Yorker gets very creeped out by that kind of
this language, because it's considered a narrow and a shallow person who talks about being
saved, and yet the Bible tells us that rather than being a narrow and shallow concept,
it's the deepest and richest and broadest and most multifarious concept a mind can conceive of.
And in a sense, Paul, in chapter one and two, is taking the concept of salvation,
which we've heard the name, the word, so often, and he's running it like white light
through a prism and breaking it down into its constituent rainbow.
It's so beautiful when you stick a beam of light through the prism, and the prism breaks it down to show you all of the rich glories that are inside there.
That's what Paul is doing in Ephesians chapter 1 and 2.
But especially chapter 1, he is trying to show us salvation from God's point of view.
And we have said that one of the good things about college education today is that college generally, college educators, are,
down on ethnocentrism. And they know that all human beings have a tendency to be ethnocentric,
which means we have a tendency to look at everything as if our ethnic group is the center of the
universe. And all other ethnic groups are marginal or peripheral. That our way of doing things
must be the right one. That our way of thinking must be the right one. And the good thing
about college education today is they pound on that. And they say, you mustn't think that
your culture is the pivot on which everything else rests and everything else orbits around you.
You mustn't think like that. We must get rid of ethnocentric thinking. Now, Christians agree.
Christians go one step further. The Bible goes one step further. It's not enough just to get
rid of ethnocentric thinking. You have to get rid of anthropocentric thinking. Human-centered
thinking. It's easy for us to decide at the human point of view that our particular view of
things is the central thing. You see, if you read the scripture, you see that God makes
everything orbit and everything turn around what is just, what is true, and what is right,
and what is holy. Everything turns on that. What is just? What is true? What is righteous? What is
holy. Everything turns on that. Now look at you and me. Everything turns on our happiness,
on our comfort, on our joy. Well, what about righteousness and truth and justice and holiness?
Oh, we'll take that into consideration. But you see, it's not the thing that everything is turning on
in our lives. What we turn on, our lives orbit around and turn on the joy. Justice and righteousness and
holiness is out there on the margins. We try to work it in if we can. Yeah, it'd be wonderful if we
could be just and righteous, but the important thing is to be happy. Don't you see that to turn
everything on the human point of view, to turn everything like that, is worse than ethnocentrism.
It's human-centeredness. God's perspective is the only one that's realistic. I remember some years ago,
was in a car, and I didn't own the car, I'd barred the car, and I was trying to get home at a certain
time, and I was on a long trip, and the gas gauge was getting lower and lower and lower.
And I was looking at the gas gauge, and I had a passenger, and the passenger says, you know,
the little pointer is below empty. And I looked at it, and I said, no, no, it's at 1-8-full.
No, it's below-empty. No, it's 1-8-full.
Next thing, you know, almost within a second after that argument, the car shuddered and came to a halt.
So I stood back, and, you know, I'm 6'4 and my passenger was about 5'2, so I came on down and took a 5-2 perspective on the gas gauge.
Sure enough, you know, it was empty.
I was looking at it like this.
My passenger was looking at it like this.
Now, the point is, those are two different perspectives, two different angles, and they can't both be right.
But I didn't know which one it was.
I said, well, maybe it was made to be looked at like this.
Now, my passenger was saying, oh, of course not.
It is made to be looked at like this.
Well, of course, that's because my passenger always looked at everything from there, and so do I look at everything from there.
Only one can be right.
The Bible says that your life and the life of this world is like a gas gauge, but it's meant to be.
looked at. It can only truly be understood if it's looked at from God's angle. That's hard. It's just as
hard for white Americans to try to not look at everything from the white American angle and to be
totally censured on that. You think that's hard? It is far harder because it takes the word of God
and it takes the inspiration of Holy Spirit to stop looking at everything from the human angle.
From the human angle, things don't make sense.
Here's Joseph in the pit.
His brothers, jealous of him,
and stripped him, thrown him in the pit,
and they're about to sell them under slavery,
and he says, Lord, you've got to help me.
So how does God answer his prayer?
He sold into slavery.
For years, his life is ruined.
Not only has he sold into slavery,
but at one point he's framed by the wife of his employer.
And then he's put into prison, and any day he might be executed.
What is God doing?
You see, Joseph was looking at the gas gauge from down here.
Somebody else was looking at the gas gauge from up here,
but only God can see things in the true perspective.
And later on, in Genesis' first chapter 50, verse 20,
he says to his brothers, who had sold him into slavery,
and now he saw the purpose of it because as time went on,
he began to see things from God's point of view,
and he says, you meant it for evil, God meant it for good.
Now, right now, you can look at your life and you can decide whether you're going to stand up on Genesis 50, verse 20.
Get on Genesis 50, verse 20, and look.
It says, other people mean it for evil.
This person has hurt you.
This person has hurt you.
God means it for good.
Look at Revelation, Romans 828, all things work together for good to those who love God.
you look at this passage
God has chosen you to be holy and blameless in his sight
he has destined you he has secured it
he is guaranteed it
he is taking everything and working it together according to the council of his will
it says in verse 10 and 11
so that you can eventually be a great and glorious person
now you can either stand up and look at your life
on the platform of Ephesians 111
Ephesians 1 8, Romans 828, Genesis 50, 20.
It's up to you.
Or else you can continue to look at it from the human point of view and say,
I don't get it, I don't get it, I don't get it, I don't get it.
There's only one angle that works.
It's the biblical angle.
It's the God's perspective.
Now, we've said up to here that the Bible's talking about redemption from God's perspective,
and in verses 3, 4, and 5, we've actually looked at the Father's role in our salvation.
You see, it says what the Father does in our salvation.
It says, praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,
who blessed us with everything in heavenly realm.
So he's talking about the Father,
for He chose us in Him before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight.
He predestined us to be adopted as his sons.
Now, the point is, is elect, the Greek word elect, and the Greek word predestine means he has set and he has destined us,
which means he is guaranteed that you and I, those of us who believe in Christ,
he is guaranteed that we're going to be holy and blameless in his sight, that we're going to sit in glory with him.
He's guaranteed it.
Now that's what the Father has done.
and immediately the question arises how could that be and the answer begins in verse seven
because the answer to how can the father actually accomplish his purpose is that the son
has accomplished his purpose so when you get to verse seven is a change and it moves from talking
about the father to talking about the son now when you get to verse 13 and 14 it moves from talking
about the son to talking about the spirit because it's the triune god it's the it's god the father's son
the Holy Spirit that is in view. Now, the link between verses 3, 4, and 5, and 6 about the Father,
and verse 7 is the little word in him. Now, for the life of me, I hate to do this because people
make fun afterwards, but it may be hard for me to get past those two words before our time is
out. I want you to know that it's not the word, but it's the message in those words,
turned thousands of people over the history of the church into dynamos.
And it can change you into a dynamo tonight if you let it sink in.
See, the question is, how in the world could God guarantee that we're going to be holy?
How can he guarantee that?
When he himself is holy and a judge, how can he guarantee that rebels, weak, foolish rebels,
how can he guarantee that we're going to be perfect and holy and gracious?
There's a parallel passage to Ephesians 1.
It's 1 Corinthians 1.
And in 1st Corinthians 1st 1st, 1st, 1st 1st,
you have almost the same basic sentiment.
I quoted it probably a week of two ago,
and it's probably the most important passage to me personally in the Bible.
It starts like this.
Just like in Ephesians 1, it starts with what the Father does.
It says, consider your call brothers.
Not many of you are wise.
Not many of you, according to worldly standards, were wise.
not many were powerful, not many were of noble birth,
but God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise.
God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong.
God shows what is low and despised, even the things that are nothing,
to bring to nothing the things that are so that no human flesh can boast in his presence.
Now look carefully.
That is my life verse.
God chose the foolish things to shame the wise.
He chose the weak things to shame the strong.
Now, I've often said that's my life verse,
and over the years when I preached on that text,
and I said, when I see that, I see myself.
I've had people come up afterwards and say,
that doesn't make much sense.
How can you identify with being weak and foolish?
You seem successful.
Now, for a fleeting minute,
it's wonderful to hear anybody in the world
think that a minister could be making any contribution to society at all.
So, I mean, you know, for the sake of my profession, I can almost be happy that they said that, but that's a fleeting second.
Because when somebody says, well, how could you identify with that?
It shows that they don't understand the gospel.
If you understand the gospel, it completely shatters your normal way of thinking.
There's only three ways of thinking.
God has chosen me because I'm strong, or God has rejected me because I'm weak, or God has chosen me because I'm weak,
or God has chosen me because I'm weak.
Which of those three makes the most sense?
Listen, God has chosen me because I'm strong.
God has rejected me because I'm weak.
God has chosen me because I'm weak.
Which of those three makes sense?
The first two make perfect sense.
Heck yeah.
Of course, you choose the one who's strong.
You reject the one who's weak.
What idiot would say God chose me because I'm weak?
Well, Paul, the idiot, St. Paul.
The Bible says that. How could that be? If you don't understand the gospel, you would say,
either I'm strong and therefore God chooses me or I'm weaker God rejects me, and Paul has the
audacity to say, no, you see, salvation is completely and surely and totally by grace.
And therefore, God, with his divine sense of humor, to show that no one is worthy and no one
can make themselves Christians, has a particular delight in going after.
to the weak and the messed up and the foolish to show the whole world that their wisdom is nothing,
that their strength is nothing.
Now the question is, how could that be?
How could God be a just God and do that?
How could he choose the weak?
How could he choose the rebel?
How could he choose that?
Isn't he a great judge?
Another way to put it,
if God is not a perfectly righteous judge who will punish all evil,
there's no hope for the world.
If God is a perfectly righteous judge who will punish all evil, there's no hope for us.
And that seems to be a dilemma that we can't get out of.
Either you've got a God who punishes all evil and we are sunk, or you've got a God who doesn't
punish evil, he kind of winks at evil, and he says, well, you know, boys will be boys and I guess
girls will be girls and everything else will be everything else, and I'm just kind of a, you
know, a fairly laid-back God and I'm not going to punish.
and then there's no hope for the future.
So, you see, how could we be saved?
How could God choose the week?
And the answer is, in Him.
Now, you see, First Corinthians goes on.
Why did God choose the week?
How can He choose the week?
How can he choose the foolish?
How can he choose the lowly and despised?
And see, 1st Corinthians 1 goes on this way and says,
for of Him,
you have become in Christ Jesus
who has been made for us to be a,
our wisdom, our righteousness, our sanctification, and our redemption. Do you see that? See, in 1 Corinthians
1, Paul is saying, God doesn't choose the strong, and he doesn't reject the weak, but he chooses
the weak. How can he do that? Because in him, you have become wisdom and righteousness and
sanctification of redemption. His righteousness has become yours. It's in him. It's in him. It's,
It's in Him. In Him, you're everything. Apart from Him, you're nothing. In Him, you're righteous,
you're wise, you're holy, you're redeemed. That word, in Him is your life. It's because of in Him
that we do not choose between the ones who said, God has chosen me because I'm strong, God has
rejected me because I'm weak. If you don't understand in Him, or in the old King James,
it says, in whom, same thing. In whom we have redemption. In Him we have redemption. If you
If you don't understand those two little words, you are forever trapped between,
he chooses me because I'm strong, he rejects me because I'm weak.
And you're going to go back and forth because you're going to have strong weeks and you're going to have weak weeks.
And you're going to always be going back and forth, friends.
And when you come and see anything that the Bible says about election
and about being saved surely by grace and being chosen,
and God is setting his love on you, not because of your dessert, but just because he loves you,
a love that has no other rationale but itself
that it cannot be overrun or overwhelmed by your faults
but instead it overwhelms your faults
he doesn't love you because you're lovely he loves you to make
he loves you to make you lovely you won't understand that
if you don't understand it's in him totally in him
marriage is one of the most significant human relationships there is
but is also one of the most difficult and misunderstood
in the meaning of marriage tim and kathy kelly
offer biblical wisdom and insight that will help you understand God's vision for marriage.
Whether you're single, considering marriage, or have been married for a long time,
the meaning of marriage will help you face the complexities of commitment with the wisdom of God.
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Now here's Dr. Keller with the rest of today's today's story.
teaching. Now, in him also means this. It means that Jesus Christ did not come to show us how to be
good people. He did not come to teach us the way. He came to be our substitute and to actually
accomplish something for us. There's an awful lot of churches that will go at it this way.
They will say, well, you know, we're modern people. I don't know if, and
Many of you were to college and you took New Testament 101, but you might have run into a whole school of German scholars and theologians who talked in the early part of the 20th century about demythologizing the Bible. Did you ever hear that?
We've got to demythologize the Bible. What's that mean? Well, the idea was that there's all these mythical elements in.
Listen to this. This is very important. This has been done in church after church after church in this country and in this city.
We've got to look at the Bible, and there's a lot of great things in the Bible, but there's a lot of mythological elements that the modern mind can't believe anymore.
We've got to pull out the supernatural.
We've got to pull out the miraculous.
We've got to pull out all those ancient legends, and we've got to get the teaching, the basic principles of Christianity, because those things will turn our lives around and will show us how to live and how to change our world and how to be better people.
So what are the mythological elements we take out, huh?
Well, we take out the virgin birth, the idea that Jesus is the pre-existent son of God come to earth.
I can't believe that.
We take out the idea that on the cross, Jesus Christ, turned away the wrath of God and paid for our sins.
Oh, we can't believe in an angry God and all that stuff.
That's the Greek stuff.
You know, remember all the Greek myth?
Here's Agamemnon, and he's on his way to Troy, or he gets he's on his way back from Troy, I guess.
And the boat is terribly, it's foundering because he's a heart.
West Wind, and so what does he do? The gods are unhappy, so he takes one of his children.
He takes his daughter, and he offers her up a blood sacrifice. He kills her. And immediately
the gods, their wrath is turned away. Let's not, you know, and there's one of those old, awful,
pagan, primitive, obscene myths from the ancient times where people were scared of nature, you know.
And they made up these ideas as a way of, they weren't scientific, with a pre-scientific idea.
So they made up these stories to help them deal with the great unknowns of nature.
And unfortunately, one of those mythological elements is creeped into the scripture.
This thing about God's wrath and Jesus turning away.
Oh, no, we can't believe in that.
And we can't believe in a literal physical resurrection anymore.
We can't believe that if you were there with a Polaroid camera,
you would have actually seen the stone all the way in Jesus coming out.
We can't believe in those things.
But we can get the principles.
We can get the teaching.
That's the important thing.
Not if you look at this word in him.
Your redemption is in him.
Let me say something, and you can quote me anywhere.
Jesus was a failure as an educator.
You heard it here first.
A failure!
Listen, you musicians, you know, piano, right?
Suppose somebody hires you to educate a child in the piano.
You're going to teach the child piano.
All right, what if the second lesson
with a second grade student.
The second lesson, you sit down and you play a Chopin piece,
and then you turn around and say, now you do it.
Go ahead, you do it.
You're a failure as a teacher.
You should go back and take educational psychology 101.
You're supposed to break it down.
Can't give a second grader on the second lesson,
this wonderful, beautiful picture, and then say,
okay, you try it.
All that will do is discourage the time.
child. All that will do is actually, if anything, create in the child a sense of inadequacy.
You're a lousy teacher. What if you, what if one of you is a workout, a trainer, you know,
a gym coach, and somebody comes to you and says, I want you to train me. I need to get in shape.
You say, fine, the very, very first time you bring them into the gym and you say, let me show,
I can press 300 pounds. Let me show you can do 300 sit-ups.
watch. Then you get up and you say,
now you do it. Your failure is an educator.
A person's going to die.
It's going to be in the papers.
You're a wonderful athlete, but you're a total failure as an educator.
Jesus Christ shows up and he says,
let me tell you the kind of holiness
and the kind of integrity and the kind of godliness
and the kind of purity
and the kind of love that should characterize your life.
He takes the law of most of the law
of Moses, and he expounds it in a sermon on the Mount. And he gives us a standard that is so impossible,
it is so much beyond even our understanding that we had of the Ten Commandments in the Old Testament.
Look at the Ten Commandments of the Old Testament. Look how wonderful how they are, but look at how hard
they are to obey. And Jesus comes along and says, you know the commandment thou shalt not kill?
You know what it really means? It means you can't be hostile. It means you can't hold a grudge.
It means you can't be cold to people.
It means you can't reject them.
It means you can never fail to treat them with love.
And you say, oh, now you try it, he says.
In other words, he puts up a standard that is absolutely impossible to reach.
And he says, be perfect as I am perfect.
Now, friends, if he came as a teacher, he is an utter failure.
He is worse than the person who had the second lesson with a second grade teacher says,
here's a Chopin Sonata, now you dry it.
If you were the parent of that child, you would say, excuse me, I'd like my money back.
You're no teacher.
If Jesus came as a teacher, he was a failure.
And if you take all of the mythological elements so-called out of the Bible,
you have got a complete failure and you've got no rationale at all.
You have no explanation for why in the world,
the apostles would have been so completely changed by their contact with Jesus.
You have no idea in the world why they should be so changed by their contact with Jesus
that they should have been able to turn the world upside down.
Do you think the sermon on the mount would have transformed anybody?
Somebody coming and saying, here, look at this incredible picture of what you should be like.
It gives you a nosebleed even to listen to it.
And then Jesus says, go and do it.
Is that going to energize people?
Could that have possibly changed them?
CFD. Mule, who the teacher of New Testament at Cambridge, says,
if the coming of existence, if the coming into existence of Christianity,
a phenomenon undeniably attested to in the New Testament,
rips a great hole in history,
a hole the size and shape of the resurrection,
what does the secular historian propose to stop it up with?
The actual historical effect is inconceivable without the resurrection of Jesus as its objective historical cause.
Now, I'm not talking about the resurrection.
I'm talking about the redemptive work as a whole of Jesus.
What is he saying?
He is saying there's no way that the teaching of Jesus would have done anything but crushed people into the dirt.
Jesus says, this is holiness.
This is the kind of life you need to live.
That would just crush people in the dirt.
if that's all he was was a teacher. Instead, these people were transformed. How could that be?
Because they knew that their holiness was in him. They realized that he died for them, and when he died for them,
when they died in him, they were treated as if they had paid all the debts that Jesus paid when he died.
and they saw that when he was raised, and they were raised in him,
they were as beautiful in God's sight as if they had been raised in His Holiness Perfect
and had lived as great a life as Jesus.
Our redemption is in Him.
Martin Luther, John Wesley, all those people,
until they understood were redeemed in Him, were saved in Him.
Not by listening to his teaching and now we go and get ourselves saved, we make ourselves Christians,
but in Him, it wasn't until they saw that, that they were transformed and became dynamos.
There is no way that the teaching of Jesus Christ can possibly account for the effect in history.
Now, one more thing that we can probably adjust here.
In Him.
Let's use this in Him as a test for a minute.
let me put it this way
let me ask you this
do you know if you're a Christian
now as a pastor I'm continually sitting down with people
and saying as far as you're concerned
do you believe you're a Christian? Are you a Christian?
And an awful lot of times people say
I hope so I'm trying real hard
I think so
and when they say that
and they don't immediately start talking about Jesus
immediately, it shows that they really don't understand in him.
They don't understand that the redemption is in him.
I put it this way.
If I ask you, is your life energized now by the concept in these two little words?
I have asked people, do you believe that God will accept you into heaven?
I don't know if any of you have ever read the book or taken the training called evangelism.
our connection, our fellowship.
And in talking to people that try to ascertain where they are spiritually, he asked them a question.
I'll ask you a question.
If you were to die tonight and suddenly appear before God and he were to say, why should I let you
into heaven?
What would you say?
That's the question.
You ever heard that question before?
It's not a bad question.
It's a telling question.
Another way to put the question is to say, well, if you knew that tonight was your last night,
would you have hopes that God would accept you?
and what would your hope to be founded on?
Now, let me tell you a couple of the answers that I usually get.
One of the answers is because I think God is forgiving.
I believe that I'm a sinner, but I believe in the mercy of God.
Is that the right answer?
The reason I believe that God will receive me into heaven is God is a merciful God.
He's a forgiving God.
There was a French skeptic.
Wasn't a Christian.
He lived a very licentious life, and as he was dying,
somebody asked him, do you believe that God will receive you?
and his last words were,
God will forgive me, that's his job.
In other words, he's forgiving.
Do you think the idea that God is a laid-back God
that he's just merciful, he'll overlook,
do you think that will ever change somebody?
Let me tell you something.
When I'm with my children and they're acting up,
and I'm just too wimpy or too lazy or something
to ever, ever come down on them.
If I keep saying five times in a row,
if you do that one more time, five times in a row, if you do that one more time, I'm going to do this,
I'm going to take that away. In other words, if it's my job to continually just overlook sins,
does that change my children? It makes them a lot worse. They're not changed. They get worse and
worse and worse. Just talk about God's mercy is not the reason that God is going to let you into heaven.
Some people say, well, I've been very, very sorry for my sins. Okay, sure, you've been very, very
sorry for your sins. Do you think that will earn it? If somebody says, well, I have really tried
very, very hard, I've really tried my best. That's another answer. Another answer that people
very often give is they say, I've had a hard life. I think God's going to let me in because I've
lived a very hard life I've suffered. I've done some things wrong, but that's mitigating circumstances.
If you say any of those things, you don't understand what it means to be a Christian. Because
here's what a Christian says. In him, I am.
redeemed. In him, my sins are gone. In him, I'm accepted. Apart from him, I am nothing.
You see, if you understand that for Christ and Christ alone sake, God will accept you,
then you understand the gospel. It's in him alone that you have redemption. So if you're a
guilt-ridden person, you don't understand that in him you're perfect. If you're a proud person
and you feel a little bit better than most other folks.
If you say God's going to take me to heaven because I'm better than most folks,
and you still don't understand in him,
if you're living a licentious life,
and you start to say, well, God's just a forgiving God,
and I know that I'm not doing right,
but on the other hand, I think this is what is true for me.
You still don't understand that it's only in him that you're redeemed,
and he redeemed you so you'll be holy and live a righteous life.
Look, this is a doctrinal and practical.
practical test. It distinguishes real Christians from legalists. It distinguishes people who believe
in Orthodox Christianity from others. There's some people who say, well, Jesus is not the only
way to God. There's many ways to God. The good Buddhists and the good Muslims, they're going to come to
God too. And that means you don't have to have grace alone. It's possible to get to heaven through
good works. If you say Jesus is not the only way to God, what you're actually saying is it's
possible to be good enough. It doesn't necessarily take grace. But if you believe in him,
you know Jesus is the only way. If you believe it's in him, then you know that you're saved by
grace alone. If you believe it's in him, you're no longer guilty and always looking down at yourself.
If, on the other hand, it's in him, you're no longer proud and looking up and being inflated.
In him. In whom? In him. That's the reason God can.
can choose you because all been accomplished for you. Hey, last thing. What do you have in him?
You have the forgiveness of sins because he's redeemed by the blood. We have to come back to this later,
but one of the things that has really worked the most on my heart in the last few years is a little
statement I read in an old sermon, a very old sermon once that said, stop and think what it means
that you have forgiveness of sins. Stop and think about it. You realize that the Bible tells us that
apart from Jesus Christ, you would be cast off forever, in a sense you'd put into prison forever.
You'd never get out, which means that even if you'd spend 10,000 years, cast out from God,
you wouldn't have paid your debt back. That's how big it is.
Jesus Christ, just in those few hours of torment on the cross, suffered infinitely because he lost
an infinite love, an infinite relationship, and therefore paid it off completely.
So don't you see how hard it would be? Those of you who are living your life trying to atone
for your own sin. Don't you see how impossible it is? There's some things that you're trying to live
off and you're trying to work off in your life that you never will. There are some of you who,
because you feel guilty about this or because you feel guilty about this, you're coming to church.
That's no reason. Because you feel guilty about this and because you feel guilty about this,
you're in this and that relationship. Don't you know, if you said, God, I would like to go to hell
for 10,000 years to pay off this sin, the sins of my life, that wouldn't be enough. Don't you see
how completely impossible it is to go the way you're going. But in him, you have complete forgiveness
of sins, total and utter forgiveness of sins. Poor Henry V, before the big battle, he's there saying,
oh, Lord, forgive me, I've done everything I can. You know, with my wealth, I pay 500 beggars
every day and give them food. I have built cathedrals. I have six thousand priests in my employ that
pray to you and do all these things. Oh, forgive me. Poor Henry. You know, I like him an awful
lot. And there he is. And he's really not that old. I mean, if he'd only been able to get
with Martin Luther, who would have taken him to Ephesians chapter 1, verse 7, and said,
in him, you have forgiveness of sins through the redemption of his blood, according to the riches
of His grace.
Just take this entire week and live out of those two words.
You'll take criticism well this week.
You'll look at things from God's perspective and not be that upset when things go wrong.
Just live off those two words every day this week and watch what happens.
I dare you because I love you enough to dare you in him.
Let's pray.
Our Father, help us to help us to.
live out of that, help us to live off of that, help us to see just what we have in you,
O Lord Jesus Christ. And we ask that you would help us to see the places where we have forgotten
that. The places we were guilty, the places where we're proud, the places where we're licentious
and disobedient, the places where we are not seeing our completeness in you. Show us that, enable
us. We ask it in Jesus' name. Amen.
Thanks for joining us here on the Gospel and Life podcast.
If you were encouraged by today's teaching, you can help others discover this podcast by rating and reviewing it.
And to find more great gospel-centered content by Tim Keller anytime, visit gospelonlife.com.
Today's sermon was recorded in 1992.
The sermons and talks you hear on the Gospel and Life podcast were recorded between 1989 and 2017
while Dr. Keller was senior pastor at Redeemer Presbyterian Church.
Thank you.
