Ben Merkle, Mystery (Ephesians 1:7-10) including Exhortation

Summary, July 27th 2025

In his sermon, Ben Merkle emphasizes the inadequacy of human confession and the sufficiency of Christ’s perfect work on our behalf. He explains that our confessions of sin are inevitably flawed—we forget sins, lack full sincerity, and may even repeat the sins we confess. However, salvation does not depend on our imperfect efforts but on Christ, who bore our sins and perfectly confessed them for us (as seen in His baptism of repentance and Psalm 40). Merkle then shifts from his exhortation to Ephesians 1:7-10, highlighting redemption through Christ’s blood as the forgiveness of sins, grounded in God’s grace rather than human merit. He warns against seeking assurance of salvation in subjective experiences (e.g., emotional conversions or personal sincerity) and instead directs believers to rest in the objective truth of Christ’s finished work—His death, resurrection, and sovereign plan to unite all things in Himself. The gospel, he stresses, is a revealed mystery, not deduced by human wisdom but proclaimed so that faith may rest in Christ alone. The sermon closes with an encouragement to find confidence not in introspection but in the unchanging work of Jesus.

Transcription*

(Exhortation) This is the time when we begin preparing our hearts to confess our sin, and that’s what this exhortation, this portion of the liturgy is intended to do, to help you prepare your hearts to confess your sins. But I’m afraid that I need to give you some bad news about the confession that you’re about to make. In one sense, your confession won’t work. I promise you that in addition to all the things that you screwed up in the past week, you’re going to screw this up also.

Leave a Reply

  • Rich Lusk (Mark 11)

    Summary In his sermon based on Mark 11, the speaker discusses Jesus’ symbolic actions surrounding his entry into Jerusalem, highlighting the event’s significance in reshaping expectations about His role as the Messiah. After Jesus curses a barren fig tree—symbolizing judgment against the temple—He cleanses the temple of vendors and money changers, declaring it a “den…

  • Gene Liechty (Mark 10)

    Summary In today’s sermon on Mark chapter 10, the preacher highlights key themes of spiritual blindness and the nature of true discipleship through various encounters of Jesus. Jesus teaches about divorce, emphasizing God’s original intent for marriage based on Genesis, countering the Pharisees’ legalistic interpretations. He welcomes children, illustrating humility as essential for receiving the…

  • Tyler Hatcher (Mark 9)

    Summary In this sermon based on Mark chapter 9, the speaker emphasizes Jesus’ identity as the great King, Prophet, and Priest, particularly highlighted through the Transfiguration and His miracles, including the healing of a boy possessed by a demon. Jesus instructs His disciples about the necessity of humility and servitude, teaching that true greatness comes…

Categories