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A Little Country Church
E.A. Johnston
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0:00 3:59
E.A. Johnston

A Little Country Church

E.A. Johnston · 3:59

E.A. Johnston emphasizes the necessity of preaching the Old Gospel that confronts sinners with their peril under God's law to awaken true repentance and salvation through Christ.
In this sermon, E.A. Johnston challenges the modern presentation of the gospel that emphasizes God's love without addressing the peril of sin and the wrath of God. He calls for a return to the Old Gospel, which confronts sinners with their lost condition and the necessity of fleeing to Christ for salvation. Johnston uses vivid illustrations to show the urgency of true conviction and warns against a church filled with unconverted members. This message is a passionate plea for genuine repentance and revival in the church.

Full Transcript

The new gospel of our day tells folks that God loves them, and he loves them so much that he sent his son Jesus to earth to die on a cross so we can be saved and go to heaven. But this gospel leaves out what men are saved from, and why they need to be saved in the first place. The old gospel prepared men's hearts by giving them a real sense of their danger if they continued in a natural condition, that because of the holiness of God and the strictness of his law that sinners lay under immense danger of dying in their natural state and falling under the sentencing of the law, which will by no means clear the guilty, that a man who dies in his sins will be liable to God's wrath for sin, and the only way of escape is to flee to the refuge from sin, the Lord Jesus Christ.

Men must be driven out of themselves and out from any false refuge like self-righteousness or a false faith. They must see what danger they are exposed to before they want to come to Christ to save them from that danger, to save them from the terribleness of damnation and God's wrath upon them. I used to have to kill poisonous snakes on my property in the South.

They were crawling all over that property. The hardest ones to reach were the copperheads that lived in the rock bed in a drainage ditch in front of my house. I'd have to hold a can of gasoline in one hand and a shovel in the other as I straddled those rocks, and I'd pour the gasoline into the rocks and smoke those snakes out.

Soon they'd come slithering out from the rocks, and then I'd hit them on the head with my shovel. And as I had to get serious about driving those snakes out to destroy them, So, too, the preacher must inform men of their great danger of lying under God's wrath for sin, that they are exposed to the sentencing of the law if they remain in the rock bed of a natural condition. They must be driven out of their carnal security by the threatenings of the law, and a sinner must be made to see his danger before he will be willing to come to Christ to be saved from damnation and hell beneath the outpoured wrath of God, which is like a smoking furnace.

The New Gospel is faulty in that it doesn't warn men to flee from the wrath to come. It merely invites men to come to Jesus when they see no need of him in the first place. That's why today in our churches we have decisions and very few conversions.

Few have been awakened to their lost condition and brought under conviction by the Holy Spirit. This is why the church doesn't function as it should because it's become more like a barnyard overrun with goats who like to bite and nip at each other and who trouble the rest of the members. A little country church is nice so long as the members are sheep who get along as they follow Jesus.

But I fear until the Old Gospel, which is God-centered, is brought back again into our pulpits, the new man-centered gospel will only continue to fill up the sanctuary with bearded goats who like their place of prominence and who will butt heads with anyone who gets in their way.

Sermon Outline

  1. I
    • The New Gospel's focus on God's love and salvation
    • Its omission of the danger sinners face without salvation
    • The importance of understanding what men are saved from
  2. II
    • The necessity of conviction through the law's threatenings
    • Analogy of driving out poisonous snakes to illustrate driving out sin
    • The role of the preacher in awakening sinners to their peril
  3. III
    • Critique of the New Gospel's failure to warn of God's wrath
    • Consequences of lacking true conviction in the church
    • The problem of a church filled with unconverted members
  4. IV
    • The call to return to the Old Gospel, God-centered and convicting
    • The need for genuine conversions rather than mere decisions
    • Vision for a church of true sheep following Jesus

Key Quotes

“The new gospel of our day tells folks that God loves them, and he loves them so much that he sent his son Jesus to earth to die on a cross so we can be saved and go to heaven.” — E.A. Johnston
“Men must be driven out of themselves and out from any false refuge like self-righteousness or a false faith.” — E.A. Johnston
“The New Gospel is faulty in that it doesn't warn men to flee from the wrath to come.” — E.A. Johnston

Application Points

  • Recognize the seriousness of sin and the reality of God's wrath to appreciate the need for salvation.
  • Avoid relying on self-righteousness or false faith as a refuge from judgment.
  • Seek genuine conviction and repentance rather than mere decisions or church attendance.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main critique of the New Gospel according to the sermon?
The New Gospel fails to warn sinners of the danger of God's wrath and does not prepare their hearts by showing them their lost condition.
Why does the preacher compare sinners to poisonous snakes?
To illustrate the need to drive out sin and false security from people's hearts before they can be saved.
What does the Old Gospel emphasize that the New Gospel neglects?
The Old Gospel emphasizes the holiness of God, the strictness of His law, and the danger sinners face if they remain in their natural state.
What is the consequence of preaching a man-centered gospel in churches?
It results in many decisions but few true conversions, leading to a church filled with unconverted members who cause division.
What is the preacher's hope for the church?
That the Old Gospel will be restored in pulpits, leading to genuine conversions and a church of sheep who follow Jesus harmoniously.

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