Nathan W. Bingham
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And to thank you, we'll send you this series on DVD, unlock the messages and study guide in the free Ligonier app, and also send you a hardcover edition of R.C.
Sproul's commentary on Galatians.
Well, here's Dr. Thomas to consider what the conversion of the Apostle Paul teaches us about the nature of God's sovereign grace.
At the time of the Reformation, the word sola, alone, became a necessary qualifier to guard the simple truths of the gospel.
We're justified by grace alone, through faith alone, because of Christ alone, for the glory of God alone.
And just as we're not justified by believing in the solas, we don't look to Paul as the source of the gospel.
God communicated the gospel through Paul, and we are grateful beneficiaries of Paul's faithfulness to God's gospel.
This is the Saturday edition of Renewing Your Mind.
You heard a message today from Ligonier teaching fellow Derek Thomas and his series, No Other Gospel.
This is a series that points us directly to the gospel that Paul taught to the churches in the ancient Roman province of Galatia.
If you'd like to add this series to your library, you can request the DVD set along with digital access to the messages and study guide when you give a year-end gift at renewingyourmind.org or by using the link in the podcast show notes.
In addition to sending you this 14-message DVD set, we'll also send you R.C.
Sproul's expositional commentary on Galatians so that you can make this book a focus of your study in the new year.
Simply make your year-end donation at renewingyourmind.org before midnight tonight.
And for our global listening audience, there is a digital resource bundle waiting for you at renewingyourmind.org slash global.
Thank you so much for listening, sharing these episodes, and giving often to help keep this program freely available to Christians around the world.
Well, the Judaizers we heard about today were insisting that the ancient Jewish practice of circumcision was necessary for salvation.
Paul saw this as a threat to the gospel, and he was not about to let them get away with it.
Why was he so dogmatic about the issue?