Admonition Podcast

In this lesson, Aaron Cozort explores the various mechanisms within the gospel that prompt individuals to seek salvation. He discusses the brevity of life, hopelessness, separation from God, misconceptions about goodness, and the role of guilt in the search for redemption. Each theme is examined in depth, providing insights into how these factors influence people's spiritual journeys and their understanding of the gospel's message.

Chapters

00:00 Introduction to the Gospel's Mechanisms
08:09 The Brevity of Life and Its Impact
12:55 Hopelessness and the Search for Meaning
16:47 Separation from God: Understanding Our Need
18:15 Human Solutions vs. Divine Solutions
24:16 The Goodness Problem: Misconceptions About Salvation
30:40 Guilt and the Path to Redemption
38:09 Universal Mechanisms of Salvation



Creators and Guests

Host
Aaron Cozort

What is Admonition Podcast?

The Admonition podcast brings you Bible lessons and sermons from the Collierville Church of Christ with host Aaron Cozort. Each episode focuses on interpreting Scripture in its original context, exploring the background of key passages, events, and teachings. Gain deeper insight into God’s Word as we study together, applying timeless truths to everyday life.

So take your Bibles, if you will.

And let's see if the clicker's working.

And we're going to be going through a number of issues that bring people to the gospel.

When you think about the gospel, when you think about the message of the gospel, yes, it
presents to us how to be saved.

Absolutely, it presents to us

what we should do in order to be saved.

But the question is often visible within the Bible concerning why someone is asking that
question.

The scenario is presented to us over and over and over again that people come to the
gospel for a variety of reasons.

with a variety of things in mind in their lives that are going on that are causing them to
search for the answer.

What must I do to be saved?

So Brian said uh when he presented the opportunity for me to speak, he said, what I want
to talk, I want you to talk about is I want you to talk about the mechanisms that are

built into the gospel that cause a person to desire

the knowledge about how to be safe.

So that's what we're going to do this morning.

The very first one that we're going to focus on and I will mention in the book as you get
a copy of the book and I encourage you to do that as it is available.

There are 10 of these uh mechanisms in the book.

We don't have time for that this morning.

So we're going to go through about six of them this morning.

But the first one is the brevity of life.

Hebrews chapter nine verse.

Verse 8-7 tells us that it is appointed unto men once to die and after that the judgment.

If you understand that you are going to die, then you have a reason to ask, what then?

After you have asked what then and you might explore all of the answers that may come from
humanity about what then,

The reality that you will be faced as all of humanity's answers fail, fall short because
all of them are based upon the knowledge that humans have.

And in spite of all of the bestsellers that have made it through all of the bookstores,
from all of the people who claim to have gone to the other side and come back and written

something, and a publisher said, hey, we can sell that for you.

There is one individual who having died came to life never to die again and his name was
Christ.

And he is the firstborn from the dead.

In John chapter 11, you find the record of the death of Lazarus.

Now Jesus was not the firstborn from the dead in order.

He was the firstborn from the dead in preeminence.

And when you consider that Jesus will raise Lazarus from the dead, we don't have time to
go through the entire text.

I encourage you to look at that in your own study.

But as Jesus comes to Bethany, as Jesus comes to where Mary and Martha are, where Jesus
comes to where Lazarus has already died, he knows that he's already dead.

And Martha comes running out to Jesus as he arrives and she says, if you had but been
here.

Our brother whom you love would still be alive.

And Jesus will make it clear to her if you look at verse 25 of John chapter 11, I am the
resurrection and the life.

who believes in me, though he may die, he shall live.

And whoever lives and believes in me shall never die.

Do you believe this?

She said to him, yes, Lord, I believe that you are the Christ, the Son of God, who is to
come into the world.

And when she had said these things, she went her way and she secretly called Mary her
sister, saying, the teacher has come and is calling for you.

And Mary and Jesus will have a similar discussion, but their focus is our brother has
died.

And we realized that that's true for all of us.

Now I spend every day to some degree living in a world of technology.

And some of you may listen to some of those podcasts and some of the people in the
technology world talking about all the grand new things that AI and robotics and all of

the new technology is going to bring to humanity.

They're expecting we're going to live longer and longer and longer.

But there was a day in the year of the flood when a man who was 969 years old died.

So I don't care how long they extend our lives, the end is still the same.

And because of the brevity of life, some people start asking the question, what then?

And what must I do?

Solomon would write in Ecclesiastes chapter seven that it is better for us to go to the
house of mourning, to the funeral home.

than to go to the house of laughter.

It's better to go there because the one who is serious about that, the one who's cognizant
of what they're witnessing as they go to the house of mourning will lay it on their

hearts.

They will internalize that one day it will be them in the casket.

So what should we do?

Ecclesiastes chapter 12 verse 13, Solomon tells us what man's purpose is.

And we need to understand that there is coming a day for all of us where we will leave
this life.

Turn to 1 Corinthians chapter 15.

When you consider the problem,

when you consider the need for someone who realizes they have a problem, they are going to
die.

The solution is described by Paul in verse 54.

He says, so when this corruptible has put on incorruption, when this mortal has put on
immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, death is swallowed

up in victory.

What they're looking for.

is a solution to the problem of death.

What salvation found in Christ because he did not stay in the grave, because he was
resurrected, because we are not of all men most miserable.

The solution that is found in Christ is death is swallowed up in victory.

The brevity of life is one of the mechanisms that God has placed into the gospel whereby
we can know that we have a solution to our problem and whereby we can be assured that the

gospel is that solution.

But then consider, oh, see if we can go the right way.

Left is right and right is left, okay?

Is hopelessness.

We've all met people sometime in our lives, if we're old enough, that have given up on
life.

their circumstance, their health, their jobs, their family, something in life has caused
them to give up hope or be on the last strand of hope.

And when they look at this life, they wonder what's this all about?

One of the worst things you can do to any human being is cause them to lose hope.

But true hope is found in only one place.

True hope is found in only one solution.

You turn to Hebrews chapter 6.

And the Hebrew writer is going to deal with a scenario.

In Hebrews chapter 6, we find beginning in verse 13, for when God made a promise to
Abraham, because he could swear by no one greater, he swore by himself, saying, surely

blessing I will bless you, multiplying I will multiply you.

So after he had patiently endured, he obtained the promise.

Now, God made a promise to Abraham.

He told him that you're going to have a seed that is going to come from you.

You're going to have descendants.

You're going to be a father of the nation that's going to be as the stars of heaven.

You're going to be the father of many nations.

All these promises Abraham had seen, had heard for 25 years.

If someone tells you that they're going to give you something in the future and then they
go on their way and then you see them month later, your brain's going to be thinking, am I

getting it?

and they don't say a thing about it.

And you're like, well, I don't want to be rude.

So a year later, am I getting it?

I haven't seen any evidence of it.

Are you sure you have the thing?

Whatever it is, are you sure you have?

uh Two years, three years, four, 10 years later, you see them at the Florida School of
Preaching Lecture.

You got the thing yet?

But Abraham patiently endured, he obtained the promise, for men indeed swear by the
greater.

And an oath for confirmation is for them an end of all dispute.

Thus God, determining to show more abundantly to the heirs of his promise, the
immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an oath, that by two immutable things in which

it is

possible for God to lie, we might have a strong consolation who have fled for refuge to
lay hold of the hope set before us.

This hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and sure, which enters the presence
behind the veil where the forerunner has entered for us, even Jesus, having become high

priest forever, according to the order of Melchizedek.

Now notice something important about the statement there.

Because if someone tells you, I'm going to give you something, you just have to wait for
it.

And you're waiting in anticipation and you're hoping for that thing.

What's the one really important question that you want an answer to?

Do they actually have the thing they're promising to give you?

And for every individual throughout all human history who has promised someone hope in
eternity, but has never been in eternity, they don't have what they're promising.

There is no hope there.

But the Hebrew writer pictures this for us as he pictures Christ who has entered beyond
the veil, who has entered beyond death, and he took with him the anchor.

and he planted it firmly and it will not be moved.

For the person who is without hope in this life, the gospel has presented Christ, our
Savior, as the solution.

Because he's been beyond the veil.

And he is alive forevermore, the book of Revelation says.

But then consider as well, separation from God.

Isaiah chapter 59 verses 1 and 2 tells us that man's sins separate us from God so that he
will not hear our voice.

As Isaiah writes to a nation where he began his prophecy telling them in Isaiah chapter 1,
come now, let us reason together, says the Lord.

Though your sins be as scarlet, I shall make them white as snow.

Though your sins be red like crimson, they shall be made as wool.

And Israel says, we will not.

For all of the we will nots that you will meet in the world, there will be people who you
will meet who to their very core understand their separation from God.

and they're looking for a solution.

So the scriptures present a solution.

Hebrews chapter 7.

You notice at the beginning of that chapter, the Hebrew writer says, this Melchizedek king
of Salem, priest of the most high God, who met Abraham returning from the slaughter of the

kings and blessed him, to whom also Abraham gave a tenth part of all, first being
translated king of righteousness, and then also king of Salem, meaning king of peace.

without father, without mother, without genealogy, having neither beginning of days nor
end of life, but made like the Son of God, remains a priest continually.

Now consider how great this man, to whom even the patriarch Abraham gave a tenth of the
spoils.

And indeed those who are of the sons of Levi, who received the priesthood, have a
commandment to receive tithes from the people according to the law,

that this from their brethren, though they have come from the loins of Abraham, but he
whose genealogy is not derived from them, received tithes from Abraham and blessed him who

had the promises." What the Hebrew writer is doing is he's helping you to understand that
Abraham was great, but there was one who was greater than Abraham in Abraham's day.

And it's witnessable by that because Abraham paid tithes

not to a lesser man but to a greater man.

And Abraham paid tithes to Melchizedek.

We go forward to verse 16 and notice, actually verse 15, and it is yet far more evident if
in the likeness of Melchizedek there arises another priest who has come not according to

the law of a fleshly commandment but according to the power of an endless life.

For he testifies you are a priest forever.

according to the order of Melchizedek.

For on the one hand there is annulling of the former commandment because of its weakness
and its unprofitableness, for the law made nothing perfect.

On the other hand there is bringing in of a better hope through which we draw near to God.

You go down to verse 23 and you read, there were many priests because they were prevented
by death from continuing.

He says, here's your problem.

You've got a man who's standing between you and God.

You have a mediator who's going to God on your behalf.

But what is the issue when the priest dies?

Your mediator is gone.

What happens if the son of the priest comes forth and he's now the high priest and he's
not a good and righteous man?

Did that happen in the Old Testament?

Certainly it did.

So now you have a mediator standing between you and God who doesn't even respect God.

Christ is a different kind of mediator.

Verse 26, for such a high priest was fitting for us, who is holy, harmless, undefiled,
separated from sinners and has become higher than the heavens, who does not need daily as

those high priests to offer up sacrifices first for his own sins, then for the people's.

For this he did once for all when he offered up himself.

For the law appoints as high priest men who have weaknesses, but the word by the

But the word of the oath, which came after the law, appoints the Son who has been
perfected forever." Now, this is the main point of the thing we're saying.

We have such a high priest who is seated at the right hand of the throne, majesty in the
heavens.

You see, for the one who's separated from God, who needs a mediator on his behalf,

to go to the Father, they have one in the Gospel.

But then consider as well that some will come to the Gospel because they've tried all of
the human solutions.

They've tried everything that humanity has to offer.

They've done everything that humanity says, this is what you can do and you can then find
peace and you can find hope and you can find solace.

They've tried every form of exercise.

They've tried every chasing of every

a thing that men desire.

They've found riches.

They search for everything.

By the way, if you want to see this exhibited in the life of individual, read the book of
Ecclesiastes.

As Solomon searches again and again and again for that which makes life worth living, he
says, this is vanity, this is vanity, this is vanity, this is vanity.

He's tried all the human solutions and there's not one.

Paul in 1 Corinthians chapter 1 will write to the church in Corinth and he will write to
them about how he was in their presence.

But as he does, he sets forward that God's solution is not man's solution.

That when man looks at God's solution, man looks at that solution and says, that's
ludicrous.

That's not the solution.

Notice what he says, chapter 1 verse 18 of 1 Corinthians, for the message of the cross is
foolishness to those who are perishing.

But to us who are being saved it is the power of God.

For it is written, will destroy the wisdom of the wise and bring to nothing the
understanding of the prudent.

Where is the wise?

Where is the scribe?

Where is the disputer of this age?

Has not God made foolish the wisdom of this world?

For since in the wisdom of God the world through wisdom did not know God.

Paul lays an accusation before all of the wise men of all of human history and says, you
can't get people to God.

No matter how wise you are.

Unless you use God's solution.

He says, It pleased God through the foolishness of the message preached to save those who
believe.

For Jews request a sign and Greeks seek after wisdom, but Christ crucified to the Jew a
stumbling block and to the Greeks foolishness.

But to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom
of God.

Paul will tell the Corinthians, when he came preaching, he determined not to know anything
but Jesus Christ and Him crucified.

Now, brethren, let's be really, really clear on what Paul means when he says that.

Paul does not mean as long as we all agree

in doctrine that Jesus Christ was crucified and was resurrected, we can ignore all the
other disagreements and we'll all go to heaven.

That is not what Paul preached.

As a matter of fact, you could only come to that conclusion if you come to the end of
chapter one, ignore the first half of chapter one and don't read any of the rest of the

book.

No, Paul says, I determined not to come to you with human wisdom.

I determined to come to you with one singular message.

Jesus Christ and him crucified because all the human wisdom that I could bring to the
table, all the teachings of Gamaliel that I could put before you.

All the Jewish Talmud that I had memorized from my youth, all of the insights from the
speakers and the individuals and the poets of Greek mythology that I could present to you

wouldn't have done a thing for your soul.

because you were still separated from.

Now here's the thing, God's placed all these mechanisms in the gospel for us.

But are we paying attention to them?

In business, I have some individuals that I'm in a business group with, they're insurance
agents.

And you want to know what they tell us regularly.

If you want to give me a good referral, they said, here's what you need to do.

Find someone who's going through some sort of life change.

They graduated from high school or college.

They had a child.

They got married.

They got old.

They retired.

Somebody died, somebody got sick.

And guess what?

The reason why that's a great time to introduce them to an insurance agent is because
they're thinking about their life.

When the child's born, they're thinking, what am I gonna do for this child?

I can't hardly feed ourselves.

When they retire, think, well, I'm going to be poor now.

What do I do now?

How am going to make it?

but I soon, so I don't run out money for a die.

guess who else wants to talk to them when they have life change?

The investment guy, right?

The insurance guy, the investment guy, the banker was everybody wants to talk to them when
they have a life change.

Why?

Because they're thinking about their situation.

Well, all of these built-in mechanisms are things people start thinking about when
something changes in their life.

So I encourage you as you're thinking of the things that you learned this week about
evangelism, as you're thinking about the methods that you know, as you're thinking about

the opportunities that you know, be looking for when things in someone's life change.

because now they're going to start asking questions.

But then consider as well the goodness problem.

This is one that often challenges people because they are of the opinion, not based on
scripture, that if you are a good person, surely you're going to heaven.

You can go to funeral after funeral after funeral and listen to preacher after preacher
after preacher preach someone into heaven because you can hear them list off all the good

things they did.

In Acts chapter 10 and in verse one, we read in the text, there was a certain man in
Caesarea called Cornelius, a centurion of what is called the Italian regimen, a devout man

and one who feared God.

with all his household who gave alms generously to the people and prayed to God always.

Now you hand that to a denominational preacher as they're preaching a funeral and they can
get that guy through the pearly gates in no time.

But what does the text say?

About the ninth hour of the day, he saw clearly in a vision an angel of God coming in and
saying to him, Cornelius.

And when he observed him, he was afraid and said, what is it, Lord?

He said, your prayers and your alms have come up for a memorial before God.

Now send men to Joppa and send for Simon, whose surname is Peter.

He is lodging with Simon the Tanner, whose house is by the sea.

He will tell you what you must do.

All the good deeds Cornelius had done and he was still lost.

And he could have sat on those good deeds and continued to do them until his last breath
was taken and he would still be lost.

The text tells us verse 34, after Peter and the Jews come to him, then Peter opened his
mouth and said, truth, I perceive that God shows no partiality.

But in every nation, whoever fears him and works righteousness is accepted by him.

Now, you're going to find somebody come to that.

They're going to read that and they see, see everybody who fears God and works
righteousness is saved.

That's not what that passage teaches.

Peter says that God has proven through the things that he has done that everyone who fears
God and works righteousness is someone who can approach God for salvation if they do it

his way.

And the person who does not fear God won't do it God's way.

And who does not work righteousness won't do it God's way.

But then notice what Peter says.

says, but in every nation, whoever fears him and works righteousness is accepted by him.

The word which God sent to the children of Israel, preached peace through Jesus Christ.

He is Lord of all.

That word, you know, which was proclaimed throughout all Judea and began from Galilee
after the baptism which John preached.

How God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and with power, who went about
doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil, for God was with him.

And we are witnesses of all things which he did both in the land of the Jews and in
Jerusalem, whom they killed by hanging on a tree.

Him, Christ, God raised up on the third day and showed him openly, not to all the people,
but to witnesses chosen before by God, even to us who ate and drank with him.

after he arose from the dead.

And he commanded us to preach to the people and to testify that it is he who was ordained
by God to be judge of the living and the dead.

To him all the prophets bear witness or witness that through his name whoever believes in
him will receive the remission of sins." And someone will come to the passage and they'll

say, see, it's not enough to just do good works.

You got to believe and then you're saved.

While Peter was still speaking these words, the Holy Spirit fell upon all those who heard
the word.

And someone else will come see, it's not enough just to do good works.

You got to believe and the Holy Spirit's got to fall on you.

And then you're saved.

But read the rest of the text.

And those of the circumcision who believed were astonished as many as came with Peter,
because the gift of the Holy Spirit had been poured out on the Gentiles also, for they

heard them speak with tongues and magnify God.

Then Peter answered, Now, wait a minute.

The person who says you've got to have the Holy Spirit fall upon you will say it's proof
that you're saved because you can speak in tongues.

So you know you're saved, right?

Having heard them speak with tongues and magnify God, Peter answered, Can anyone forbid
water that these should not be baptized who have received the Holy Spirit just as we?

And he commanded them to be baptized in the name of the Lord when they asked him to stay.

Then they asked him to stay a few days.

The only commandment

that Peter gave them about salvation.

was believe and be baptized.

And he didn't command them to be baptized in the Holy Spirit, did he?

Because if he had commanded them to be baptized in the Holy Spirit, what in the world is
he doing asking the Jews about water?

You see the gospel presents a built in mechanism for those who have the goodness problem.

They hope they're good enough to go to heaven.

How much time do we have left, Ryan?

Minus two minutes?

Alright, guilt.

Raise your hand if you're here this morning and you've never sinned.

Raise your hand if you've never said the wrong thing.

You've never mistreated someone who certainly never deserved it.

You've never lied.

You've never cheated.

You've never looked at that which was inappropriate.

You've never done something that was ungodly.

Raise your hand.

and even for the Christian who knows the price that was paid for their redemption and the
purchasing blood of Jesus Christ that continues to cleanse them from all sin as they walk

in the light, as he is in the light.

We are confronted with this.

We remember what we did.

and guilt for those who are outside the body of Christ who did not have access to that
blood, who do not have the assurance that is in Christ Jesus because they are not in the

body of Christ and they are not walking in the light and they are separated from God.

Guilt causes them to search for an answer.

Some sadly come to the conclusion they have simply committed too many sins to be forgiven.

Some conclude they have committed too large of sins to be forgiven.

In Acts chapter 2 and verse 35, as Peter preaches to the people on the day of Pentecost,
as Peter pronounces that first gospel sermon at the beginning of the church and the

kingdom of God, Peter says to them, as he speaks concerning the Lord and the prophetic
statements concerning the Lord, that

The Lord said to my Lord, sit at my right hand till I make your enemies your footstool.

Do you know who he described as the enemies that God would place under the feet of Christ?

If you go back into the book of Mark, you will find that attributed to the Jews.

to a nation that believes today and to which denominationalists all over the world will
proclaim today, they are the people of God.

God says, they are my enemies and I will put them under the feet of my son.

Because notice what he says, he says, therefore, let all the house of Israel know
assuredly that God has made this Jesus whom you crucified both Lord and Christ.

and some of them.

with a heart that could be touched by guilt.

We read, they reacted, now when they heard this, they were cut to the heart.

and said to Peter and the rest of the apostles, men and brethren, what shall we do?

When confronted with guilt, they asked the question, men and brethren, what shall we do?

There's a lesson here for us.

Because the natural human tendency is this, when we observe and come to knowledge of the
fact that someone has committed some great sin.

Inside the body of Christ outside the body of Christ doesn't matter When we realize that
they are guilty of some great sin, we go the other direction from them

when it just might be that that is the moment, having come to a realization of the sin
they have committed, that there is hope for their salvation.

When God sent the prophet to David.

It wasn't during the interaction at the beginning that David realized the problem.

It wasn't in the midst of the story when David realized the problem.

It was when the prophet said, you are the man.

David realized the problem.

these individuals on the day of Pentecost had just been told, you are the man.

And they said, men and brethren, what shall we do?

And Peter said, there's nothing you can do.

It's up to the Holy Spirit who's going to be lost and who's going to be saved, whichever
ones he decides and picks.

No, Peter didn't preach Calvinism to.

Peter said, Repent and let every one of you be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for
the remission of sins.

And you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit for the promises to you and to your
children and to all who are far off as many as the Lord our God will call.

And with many other words, he testified and exhorted them saying, be saved from this
perverse generation.

Did you notice that they already believed and they weren't saved because He's still
calling upon them to be saved?

What do we read next?

Then those who gladly received His Word were baptized.

And that same day about 3,000 souls were added to what?

to them, to the disciples.

to the church.

when someone is confronted with guilt.

That may just be your door to get in to save their soul.

The gospel's built in evangelistic mechanisms.

We need to understand something about this and do not miss this point.

These are not American mechanisms.

These are universal mechanisms.

They work in every missionary and evangelistic field on the globe.

And someday, if Elon gets his starship built and we get a whole population on Mars,
they'll work there too.

God knew how to save men.

because God made man.

And when God presented us with the gospel, He presented us with all the scenarios.

where there would be times in a person's life if their heart was willing to hear the Word.

they would have the opportunity to be saved.

Thank you for your attention.