02-03-2026 PART 3: The Power That Saves Comes from God, Not Us
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Section 1
This teaching opens with gratitude and reflection after a season of illness, highlighting endurance through weakness and God’s sustaining grace. Drawing from 2 Corinthians 6, the discussion frames the Christian life as one marked by hardship, loss, and difficulty, yet also by joy, richness, and spiritual abundance. The contrast is intentional: believers may appear to have little, yet they possess everything in Christ. A powerful praise report follows as Joanne shares her husband Stan’s remarkable physical recovery, moving from severe heart failure to restored health. That testimony becomes a doorway for spiritual opportunity, as time together, prayer, and even traffic delays create space for hearing the gospel. What unfolds is a reminder that God often uses ordinary circumstances to accomplish extraordinary purposes.
Section 2
A central emphasis of the conversation is that salvation is not produced by persuasion, argument, or perfect presentation, but by divine revelation. The sharing of personal testimony, especially hearing how God intervened in a life marked by despair and addiction, becomes a vehicle for the Holy Spirit to work. The discussion of Peter’s confession—“You are the Christ, the Son of the living God”—underscores that this realization did not come from human reasoning, but from the Father’s revelation. That revelation is the foundation upon which the Church is built. This truth reframes evangelism: believers are called to share faithfully, but it is God who opens eyes, resurrects hearts, and brings life from death. Human effort participates, but divine power alone saves.
Section 3
The teaching then turns to Romans 15, where Paul clarifies that he does not boast in himself, but in what God has done through the gospel. Paul’s confidence rests not in his background, education, or communication skills, but in the power of the Holy Spirit. The gospel itself is the power of God unto salvation, to the Jew first and then to the Gentile. Revival, transformation, and conversion do not happen because people decide they will, but because God pours Himself out. This brings freedom and humility to believers: they are responsible to live honorably and speak truthfully, but salvation belongs to the Lord. The closing encouragement is steady and reassuring—trust the gospel, rely on God’s power, and rest in the truth that the message of Jesus Christ is eternal, unchanging, and fully sufficient to save.