Rev. Allen Baker preaches on damnation at RTS Jackson's 2017 Missions Conference.
Elias Medeiros: For me, it is a great privilege to introduce to you the Reverend Dr. Al Baker. I told you yesterday he’s an ordained minister of the PCA and has been in gospel ministry for more than 35 years. He finished his M.Div. in 1981 at Reformed Theological Seminary in Jackson. He has a Doctor of Divinity in Evangelism and World Missions honorary degree from Whitefield Theological Seminary. His base of operations is in Birmingham, Alabama, and he serves as an evangelist with Presbyterian Evangelistic Fellowship. He has four books written: Evangelistic Preaching in the 21st Century, Seeking a Revival Culture, Revival Prayer, and Essays on Revival. Prior to his present ministry, Al was the organizing pastor of Christ Community Presbyterian Church, West Hartford, Connecticut, serving there for nine years. Before that he was the pastor for 10 years of Golden Isles Presbyterian Church in St. Simons Island, Georgia. Al has long been actively involved in 40 missions, as I mentioned yesterday, to Central America, South America, Africa, India, Great Britain, Europe, Japan, and Indonesia. He travels extensively around the United States, preaching in churches and in the streets, literally. His wife, Wini, is here with him, and God has greatly used her also to minister to seminary and faculty wives wherever they go. He really prays to promote the revival culture in churches by leading revival pray weekends and preaching Bible conferences. He’s also working to raise up the next generation of revival and evangelist preachers like Samuel Davies, the great 18th-century Presbyterian preacher from Richmond, Virginia. He is with us for now, and right after this, we’ll have a free lunch, and he’ll give us the third exposition. By the way, if you talk with him for a few minutes, and I have the privilege for being with him in some places together, this is a man who loves the Lord, and he memorized the Scriptures. He could he could quote for you Romans from 1 to 9 by heart today to you if want. But he’s not going to do that. But he memorized the Scripture and meditated on the Bible every single day. My dear brother.
Allen
Baker: Amen. It’s a pleasure to be here. If you have your Bibles, I’d like for you to turn with me to Matthew 25. Yesterday, I mentioned that my topic is “A Passion for Souls.” You know, in Romans 9, the apostle Paul says that he has “unceasing grief and sorrow in his heart for his brethren.” He says, “I could wish that I were accursed, separated from Christ for the sake of my brethren.” Now, my dear friends, that is a burden for the lost, a passion for souls. Now, after I mentioned that yesterday, then I said we need to gain a better motivation as we go out to preach and to evangelize and have that passion for souls, and so we looked at Romans 1. Paul, “I’m under obligation.” We looked at the universality of sin. Then we talked about Paul speaking about the propitiating death of Christ. Then we ended by looking at Ephesians 2. “While we were dead in our trespasses and sins” Paul goes through, says, “but God being rich in mercy because of the great love with which he loved us” and so forth. Yesterday, it was motivation. In this hour it’s damnation. And then the next hour, glorification. Matthew 25, this is the Olivet discourse. This is the section, verse 41, where Jesus is about to say, “Because you did not do it the least of these my brethren and you did not do it unto me.” So we’re going to look at verse 41 and then also verse 46. This is the Word of God, the infallible, inerrant, inspired Word of God, our only rule of faith and practice. This is a most sober verse: “Then he will also say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me, accursed ones, into the eternal fire which has been prepared for the devil and his angels.” And verse 46: “These will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.” Let’s pray briefly. Father, in the name of Jesus, we ask that the Holy Spirit come down. We pray, Father, that you would rend the heavens and come down, that the mountains may quake at thy presence as fire kindles the brushwood, as fire causes the water to boil, to make thy name known among thine adversaries, that the nations may tremble at thy presence. Now, Lord, we ask for the Holy Spirit to come on the preacher and everyone here. Father, our desire is that we would see something, something of the awful reality of hell and the lake of fire and that, Father, you would use this to generate within us a passion for souls. We pray in Jesus’s name. Amen. This year, 56 million people will die. Today, 153,000 people will die. This hour, 6,390 people will die. In the next minute, 107 people will die. And every second, nearly two people in the world die. Boom. Boom. Boom. Six people just now. Now Jesus says, “Enter by the narrow gate for the gate is wide and the way is broad that leads to destruction and many are those who find it” (Matt. 7:13). George Gallup has said that based on his surveys, he would suggest that maybe only seven percent of America is truly Christian. Now we don’t know. That’s up to God, of course, but that’s a staggeringly small number. In fact, it’s something like 26 million people. So you think about all the people dying in the United States today, all of the people dying all over the world today, this year. Many of them, apparently, when they die will go to hell. Jesus said that your judgment is upon you because you did not believe in the name of the only begotten son of God. What is hell like? Who goes there? When do they go there? Why do they go there? We know the Scriptures make clear that there is a hell. Jesus spoke of hell more than anyone else in the Scriptures. As I like to say when I’m preaching out on the streets, “This Jesus, this loving, wonderful savior, is the one who developed the doctrine of sin and the doctrine of hell. He’s the one who lays it out.”