You can now listen to John Piper's message from this morning. The manuscript will be posted tomorrow.
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John Piper preaching
Piper: So already now the age to come—the age of glory—has begun. So with one foot raised, stand in awe of Jesus Christ.

Signing
Piper: Five, by the sight of God's glory in the gospel we are already being changed into the likeness of Christ (2 Corinthians 4:4).
Piper: Four, our glory in the new creation will only be the reflected glory of Christ.
Piper: Third, the apex of God’s love is to give us himself for our everlasting enjoyment.
Piper: Second, Christ's beauty in the new heavens and new earth will have no competitor.
Piper: The highest pleasure of the human soul is admiration. To see and savor the glory of Christ—to admire him—is why we were created.
Piper: What difference does all of this make for us? Five things...
Piper: Jesus' role in the theater of God is to display the apex of God’s glory in history for our perfect salvation, and to display the apex of God’s glory in eternity for our perfect satisfaction.
Piper: Jesus is the embodiment of the glory of God’s grace, and Jesus is the means of attaining it.
The glory of the grace of God is Christ's glory (2 Corinthians 4:4; Ephesians 3:21; Philippians 4:19; John 12:41).
Piper: God has planned eternity to show us more and more of the riches of his glory. So he will satisfy our ever-growing capacities to see and savor and praise it.
Paul calls this “the great love of God” (Ephesians 1:4)
Piper: The apex of God’s glory is the glory of his grace. All his other glories—the glory of his justice and wrath and power and wisdom and truthfulness—serve the glory of his grace (Romans 9:22-23.)
Piper: QUESTION: What is the ultimate goal of God in the theater of God?
ANSWER: That the glory of his grace should be praised by innumerable redeemed human beings (Ephesians 1:6).
Piper: My conclusion from Ephesians 1:4-6 is that the universe is not large enough or long enough to display the fullness of the glories of Christ.
God must direct our attention back to eternity and outside this universe to find ample scope for the revelation of the glory of his Son. He considers this valuable for us to know.
Piper: Three times in those verses Paul speaks of the glorious displays of Christ’s greatness before and outside this universe. So it seems inadequate to say that this created universe is the extent of the theater of God.
Piper: Ephesians 1:4-6 is the first place I go every time I ask about the ultimate purpose of God in the universe.
Piper: Calvin would want me to join him in magnifying the glory of Christ at this our last session, and he would want me to do it mainly with the Word of God.
Piper: If there are two things that have been burned on my mind with the help of John Calvin it is the majesty of the Word of God—the Bible, and the supreme worth of the glory of God manifest supremely in Jesus Christ.
Piper: Unlike anyone else in the universe, the work and the person of Jesus demand that we think of denouement in unusual ways.
Piper: Denouement is “the final part of a play, movie, or narrative in which the strands of the plot are drawn together and matters are explained or resolved.”
John Piper: My title is “Jesus Christ as Denouement in the Theater of God: Calvin and the Supremacy of Christ in All Things.” The question I am trying to answer is how Jesus Christ relates to the ultimate purpose of God in creating the universe as the theater of God.
You can now watch the panel discussion and Sam Storms' message.



