Oneplace.com

What If Your Best Effort Cannot Save You

May 18, 2026
00:00

You can feel it in your bones when someone treats salvation like a self-improvement project. Try harder. Be better. Clean yourself up. Say the right words. But Ephesians 2 refuses to flatter us, and Dr. Timothy Mann leans into that honesty with clarity and care. We start with the sobering diagnosis: apart from Christ, we are “dead in trespasses and sins,” not merely wounded. Dead people do not need a boost; they need resurrection.

From there, we walk straight through the passage and name what Scripture names: the pull of the world’s values, the reality of the devil’s deceptive influence, and the tyranny of the flesh that makes sin feel like freedom while it quietly enslaves. We also tackle the most-avoided phrase in modern spirituality, “children of wrath,” and explain why God’s wrath is not cruelty but justice. If we soften the bad news, we will always shrink the good news, and grace will start to sound like a bonus instead of a miracle.

Then the turning point lands with force: “But God.” We talk about God’s initiative, his rich mercy, his great love, and the action he takes when we bring nothing but need. Salvation by grace through faith is not earned, negotiated, or achieved. It is a gift, and it creates a new life that finally makes sense of good works as the result, not the requirement.

If you want a clearer grasp of the gospel, deeper assurance of salvation, or better words to share with someone you love, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find these Bible teaching messages.

How can we pray for you? Text us and tell us how the episode helped you, as well.

Support the show

Enjoying this episode? Subscribe to the show!

Dig deeper into biblical truth with articles from Pastor Tim! — Click Here

Get Pastor Tim’s book Saved: Understanding God’s Work In Us — available now at   Xulon Press       Amazon       Barnes and Noble 

Guest (Male): Welcome to Foundations of Truth, the biblical teaching ministry of Dr. Timothy Mann. Our mission is to help you build your life on the unshakable foundation of God's word, rooted in Scripture, anchored in the grace of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

Today on Foundations of Truth with Dr. Timothy Mann, religion says "do better", but the Gospel says "you need new life". Today we begin a powerful new series: "God Saves Sinners" from Ephesians chapter 2. If you've ever wondered whether grace is truly greater than your sin, stay with us. Here now is Dr. Timothy Mann.

Dr. Timothy Mann: One of the things I'm aware of and know as a pastor is that a lot of people today are confused about what it means to be saved or to have a relationship with God. Some think it's about trying harder, being good, or going to church. Others think it's just saying a prayer or believing certain things.

But the Bible tells a much greater reality, a much greater story, and a much greater truth. Salvation is not about what we do for God, but about what God has done for us through Jesus. So, in this new series that we're calling "Saved: Understanding God's Work in Us," we're going to be exploring what it truly means to be saved, how God rescues us from sin, brings us into a new life, and secures us by His grace.

Whether you're sure of your faith or still wondering, I believe this series will help you understand what salvation really is and how you can personally know the God who saves. And when God saves you, everything changes. Things begin to change.

So let's read the Scripture, Ephesians chapter 2. I'll be reading from the New King James version of the Bible. I'm going to read the first 10 verses of Ephesians 2. Now, of course, this letter, written by the Apostle Paul under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, was written to the believers in the city of Ephesus, the church there in Ephesus.

In chapter 2, the Bible says this: "And you He made alive, who were dead in trespasses and sins, in which you once walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit who now works in the sons of disobedience, among whom also we all once conducted ourselves in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, just as the others."

"But God, who is rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in trespasses, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved), and raised us up together, and made us sit together in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, that in the ages to come He might show the exceeding riches of His grace in His kindness toward us in Christ Jesus."

"For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast. For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them." And we'll stop here. This is God's word that we've just read.

Imagine walking along the beach and seeing someone floating face down in the water offshore. They're not waving their hands. They're not calling for help. They're unconscious and lifeless. That's not someone who needs a life preserver or a float. That's someone who needs to be rescued, pulled out, revived, and given life.

And that's how the Bible describes our condition before God saves us: not spiritually injured, not spiritually misguided, not spiritually struggling—dead. Dead. That's the word the Apostle Paul uses to describe us in Ephesians chapter 2, verse 1. It says, "And you He made alive, who were dead in trespasses and sins."

See, folks, our problem is not that we're bad and need to be made better. Our problem is that we're dead and we need to be made alive. This is one of the clearest passages in the Bible about salvation. In just ten verses, the Apostle Paul takes us from the depths of human sin to the heights of God's mercy. He takes us from the pit of wrath to the riches of grace. He takes us from what we were to what we are in Christ.

If we don't understand this passage, we won't understand the Gospel. If we minimize sin, we'll distort grace. If we think we had something to do with our salvation, we'll rob God of His glory. So today, we're going to take a hard but honest look at what the Bible says about our need for salvation, God's work in salvation, and the purpose of salvation.

In these verses, here's the big idea: Salvation is entirely a work of God's grace. He raises the spiritually dead, He redeems the helpless, and He creates us anew for His glory. Let's walk through this very powerful passage under those three headings. And may the Spirit of God today awaken us again to the miracle of grace.

Chapter 2, verse 1. Let's start where the passage starts, and that's with the bad news. The Bible doesn't sugarcoat our condition before Christ saves us. The Apostle Paul doesn't say we were misguided. He doesn't say we were a little off track. He says we were dead in sin. "Who were dead in trespasses and sins." Dead in sin. Spiritually lifeless toward God. By our very nature, we were unresponsive to God.

Look again at chapter 2, verses 1 through 3. Put your eyes on God's word again. "And you He made alive, who were dead in trespasses and sins, in which you once walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit who now works in the sons of disobedience, among whom also we all once conducted ourselves in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, just as the others."

I don't know about you, but I think this paints a very sobering picture of the human condition. And before Christ in our life, this is true of all of us. And so let's unpack it piece by piece here just for a moment. What we see here in this passage, first of all, is we need to understand our need for salvation.

Again, Paul says we were dead in trespasses and sins. This is not physical death, but spiritual death. Sin didn't just wound us; it killed us. Like a branch severed from a tree, we're cut off from the life of God. And he says we were dead in trespasses and sins. Trespasses and sins.

Now, we've had Providence on three acres over on Old Tomoka Road. When we first bought it, we had a problem with people dumping stuff in there. How many mattresses did we get off that property? It was a mess. And Pastor Danny and Pastor Jesse, they went to great lengths and they put up barriers across the driveways and they put signs that said "No Trespassing". No trespassing.

What are we saying? We're saying, "Don't step over this line that we've put up." Trespasses—this refers to willful disobedience. Stepping over the line that God has drawn in His law and in His commands. Trespasses and sins. That's a broader term meaning missing the mark of God's holy standard.

And together, trespasses and sins describe a life that is fundamentally out of step with God and spiritually dead toward God. Bible students, those of you who have read the Gospels, the Gospel of John—think of Lazarus in the tomb in the Gospel of John chapter 11. He was dead. He didn't ask for help. He didn't move toward Jesus. He didn't take the first step. What happened? Jesus called his name and gave him life.

That's a picture of how salvation works. Because before God intervenes, we are not sick and seeking; we are dead and drifting. This is a vital truth to grasp. Salvation doesn't begin with us looking for God; it begins with God coming to rescue the spiritually dead.

Guest (Male): The message you're hearing today is one the world desperately needs because, apart from Christ, there is no hope for the human heart. And that's why Foundations of Truth exists: to clearly proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ through faithful biblical teaching.

This ministry is entirely listener-supported. Your financial partnership helps make these daily broadcasts possible. And if God is using this program in your life, would you stand with us today? You can help us financially online anytime and give a gift at firm-foundations.org. That's firm-foundations.org. Now back to more of today's message on "God Saves Sinners". Here's Dr. Timothy Mann.

Dr. Timothy Mann: What else do we see here about our need for salvation? Not only were we spiritually dead, look at verse 2 and 3. It says we were enslaved to the world, to the devil, and to the flesh. The Bible uses three very powerful forces that held us captive before Christ saves us.

We see the course of the world here. "In which you once walked according to the course of this world." That word "walked" is a metaphorical term just to describe how you live life. You live according to the course of the world. Meaning, before Christ saves us, we follow the values of the world. We chased after success, or power, or pleasure, approval, fun, money, lust, accolades. We were shaped by the culture around us, not the character of God.

And even though we thought we were independent, we were just going with the current of a fallen world. And another force that held us captive, the Bible says here, the prince of the power of the air. It says, "According to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit who now works in the sons of disobedience." This is a reference to Satan.

Listen, he's not a myth. He's not just a symbol of evil. He is a real spiritual being, a powerful fallen archangel who, along with his demonic army, influences and affects and, in fact, has under his control unbelievers. And he hates and he opposes the work of God. And those apart from Christ—those who are not saved—are under his deceptive sway, even if they don't realize it.

And then there is, it says, the lusts of the flesh. "We all once conducted ourselves in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind." We were slaves to our own sinful nature. We did what felt right, what we wanted, without reference to God and His will. And we thought we were free, but can I get a witness? Sin is a cruel master.

And look, the Apostle Paul is not describing some particularly bad group of people. He's describing all of us. All of us. I mean, notice the shift in verse 3. Look at your Bibles. "Among whom also we all once conducted ourselves." We all once conducted ourselves. Religious and irreligious, church-goers and non-church-goers, the good kids and the rebels. No one is exempt. Sin is not just what we do; it's what we are apart from Christ. It's what we can call depravity.

So, we continue to see our need for salvation. What does it say in the second part of verse 3? It tells us we were under God's wrath. "And were by nature children of wrath, just as the others." That's just as everybody else. This is the most unpopular part of the Gospel, but one of the most necessary. God's wrath is real. It is His holy, just, proper response to sin. He is not indifferent to evil. He doesn't just sweep sin under the rug. He is righteous, and we, by nature, stood condemned under God's wrath.

The Bible says we were "children of wrath". Our natural spiritual state was separation from God and deserving of judgment. This is not just a warning about the future. It was or is, depending on your standing with God today, our condition in the present. Some will say, "But I've always been a Christian." No, you haven't. Not according to Ephesians chapter 2.

Every true believer has a BC, that is, Before Christ. You might have grown up in church, you might have learned Bible stories, you might have even been well-behaved, but listen to me: you were still dead in sin until Christ made you alive. That's why grace is amazing. That's why it's so amazing, because the backdrop is so dark. The light of God's mercy shines so brightly.

And all of this applies to everyone. If you are a mature believer, if you're someone who's been a believer for a number of years—you're a mature believer—don't forget what God saved you from. I know this to be the truth: the longer we walk with Christ, the more tempted we are to soften the truth about our former condition. "I wasn't all that bad."

But I'm going to tell you, remembering our spiritual deadness makes us grateful for His grace. If you're a new believer or a relatively new believer, don't be discouraged. Everyone starts here. Your story is not unusual; it's exactly what Scripture describes. You were lost, and now you're found. You were dead, and now you live.

If you're an unbeliever, if you're not saved, this is your current condition. And listen to me very carefully: no amount of religion, no amount of morality can change it. You don't need spiritual improvement; you need spiritual resurrection. But the good news is that the God who raises the dead is rich in mercy.

We've seen the bleak reality of our condition apart from Christ: dead in sin, enslaved by the world, enslaved by the flesh, enslaved by the devil, and deserving of God's wrath. And so, if the Apostle Paul had stopped at verse 3, we would be left in despair. But thank God He didn't, because now as we move into the passage a little further, we not only see and hopefully come to understand our need for salvation, but we see God's work in salvation.

I want you to look at verse 4. "But God." Let's all say that: "But God." Yeah, "But God." I think these are two of the greatest words in all of Scripture because they mark a turning point in the story, not just the story of the Gospel, the reality of the Gospel, but they mark a turning point in the story of every genuine believer who has true salvation.

And what do we see here? Well, we see God's initiative. He acted when we were dead in sin. Verse 4: "But God, who is rich in mercy." The contrast is really breathtaking. We were dead in trespasses and sins—but God. We were objects of wrath—but God. We were powerless and hopeless—but God.

The Apostle Paul here, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, wants us to know that the reason we are saved is not because of what we've done, but because of who God is. Because of who God is. He is rich in mercy. Rich in mercy. I'm happy to announce to you this morning He is not stingy with compassion. He's overflowing with it. His mercy is not reluctant; it's abundant. God delights in showing mercy to those who do not deserve it.

And if, in some little inkling of a way this morning, you sit here and you think, "I deserved mercy," then you don't understand salvation. You don't understand grace. Jesus said it this way: He said, "I did not come to call the righteous to repentance, but sinners." And if you're sitting in here this morning and you think, "I'm good, I'm good enough, I'm righteous," then you ain't got no mercy. God delights in showing mercy to those who know they do not deserve it.

Titus chapter 3, verse 5 echoes this truth. The Bible says, "Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us." What else do we see? We also see God's motive here: His great love. Verse 4, the second half of verse 4: "Because of His great love with which He loved us."

Why did God save us? Not because we're lovable, but because He is love. And His love is not a response to our goodness; it's rooted in His character. And the Bible says in verse 5 God loved us even when we were dead in sins. That's what verse 5 says. He set His affection on us while we were still rebels against Him.

Romans chapter 5, verse 8—one of my favorite verses in all of the New Testament—says it plainly: "But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us." Never get over that. Never get over that. You were at your worst, and God loved you with His best. And the love that saved you wasn't based on your performance; it was based on His purpose.

And then we see God's action: He made us alive with Christ. Look at verse 5: "Even when we were dead in trespasses, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved)." This is what we doctrinally call regeneration. It's the giving of new life. Salvation is not self-improvement; it's a resurrection. What God did for Christ physically at the tomb, He does for us spiritually in salvation. He brings the dead to life.

Guest (Male): You've been listening to Foundations of Truth, the biblical teaching ministry of Dr. Timothy Mann. We are a listener-supported radio program and podcast, and your donations help keep us on the air. You can give a gift today at firm-foundations.org. That's firm-foundations.org. And thank you so much for listening. The grass withers, the flower fades, but the word of God stands forever.

Dr. Timothy Mann: Before we close today, I want to tell you about a resource that I believe will be a genuine help to you. I've recently published my first book, "Saved: Understanding God's Work in Us". In over 30 years of pastoral ministry, one of the questions I've encountered more than almost any other is this: How can I know that I am truly saved?

It is a question that deserves a careful biblical answer, and that is exactly what this book is designed to give. "Saved: Understanding God's Work in Us" walks through what the Scripture teaches about salvation: what God has done for us, what He is doing in us, and the assurance that every believer can have because of His word.

If you want to understand salvation more deeply, stand on firmer ground in your faith, or be better equipped to share the Gospel with someone you love, then this book was written for you. You can find it on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books-A-Million, and pretty much anywhere you buy books. Just search "Saved: Understanding God's Work in Us" by Dr. Timothy Mann. I pray it strengthens your faith.

Thanks for being with us today. And if you listen to the program on The Word Orlando, 990 AM or 101.5 FM, I would love to hear from you. We're on at 10 AM, Monday through Friday, on The Word Orlando. If you're a listener, we'd like to know. Send me an email at timothymann@firm-foundations.org. That's timothymann@firm-foundations.org. I would sure love to hear from you. God bless.

This transcript is provided as a written companion to the original message and may contain inaccuracies or transcription errors. For complete context and clarity, please refer to the original audio recording. Time-sensitive references or promotional details may be outdated. This material is intended for personal use and informational purposes only.

Featured Offer

How Can You Know the Bible is the Authoritative Word of God?

In this free guide, Dr. Timothy Mann, Senior Pastor and Bible Teacher at Providence Church, sits down with those questions and takes them seriously. He walks through three solid reasons why the Bible can be trusted as God's authoritative Word, drawing on real history, archaeology, and the kind of fulfilled prophecy that's hard to explain away.

Video from Dr. Timothy Mann

About Foundations of Truth

This is Foundations of Truth, the podcast of Firm Foundations Ministries. Our mission is to help you build your life on the unshakable foundation of God’s Word, rooted in Scripture and anchored in the grace of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Each episode is designed to strengthen your faith and encourage you to stand firm in a shifting world.

About Dr. Timothy Mann

Dr Timothy Mann is the founder of Firm Foundations Ministries. Pastor Tim grew up in Western North Carolina and became a follower of Jesus as a teenager. While serving in the U.S. Army, he responded to God’s call on his life to preach the Gospel and left military service to begin pastoring in a local church.


Pastor Tim is the founding Pastor of Providence Church and has pastored churches in Missouri, North Carolina, and Florida. He attended Southwest Baptist University in Bolivar, Missouri; Luther Rice Seminary in Atlanta, Georgia; and Anderson University in Anderson, South Carolina. He has a Bachelor of Arts in Religion, a Master of Arts in Christian Studies, a Master of Divinity, and a Doctor of Ministry degree in Biblical Preaching. He is a member of the Evangelical Homiletics Society, and his philosophy of ministry is centered upon being used by God to help others become committed and mature followers of Jesus and leading the church to glorify God through fulfilling the Great Commission that Christ gave his followers. What he loves most about ministry is when others understand God’s Word and grace and love Him more fully.


Pastor Tim and his wife, Patty, have been married 30+ years, and they have two adult children and one grandson.



Contact Foundations of Truth with Dr. Timothy Mann

Mailing Address:

PO Box 731867, Ormond Beach, FL 32173


Facebook:

https://www.facebook.com/FirmFoundationsMinistriesDRTM/

Phone Number:

386-310-4997