The sermon centres on Enoch's prophetic ministry, emphasizing his faithful proclamation of Christ's second coming and the impending day of judgment as revealed in Jude 14–15. Through a powerful blend of conviction and pastoral urgency, the message highlights Enoch's unwavering commitment to truth in a corrupt age, portraying him not as a recluse but as a courageous preacher who confronted his generation with the reality of divine accountability. The sermon underscores that judgment is not merely a future event but a present reality, where every ungodly deed and hard speech against God will be exposed, and the heart of the gospel is not only warning but a call to repentance and faith in Christ as the only means of salvation. Drawing from Scripture, it contrasts humanity's futile attempts to control the world with God's sovereign plan to bring history to a climactic end, urging listeners to respond now before the day of reckoning arrives, when all will stand before the great white throne, convinced too late of their sin and rejection of Christ.