Key Scripture:
Romans 11:1–5 (NIV) – God has not rejected His people. Even in seasons of failure, confusion, and falling away, God preserves a remnant chosen by grace.
Sermon Summary
A remnant is not a leftover—it is a people kept on purpose. God intentionally preserves a faithful group by grace to carry His purpose when the majority drifts away. Throughout Scripture, God proves He never abandons His people; He refines them.
Paul reminds the Church that even in discouraging moments, God always has someone who hasn’t bowed, quit, or compromised. Not yesterday. Not someday. Right now.
Who Is the Remnant?
Where Are They?
The greatest damage to the Church today is not from culture—it’s from within the camp.
We’re wounding what we should be washing.
Exposing what we should be shaping.
Canceling people God is still calling.
The Church was meant to be a hospital, not a firing squad.
How the Remnant Responds
“By this shall all men know that you are My disciples—if you love one another.”
(John 13:35)
II. Protect the Seed
You don’t discard the whole fruit because of decay.
Systems can be corrected. Behavior can be confronted.
But the seed must always be protected.
Some people didn’t fail because they didn’t love God—they were exposed too early.
Cut away what’s rotten, but cover what’s reproductive.
III. God Is Making Things Right With What’s Left
God has never needed everything to fix anything.
When numbers shrink, purpose sharpens.
God doesn’t rebuild with masses—He restores with the faithful, the meek, the submitted, and the still-here.
Biblical Proof
Paul himself is proof:
God redeems what’s left and restores what survives.
Just as God preserved 7,000 in Elijah’s day, there is still a remnant today—Jew and Gentile—who say, “I’m locked in.”
Closing Thought
When you protect the seed of the apple, you secure the future of the orchard.
God still has a remnant. And He’s not finished yet.