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Speaker

Cameron Porter

263 sermons · All speakers

Jun 14, 2026

The Freeness of the Priceless Feast, Part 2

Cameron Porter · Isaiah 55:3–13

Isaiah 55:3–13 unfolds in three movements: the ground of the gospel summons, the required response, and the guarantee attached to it. The ground is the covenant of grace itself — the sure mercies of David fulfilled in the person and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the covenant champion who secures abundant pardon for abundant sinners. The response calls for active, whole-souled seeking, calling, forsaking, and returning to the Lord while He may still be found. The passage closes with the guarantee that God's word never returns void and that Christ's saving work reverses the curses of Genesis 3, replacing thorns with cypress, expulsion with joyful leading out, and cosmic groaning with cosmic praise.

Jun 14, 2026

The Freeness of the Priceless Feast, Part 1

Cameron Porter · Isaiah 55:1–2

Isaiah 55:1–2 opens with a single attention-grabbing word — 'Ho' — that God employs as an imperatival invitation, commanding sinners to come and feast without money and without price upon the abundant provision of the covenant. The freeness of the offer rests on three realities: the goodness of God, the infinite worth of the things offered, and the infinite payment already made by the suffering servant of Isaiah 53. Water, wine, milk, and bread are not bare metaphors but point to Christ himself — the personification of every element of the feast — who alone satisfies the restless soul that the world's marketplace of false substitutes can never fill. Hearers are called to cease the squandering madness of spending wages on what is not bread and to believe on Christ, receiving the feast he secured at infinite cost and now offers entirely free.

Jun 7, 2026

The Blood of the Unblemished Lamb

Cameron Porter · 1 Peter 1:18–21

The redemption of sinners cannot be purchased by any corruptible thing — not silver or gold, not the accumulated wealth of the cosmos, not the religious observances of the old covenant. Expounding 1 Peter 1:18–19, this sermon traces Peter's negation-then-assertion structure: material things and old covenant types alike are insufficient to ransom a soul bound under sin and divine wrath, but the precious blood of Christ as an unblemished and spotless Lamb accomplishes what nothing else can. The blood of Christ is precious because of the surpassing excellence of the person who shed it, the definite redemption it secures, the infinite cost it required of the Father, its unrepeatable once-for-all character, its endless efficacy, and its eternal appointment in the counsel of the triune God before the foundation of the world. Hearers are pressed toward the Lord's Supper with minds fixed on the logic of substitution: the Lamb's own unblemishedness is the very ground of his capacity to bear the blemishes of his people.

May 31, 2026

SLBC Chapter 23: Of oaths and vows

Cameron Porter

May 24, 2026

The Supper on Betrayal Night

Cameron Porter · Luke 22:14–23

May 3, 2026

2LCF Chapter 22 Of Religious Worship and Sabbath Day Part 2

Cameron Porter

The Sabbath is a creation ordinance and a trans-covenantal, positive-moral, perpetual commandment binding all men in all ages — not merely a Mosaic institution that expired with the Old Covenant. This study of 2LCF Chapter 22, paragraphs 7–8 traces the threefold character of the Sabbath (positive, moral, and perpetual), the divinely-ordered transfer from seventh-day to first-day observance grounded in Christ's resurrection and the inauguration of the new creation, and the proper disposition required for keeping the Lord's Day holy. Because Christ alone kept the Sabbath perfectly as our substitute, Christian Sabbath observance flows from sanctified delight in the triune God rather than from legal merit, and the governing question for the Lord's Day is not how far one may go but how near one may draw to God.

May 3, 2026

The Priestly Blessing of the Ascending King

Cameron Porter · Luke 24:50–53

Luke 24:50–53 presents the ascending Christ as the great high priest who, having offered himself as the perfect and unrepeatable sacrifice for sin, lifts his nail-scarred hands to bless his people as he ascends to the right hand of the Father. The typological connection between Aaron's priestly blessing in Leviticus 9 and Christ's blessing at Bethany illuminates the finality and efficacy of his once-for-all sacrifice and the everlasting nature of the blessing he confers. Because Christ ascends while still blessing — not after — the favor, power, and life he bestows upon his people does not cease. Those who receive this blessing respond with continual worship, corporate praise, and the joyful acknowledgement of God's intrinsic and extrinsic glories — the very pattern the Lord's Supper calls every generation of disciples to embody.

Mar 29, 2026

The Opened Sanctuary

Cameron Porter · Mark 15:33–39

Mar 15, 2026

2LCF Chap. 21 of Christian Liberty and Liberty of conscience

Cameron Porter

Mar 8, 2026

The Glorious Proverb

Cameron Porter · 1 Timothy 1:5

Mar 1, 2026

The Ascended King

Cameron Porter · Daniel 7:13–14

Mar 1, 2026

SLBC: Of The Gospel, and the extent of the grace thereof

Cameron Porter

Mar 1, 2026

The Gospel in the Furnace

Cameron Porter · Daniel 3

Feb 22, 2026

The Children of Covenant Liberty

Cameron Porter · Galatians 4:21–31

Why would anyone seek salvation through law when the law itself testifies to salvation by promise alone? Paul confronts the Galatians with this piercing irony as they drift toward Judaizing error, using Abraham's two sons to expose the fundamental distinction between covenant bondage and covenant liberty. Through careful allegory, he demonstrates that Ishmael and Isaac represent two entirely different covenants—the legal Mosaic covenant that produces only slavery, and the covenant of grace that births true freedom in Christ. Christians must cast out every vestige of legal confidence and stand fast in the liberty that belongs exclusively to the children of promise.

Feb 15, 2026

2LCF Chap.19 Of the Law of God

Cameron Porter

The moral law of God, written on the human conscience at creation, is trans-covenantal in its binding authority — obligating all people in every age, including justified believers under the new covenant. This confession study of 2LCF Chapter 19 traces the threefold division of Old Covenant law (moral, ceremonial, judicial), the divinely designed obsolescence of the ceremonial and judicial laws at Christ's first advent, and the abiding utility of the moral law in its civil, pedagogical, and normative functions. Christ stands at the centre of the law's story as its giver, its perfect active and passive obedient fulfiller, and the one who by his Spirit now governs the hearts of his people in cheerful, free compliance with what the law requires.

Feb 1, 2026

2LCF Chap.18 Of the Assurance of Grace and Salvation

Cameron Porter

Jan 18, 2026

Fearfully and Wonderfully Made

Cameron Porter · Psalm 139:13–16

Jan 18, 2026

2LCF Chap. 17 Perseverance of The Saints

Cameron Porter

Jan 11, 2026

Christ in the River Jordan

Cameron Porter · Matthew 3:13–17

Jan 11, 2026

Paul's Apostolic Concern

Cameron Porter · Galatians 4:8–20

Dec 28, 2025

SLBC Chapter 16: Of Good Works

Cameron Porter

Dec 28, 2025

Who Are the Heirs of the Promise?

Cameron Porter · Galatians 3:29

Dec 21, 2025

Late in Time Behold Him Come

Cameron Porter · Galatians 4:1–5

Nov 30, 2025

Who Are the Sons of God?

Cameron Porter · Galatians 3:26–29

Nov 30, 2025

2LBCF Chapter 14 - Of Saving Faith

Cameron Porter

Nov 23, 2025

The Permanence and Primacy of Christ and Christianity

Cameron Porter · Galatians 3:19–26

Nov 16, 2025

SLBC Chapter 13: Sanctification

Cameron Porter

Oct 5, 2025

2LCF Chapter 10, Of Effectual Calling

Cameron Porter

Sep 28, 2025

The Promise of the Covenant of Grace

Cameron Porter · Galatians 3:15–18

Sep 21, 2025

2LCF Chapter 9, Of Free Will

Cameron Porter