Justification is Not a Process – 02.09.24

On Sunday, after a message on the Passover wherein I drew a distinction between justification and sanctification, I was stopped and asked this question in the Fellowship Hall. “Pastor, doesn’t the Bible say we have to work out our salvation with fear and trembling?”   Great question; the answer is found in the tree tenses of salvation: past, present & future;  A.K.A: Justification, Sanctification & Glorification!  

What saved us in the past, when we  were still in our sins—fallen sons of Adam by nature—was the  grace of God in the gospel. Nowhere is that put more succinctly than in Ephesians: “For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast” (Eph. 2:8–9).

But the New Testament can also speak about our salvation in the present tense—we are “being saved” (1 Cor. 1:18; 2 Cor. 2:15)—as well as in the future tense—we “shall . . . be saved” (Rom. 5:9).

There is only one salvation and one way of salvation. What occurred in our past, works itself out in the present, and comes to consummation in the future is all of a piece. Justification now leads to glorification then (Rom. 8:29–30).

Why, then, does the New Testament speak of salvation in three tenses? The answer lies in considering what happens in salvation. Initially, at the point of regeneration, our sins are forgiven — entirely and completely. We have been delivered from sin’s penalty. Through faith, we are reckoned to be righteous—as righteous as Christ is. Then, there is sanctification—a process whereby we are being delivered from sin’s power. Ultimately, in heaven, we will be delivered from sin’s presence. John Stott has argued that when Paul reasoned with Governor Felix about “righteousness and self-control and the coming judgment” (Acts 24:25), he was pointing out the three tenses of salvation.

At every stage—justification, sanctification, glorification—we come with empty hands, seeking mercy from our heavenly Father. Even at the point of our obedience as Christians—we are to “work out [our] salvation with fear and trembling” (Phil. 2:12)—we do so only because God works “in [us], both to will and to work for his good pleasure” (Phil. 2:13). And when we enter the pearly gates of heaven, wisdom will dictate that we show our empty hands and say with Edward Mote: “On Christ the solid Rock I stand; All other ground is sinking sand.”

As I mentioned on Sunday. Some will be saved “yet as through fire” (1 Cor 3:15).  A good example of those may well be Hymenaeus and Alexander who Paul turned over to Satan for the destruction of their flesh so that they might be taught not to blaspheme.  I imagine we’ll meet them in heaven, and I also imagine they will be crownless.  ☹️

Keep in mind the three tenses – it’s amazing to me how often verses like Philippians 2:12 are thrown around as if they are speaking of earning Justification.  

“….and the blood of Jesus his Son purifies us from all sin.”

Pastor Scott

P.S.  I do believe these concepts and have for a long time, but some of this verbiage is not mine.  I seem to have lost the attribution, but I don’t want to pass it off as my own.

Jargon & Assumptions – 01.26.24

If you ever try to read a medical or technical journal you may find yourself awash in unfamiliar terms used by practitioners.  Sometimes said terms are just unique to their particular field of study but often they are jargon, verbal shortcuts.

Here at church we sometimes use Old Testament words despite knowing full well we live post-cross in the Age of Grace.  Often we use those words not because we don’t understand that we are  “free from the law”, but because the word best sums up what we mean in a way we mutually understand.  I’m talking about words like “sanctuary” and “tithe.”  The challenge is, words like that really do have specific meanings and a visitor (a newer attender or even someone coming into adulthood and thinking things through for the first time) can be thrown by our use thereof.  Given Paul’s counsel in Romans 14, I’m going to try to take more care, but I also want to explain.

Sanctuary – Renamed at WOGF –  “Worship Center”

The word “sanctuary” appears 150 in the NASB translation of the Bible.  Three of those 150 appearances are in the New Testament.  Once in Matthew which records Judas throwing 30 pieces of silver into the temple sanctuary, and twice in Hebrews discussing serving in the presence of God in the true sanctuary.  At some point in church history someone observed or decided that the meeting room of a church was where we meet God.  In no way shape or form am I saying that’s incorrect. But I am saying that it’s contrary to the New Testament picture of our bodies being the temples (sanctuaries) of the Holy Spirit.  No one is going to jump down anyone’s throat for misremembering. I still call WOGF BRBC half the time, I just want to slowly fix our jargon where I can.

TITHE – Offerings (Not really a renaming)

This is a more generalized jargon or short-cut.  I’ve attached an overview article from GotQuestions and it links to 5 more articles if you want details.  NO, we are not under a tithe mandate.  Yes, Christians will probably never stop using the word, despite my attempts to “officially” change it.  When you hear the word just think of it as synonymous with “taking the offering” because that’s what the speaker means. 🙂

https://www.gotquestions.org/tithing-Christian.html

I was taught to think of the tithe (10%) as my minimum or baseline giving.  So while I don’t believe I live under tithing as a law, we (Kelly and I) have never budgeted to live on less than 90% of our income and God has always kept our bills paid.  A testimony I have often heard repeated!  – Pastor Scott