Walking in God's Grace. Inc World Prayr
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[Jesus said,] “But if you do eat my flesh and drink my blood, you will have eternal life, and I will raise you to life on the last day.” (John 6:54)
All of you have faith in the Son of God, and I have written to let you know that you have eternal life. (1 John 5:13)
There are often many mistakes here as mentioned previously because of the failing to understand these terms. Most of the mistakes fall into one of three areas:
1) Forgetting or not knowing or not bothering to learn that there are indeed three different tenses of the words “saved” and “salvation” as it is referred to in the New Testament. This often results in the words and terms being confused and used interchangeably.
2) Failing to remember that salvation is a complete work of God from beginning to end. We have no part in it. God initiates it, empowers it, and enables us to live out His work through the Holy Spirit. We do have a responsibility, though. We are responsible for making choices, empowered by the Holy Spirit, every day in faith and in obedience motivated out of gratitude for the grace God gives new each day. Choices that reflect a heart of gratitude for the precious gift of Salvation God has given all of us.
God is the one who began this good work in you, and I am certain that he won’t stop before it is complete on the day that Christ Jesus returns (Philippians 1:6).
Forgetting this important point always leads to some form of legalism in which we attempt to earn, maintain, sustain, keep, or balance out the grace gift of God.
3) Getting justification confused with sanctification. When we keep them separate, we will always have a clearer understanding of God’s Word.
If I resist the grace of God can I lose my salvation?
We all resist the grace of God daily in our lives. We think we can live this life on our own or God is interested in the ledger of good deeds and righteous works I am keeping and considers what I can do or not do in order to impress Him.
We are the ones Peter speaks of in 2 Peter 1:5-9.
For this very reason, make every effort to supplement your faith with virtue, and virtue with knowledge, 6 and knowledge with self-control, and self-control with steadfastness, and steadfastness with godliness, 7 and godliness with brotherly affection, and brotherly affection with love. 8 For if these qualities are yours and are increasing, they keep you from being ineffective or unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. 9 For whoever lacks these qualities is so nearsighted that he is blind, having forgotten that he was cleansed from his former sins. (ESV, my emphasis)
1 John 1:8 gives the unvarnished answer to the question of our spiritual state: “If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.” We are the ones who lack Peter’s quoted qualities and are failing.
In our own self-sufficiency and self-reliance we are not looking for the grace of God. In our pride and grace-averse hearts, we work to keep logs and account books of the works we do and good deeds we do, believing that we must still do more to impress God, rather than realizing Christ said “It is finished” (John 19:30).
Christ was the perfect sacrifice and the only acceptable sacrifice. The single sacrifice that could satisfy God’s need for justice (Romans 5:15-17).
We will continually sin, resist God’s grace, try to impress God, balance grace, justify ourselves to God and others, remain self-reliant, grace averse and live as we please. That is why grace is a free gift. God is pure, so are His gifts. Grace is one of those gifts and why it is given freely, regardless of how we respond. If it was in response or given and pulled back because we did nothing with it, abused it, did not do what God asked us to do it would not only not be a free gift, it would also not be pure. As a result it would not be from God. Not to mention that it would no longer be grace (Romans 11:6). God did not want us bringing our ledgers and books of good works to Him saying, “Look what I did.” It is totally 100% a work of God (Ephesians 2:8-10).
Thanks be to God it is, because we would surely mess it up! Because it is a work of God we know He is faithful to finish what He started (Philippians 1:6). The greatest proof that we have that God will finish what He has started, that we will indeed one day rise again with completely new bodies is the very resurrection of Christ Himself (1 Corinthians 15:12-58).
To make sure we knew it was completely His work and that He would finish it, He gave us His Holy Spirit as a promise or seal (KJV) of our inheritance (Ephesians 1:13-14). In Scripture, a seal signifies:
A finished transaction (Jeremiah 32: 9-10, John 17:4)
Ownership (Jeremiah 32:11-12, 2 Timothy 2:19)
Security (Esther 8:8, Daniel 6:17, Ephesians 4:30)
So yes, you will resist God’s grace just like the rest of us, but God knows this. He expected it and made sure your salvation is secured not because of what you do or don’t do but because of what His Son did. Nor are we responsible for finishing the job as every step of salvation is dependent 100% on His grace. His grace really is sufficient even for our messed up theology, weak attempts to please, half-hearted obedience, divided worship and weak sacrifice.
Still some are bound to bring up how John said that those who “abide in him ought to walk like Christ” (1 John 2:5-6) and John quotes Christ in John 15:4, “Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me.” So what does the word “abide” here mean or what is it referring to?
The word abide here refers to staying connected to Christ or in a relationship with Him. What is it that keeps us in that relationship with Christ?
Some would say that it is our obedience, but we have covered that none of us are perfectly obedient. If it is based on our obedience does that mean that when we are just the little bit disobedient God kicks us out. Sort of like, “OK, you did not thank Me over there so because of that you’re out of here.” Some would say it is not the least sins but when your life does not reflect God’s standard of living. The only issue with that is that’s our standard; God’s standard is perfection. Since none of us are perfect none of us will ever be obedient enough to enable us to stay in a relationship with Christ, within on our own ability.
There is another answer given to what enables us to stay connected to Christ here in this passage. That answer would be our faith. When we place our faith in Christ’s finished work God imparts Christ’s perfect obedience to us. Thus making it not about our obedience, but His obedience to God’s laws (The things the Bible tells us to do, which is a lot more than God’s moral law). After all, while we will always fail, He never does. Then through our faith the Holy Spirit works to keep us connected to or in a relationship with Christ. We need always remember that our salvation is a total work from beginning to end completed by God. Remembering this is God’s work makes faith the accurate answer to the question of what keeps us abiding or connected to Christ.
Then motivated by gratitude for the grace we are given daily we make choices, choices to be obedient to God. As we offer our lives back to Christ. This is the choosing to “abide in him; that, when he shall appear, we may have confidence, and not be ashamed before him at his coming (1 John 1:28).
However, even here the apostle John knows we will not always make the healthy choice that is based on our identity as a disciple of Jesus. John lets us know that the Holy Spirit not only teaches what choices to make but also enables us