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Background
on the statement "The
dynamics of salvation" |
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In "An Open Letter to the Church" (Adventist
Review, May 24, 1979), the president of the General Conference,
Neal C. Wilson, announced the intention of the denomination to
convene a representative group "to survey and study difficult
theological issues" and share the results with the church. This
group, the Righteousness by Faith Consultation, consisting of
145 members, was appointed and met in Washington, D.C., October
3-4, 1979.
The consultation appointed an editorial committee
of 24 members to prepare for publication the materials growing
out of the meeting. The editorial committee met February 4-7,
1980, and the paper "The Dynamics of Salvation" was prepared
for eventual publication in the Adventist Review. However,
it was first distributed to the full membership of the consultation
for critique and then revised in harmony with the responses.
The result is the statement "The Dynamics of Salvation" printed
in this issue of the Adventist Review. While this article
is the product of the Righteousness by Faith Consultation, it
also reflects discussions at previous meetings devoted to a study
of righteousness by faith.
"The Dynamics of Salvation"
is a study document, not a creedal statement. It attempts to
set forth what Seventh-day Adventists believe about salvation
through Jesus Christ. It seeks to combine theological accuracy
with clarity and practicality, so that the reader may experience
the benefits of salvation and not merely grasp its theory.
Certain aspects of this
inexhaustible theme, such as the nature of Christ, perfection,
and original sin, are not dealt with in detail in this paper. They may be taken
up later as subjects of the church's ongoing discussions. The Dynamics of Salvation" should
be considered as a whole, in order that the balance of the various parts may
be discerned. |
The story of our salvation is inexhaustible. It exposes the mystery of
evil and opens the mystery of the cross through which divine love conquers
evil. It tells the desperate condition of the human family and God's plan
and power to restore us into His image. It is the incredibly good news
that God has done for us and does in us what we could never do for ourselves
and which we do not deserve.
This story will be our study and song forever. Our
minds will continue to be stretched by contemplation of "the mystery hidden
for ages and generations but now made manifest to his saints" (Col. 1:26),*
and we will discern ever richer treasures of divine love and wisdom.
Yet the good news is for all. Although its depths tax
the sharpest intellect, it is simple enough for even a child to understand.
God has made it plain that every member of the human family might hear
and wonder, and wondering be won by the story of divine love. He would
have every one of us come to realize that in Jesus Christ we are accepted,
redeemed, and adopted into God's family on earth and in heaven. This assurance
turns despair into hope, and desolation to joy; for the transforming power
of God's love makes us new men and women in Christ.
Seventh-day Adventists understand the gospel in a particular
setting. We see it in the light of the final, end-time messages of the
three angels of Revelation 14:6-12. Our task is to complete the proclamation
of the "everlasting gospel" to all the world just prior to the return
of our Lord. It is the same story, the eternal story, the one story from
Genesis to Revelation-the message of the third angel, we are
told, centers in justification by faith (Evangelism, p. 190)-but
it is proclaimed in the context of the final events of earth's history
and of Christ's ministry in heaven (Daniel 7, 8; Revelation 3, 4; Hebrews
8-10).
We also see a cosmic dimension in the story of our
salvation. The divine plan reconciles all things in heaven and earth through
the cross of Christ (Col. 1:20). The agelong conflict between good and
evil originated in heaven in the rebellion of Lucifer against God. It
spread to this earth, as our first parents yielded to the tempter; thus
sin became part of us, and our world became the arena in which Christ
battles with Satan for our allegiance.
The law of God, which is an expression of His character,
plays a central role in this controversy. Lucifer denied the justice and
goodness of the law, rejected its authority, and claimed that it could
not be obeyed; he and his subjects continue to oppose it. In saving men
and women from rebellion and sin, therefore, God remains true to His own
character and His law; His gracious activity which saves us at the same
time vindicates His character and law, and reconciles the world unto Himself
(2 Cor. 5:19; Patriarchs and Prophets, pp. 68, 69).
This study focuses on the dynamics of salvation. It
does not attempt to embrace all aspects of the plan of salvation, even
as it does not claim to plumb all the depths of its mysteries. Its concern
is with men and women, here and now; it endeavors to tell plainly the
good news that God has for us. This good news, the gospel, is so utterly
different from human modes of thought that it is startling. It is easily
distorted or lost or obscured-even by theological debate. Therefore
it must be told and retold, probed ever more deeply, heard once and ever
anew.
Section 1.
Humanity's Desperate Need
Before we can accept the good news, we must
recognize our desperate need. We must see that we can do nothing to restore
ourselves to God, or to improve our evil nature: our condition is hopeless.
To such poverty-mental, physical, spiritual-God's salvation
comes.
1. We stand condemned before God (Rom. 3:19,
20). We are rebels at heart and rebels in deed, alienated from God
and from one another. Even our "righteous deeds" are as "filthy rags"
(KJV) in His sight (Isa. 64:6), because even our motives at best are mixed:
we glory in our reputation; we are proud of our good works; we compare
ourselves with others. When we see ourselves as God sees us, we know that
we are a mixture of good and evil, always a bundle of conflicting desires,
emotions, and aspirations. In our innermost being we are corrupt: "The
whole head is sick, and the whole heart faint. From the sole of the foot
even to the head, there is no soundness in it, but bruises and sores and
bleeding wounds" (chap. 1:5, 6).
Nor can we change our standing before God. No sacrifice,
no gift, no act of devotion-no work of any sort-can
restore the broken relationship. Our first parents were created in God's
image, but that image became defaced (Gen. 1:27; Testimonies,
vol. 4, p. 294); after their fall they fled from the presence of God.
"Sin has marred and well-nigh obliterated the image of God in man" (Patriarchs
and Prophets, p. 595), and we are still running from Him.
2. We are alienated from our true selves.
We are torn by doubts and conflicts; we are frightened by the depths of
sin which we see in others, and we feel within ourselves the surge of
the same evil. We are burdened by guilt, for we fall short of the glory
of God (Rom. 3:23). We proclaim our freedom, but are subject to the yoke
of bondage (Gal. 5:1) and are slaves of corruption (2 Peter 2:19).
3. We are alienated also from one another.
We seek to gather to ourselves riches, and to grow in reputation at the
expense of others; so we are jealous and suspicious, envious and crafty,
insensitive and cruel (Jer. 17:9). The network of human relations established
by the Creator lies in tatters (Rom. 1:28-32); but all our efforts are
fragmentary and inadequate.
4. We are alienated from the created world.
God appointed us to have "dominion" over the world (Gen. 1:26; Ps. 8:6),
but we have turned stewardship into exploitation. We ravage the resources
of the earth, consuming them greedily, and turning all we find to our
own selfish ends (Rev. 11:18).
So humanity is in a desperate condition. All our plans,
hopes, and efforts are corrupted by our sinfulness. Individually and collectively
we stand condemned for what we have done and for what we are, for the
spirit of rebellion against God that is part of us, for our all-encompassing
alienation and sin (Rom. 5:18; Steps to Christ, pp. 19-25).
We are lost, full of anxiety and loneliness. And we
are unable to help ourselves.
Section 2.
The Divine Initiative
The good news of the Bible is that God has
taken the initiative to save us. He comes to us in our lostness, offering
salvation in all its abundance.
The gospel reverses all human understanding and endeavors.
By nature we operate on the principles of achievement: the reward should
match the performance. But the good news is that "the gift of God is eternal
life through Jesus Christ our Lord" (Rom. 6:23, KJV). For "where sin abounded,
grace did much more abound" (chap. 5:20, KJV). God is generous in His
love, extravagant beyond our comprehension.
Throughout the Bible, God takes the initiative to save.
With the first sin He came seeking; and His call, "Where are you?" (Gen.
3:9), echoes down the ages. He calls Abraham and makes him the father
of the faithful (chaps. 12:1-3; 15:6-21; Heb. 11:8-10). In Egypt He initiates
the rescue of the Hebrew tribes from slavery (Ex. 3:6-10), and in Babylon
He intervenes again to bring them home from exile (2 Chron. 36:22,
23).
This saving activity of God is expressed by the word
righteousness. The Bible shows God's righteousness by what He
does: it is not merely a state; rather, it manifests itself uniquely in
saving activity. And in that activity Israel finds hope. So the psalmist
exclaims, "Lead me, O Lord, in thy righteousness" (Ps. 5:8) and "In thy
righteousness deliver me" (chaps. 31:1; 71:2), while God announces, "I
bring near My righteousness, it is not far off; and My salvation will
not delay" (Isa. 46:13; cf. 51:5; 56:1; etc., NASB). So we can say that
God's righteousness brings salvation; therefore God is called "the Lord
our righteousness" (Jer. 3:6, KJV).
The saving righteousness of God is not in conflict
with His eternal law. At Sinai the law was given in written form as part
of God's saving act, to define the terms of the covenant relationship
between God and His earthly children, but not as a means of salvation.
The law warns that God "will not justify the wicked" (Ex. 23:7, KJV);
yet before Him "no man living is righteous" (Ps. 143:2, NASB). And since
God as "the Judge of all the earth" (Gen. 18:25) cannot act unjustly,
every person must expect a sentence of condemnation on the basis of his
performance. Realizing this, the psalmist pleads, "Do not enter into judgment
with Thy servant" (Ps. 143:2, NASB). For the law given by God's initiative,
tells men and women what to do, but not how to gain salvation; only God
can create a clean heart (chap. 51:10), and the prophet announces that
God's Chosen One "will justify the many, as He will bear their iniquities. . . .
He Himself bore the sin of many, and interceded for the transgressors"
(Isa. 53:11, 12, NASB).
In Jesus Christ the divine initiative reaches a unique
climax. God had continually intervened to bring salvation; now, in a supreme
act of self-giving, God the Son becomes the incarnate Christ. "The Word
was made flesh, and dwelt among us" (John 1:14, KJV). He became one with
us, sharing our lot, showing us what true humanity-humanity made
in the image of God-is like. He suffered and was tested, struggling
with the tempter (Heb. 2:14, 17; 5:7-9). He "was in all points tempted
like as we are, yet without sin: (chap. 4:15, KJV). By word and life,
by death and resurrection, the God-man Jesus Christ, brings the good news
of God's love for us and the salvation He provides (John 3:16).
Over and over the life and teachings of Jesus reveal
God's character (chap. 1:18). Instead of shrinking in terror or running
in rebellion from Him, we are to call Him "our Father" (Matt. 6:9). All
that we see of goodness, care, and loving provision in human fatherhood
is at best a faint reflection of the heavenly Father. He is the divine
Provider, who cares even for the birds and lilies (verses 25-34); He is
the divine Lover, who counts everyone on earth as His child, even though
His fatherhood is not acknowledged (chap. 5:43-48); He is the divine Giver,
who delights to pour His blessings upon His children (chap. 7:7-12).
His generosity amazes us. He lavishes salvation; we
do nothing to earn it. He is not an angry sovereign, nor a demanding judge.
Rather, He pours out liberally, without regard to what we deserve. Our
only condition is our need; we have no claim on Him at all (cf. Matt.
18:23-25; 20:1-16; Luke 18:9-14).
God's grace always surprises the self-righteous. It
is the so-called "righteous" who challenge the teachings of Jesus; they
cannot comprehend the idea that salvation is really totally free. They
cling to some vestige of meritorious human activity, some remnant of their
own achievement in which they may find secret satisfaction (Matt. 21:31;
Luke 14:11).
The mission of Jesus corresponds with this revelation
of God. He comes as the One sent to the Father (John 5:36, 37), the living
embodiment of divine love to a lost world. He has come not to condemn
us but to save us (chap. 3:16-21; Matt. 1:21).
And this mission exemplifies liberation (Luke 4:16-21).
He sets us free from the captivity of the evil one. He sets us free from
eternal death (Heb. 2:14, 15). He sets us free from guilt. He proclaims
"the acceptable year of the Lord" (Luke 4:19), offering forgiveness to
all who believe. We come to Him downcast, burdened, enslaved; we go away
rejoicing, made new to live as sons and daughters of the God who forgives.
Jesus' mission of liberation led inevitably to the
cross. He foresaw it, shrank from it, but accepted it in conformity with
the divine will. His whole life had pointed to it; as important as it
was for Him to live among us and for us, it was only by His death that
God could save us (Rom. 3:21-26; Fundamentals of Christian Education,
p. 382).
He was "the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world"
(Rev. 13:8, KJV). Before the world was created, God had covenanted to
meet the crisis of sin and death (The Desire of Ages, p. 22;
The SDA Bible Commentary, Ellen G. White Comments, vol.
5, p. 1149). Sin is not a light thing, and God does not lightly pass over
it; the divine initiative meets the demands of the broken law. God is
just, and the justifier of him who believes in Jesus (Rom. 3:26)-through
the cross. God would not only become flesh and struggle with temptation
without succumbing to it (Heb. 4:15); in the climactic act of the incredible
series of divine initiatives, He would die on a despised cross, vicariously
for us all. "Being found in human form he humbled himself and became obedient
unto death, even death on a cross" (Phil. 2:8).
Jesus died for every person at every place and in every
time. This was the event toward which the sacri-fices of the Old Testament
pointed. It reconciled the world to God (2 Cor. 5:19); it delivered
humanity from the power of Satan; it opened the door to a life in union
with God. As Christians we are therefore not ashamed of the cross; it
is the guarantee of our forgiveness, the ground of our assurance, and
the pledge of our eternal life in God. "But far be it from me to glory
except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ" (Gal. 6:14; Testimonies
to Ministers, pp. 161, 162).
While the cross and resurrection of Christ are the
focal point of the ages (cf. Heb. 9:26), the divine initiative does not
end with them. The risen Christ, ascended to the right hand of the Father,
asks for the Holy Spirit to be sent to the world (John 14:16, 26). The
Spirit had always prompted men and women to follow God; now He comes in
a new way. Without Him our will is weak, so bent toward evil that we cannot
of ourselves choose the good. But He energizes the will so that we can
respond to the good news and accept the gift of salvation (chap. 3:5-8;
7:17; Phil. 2:13). In this way the ministry of Jesus is perpetuated: the
Spirit convicts the world of sin, righteousness, and judgment (John 16:8).
The story of salvation is thus the story of grace and
love. The God who delights to forgive has redeemed the world by Jesus
Christ. At every point in the story, God takes the initiative.
Section 3.
The Human Response to Grace
While Christ by His death has redeemed the
world and paid the penalty of every sin, not every person actually will
experience salvation. Why is this? Because God does not coerce, not even
for our best good. He has provided salvation as a gift, but He does not
force that gift upon us. He has made reconciliation, but we must agree
to be reconciled.
The human response to grace centers in faith, and the
essence of faith is trust, taking God at His word (Rom. 14:23; Heb. 11:1).
In the Bible, a great example of faith is Abraham, of whom Paul quotes
from the Old Testament that he "believed God, and it was reckoned to him
as righteousness" (Rom. 4:3; cf. Gen. 15:6). Here, in the context of a
covenant made by God, Abraham's faith is not simply an intellectual assent
but a total response of trust in the promising word of God. It is a readiness
to submit himself entirely to God and to accept His word. In this act
of faith, Abraham is in a right relationship with God, and obedience is
the result (Heb. 11:8). Thus he obeys God and is circumcised (Gen. 17:22-27).
Faith in the Biblical sense is never merely a mental act but always a
relationship of "faith working through love" (Gal. 5:6, NASB; cf. The
SDA Bible Commentary, Ellen G. White Comments, vol. 6, p. 1111; Selected
Messages, book 1, p. 398).
There is no merit in faith itself. We are not saved
by faith but by grace: "For by grace you have been saved through faith"
(Eph. 2:8); "There is nothing in faith that makes it our saviour."-The
SDA Bible Commentary, Ellen G. White Comments, vol. 6, p. 1071. Instead,
faith is the means, the instrument, by which we claim God's gift from
salvation (Selected Messages, book 1, p. 363). The cross alone
is our salvation; faith is our personal acceptance of the cross as God's
decisive act in our behalf.
Without the drawing of God, no person will come to
Him (John 6:44; ibid., p. 390). Our faces are turned away from Him and
we lack even the desire to return. Our will is so weakened that we continually
choose only evil (Jer. 13:23). But the Holy Spirit empowers our wills,
awakening within us a longing for God. He leads us to repent: we are sorry
for sin and turn from it as we reach out in faith to receive God's gift
(The SDA Bible Commentary, Ellen G. White Comments, vol. 6, p.
1073; The Desire of Ages, p. 175). Thus faith itself is a gift
from God offered to us all (Eph. 2:8; Selected Messages, book
2, p. 375) through the Scriptures.
We cannot fully comprehend the manner in which the
Holy Spirit energizes our wills to produce faith. We may say that we receive
God's salvation because we have chosen to do so, but we must affirm also
that whatever is human in faith is possible only because of the divine
initiative in the work of the Holy Spirit. Thus there can be no "boasting"
in our faith (Rom. 3:27).
The possibility of faith is also the possibility of
its rejection. We may resist the urging of the Spirit and spurn the gift
held out by God. By doing so we condemn ourselves, for we have spurned
grace and despised love (John 3:18, 19).
The results of the salvation appropriated by faith
are all-embracing: we are radically reoriented; we have both a new status
and a new life. In the following sections of this paper we shall study
in turn the new status and the new life in Christ. We must realize, however,
that, while these aspects may be distinguished for the sake of clarity
of discussion, they are never separated in experience. God's saving activity
which declares us to be His sons and daughters is at the same time a transforming
relationship (Rom. 5:1-5; Titus 3:5; Heb. 10:16, 17; Thoughts From
the Mount of Blessing, p. 114).
Section 4.
The New Status in Christ
The new status in Christ is too rich to be
encompassed by any one term. Among the many expressions used in the Bible
to describe this reality, the principal ones are justification, reconciliation,
forgiveness, adoption, and sanctification. Each of these terms, while
commonly employed by Christians, has a distinctive Biblical usage and
meaning.
1. Justification. This word comes from the setting
of a law court. We are regarded as criminals, arraigned at the bar of
God's justice. As the law is read out to us, we know that we are guilty.
Even if we could plead innocent in terms of external compliance, the law
probes our motives and desires, and shatters our defenses: "The law is
spiritual; but I am carnal, sold under sin" (Rom. 7:14). But now there
is a stir in the court. Our Advocate rises to speak in our behalf. Instead
of agreeing to our death, He presents His own death; while acknowledging
our disobedience, He points to His own obedience. Instead of claiming
our righteousness, He covers us with His own righteousness (Christ's
Object Lessons, p. 311). Thus He stands for us as our Representative
(The Desire of Ages, p. 357; The SDA Bible Commentary,
Ellen G. White Comments, vol. 7, p. 925) and Substitute (Selected
Messages, book 1, pp. 256, 258). Because of Him, the verdict is pronounced,
"Acquitted!" We go forth free from the accusations of the law that previously
had condemned us. This is the meaning of justification by grace through
faith (Rom. 3:21-26).
2. Reconciliation. The picture here is
drawn from human relations. Friends have fallen out; bitter feelings of
estrangement have taken hold. One party, however, has already acted to
restore the relationship; He has gone to the full extent, and beyond human
expectation, thought, or activity, to make matters right. God has once
again taken the initiative; He has "reconciled us to Himself through Christ"
(2 Cor. 5:18, NASB). So far as He is concerned, all cause of ill
will has been removed. But the second party remains alienated. He harbors
feelings of guilt for the activities which led to the disruption of relationships;
he feeds upon his hostilities. One day, however, the hopelessness of the
situation and the magnanimity of the first party touch his heart. He turns
around and is reconciled (2 Cor. 5:20; cf. Rom. 5:10; Thoughts
From the Mount of Blessing, pp. 115, 116).
3. Forgiveness. This word is related to
the world of financial transactions. According to Jesus' parable of the
two debtors, we are confronted with a debt that we can never repay. It
is so immense that we can never hope to cope with it (Matt. 18:25-35).
This debt represents our sin. In the midst of this hopeless condition,
however, God freely cancels the debt through Jesus Christ. "Christ died
for our sins" (1 Cor. 15:3). All of our accounts are fully paid up;
we enjoy the status of those who have no more debts of sin, and who therefore
forgive their debtors (Matt. 18:32, 33).
4. Adoption. This model is one of family
relationships. We are in a wretched condition, orphans in a hostile world.
We seek a home, a place of acceptance, a place to belong. We are "aliens
from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers from the covenants of promise,
having no hope, and without God in the world" (Eph. 2:12, KJV). Then one
day we are adopted. Our Father completes all formalities, paying the full
adoption price and thus making us His own children. He welcomes us into
His home and gives us all its rights and privileges. We receive the full
status of His sons and daughters. "When the fulness of the time was come,
God sent forth His Son, made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem
them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons"
(Gal. 4:4, 5, KJV; cf. Rom. 8:15; Christ's Object Lessons, p.
250).
5. Sanctification. This word is usually
employed by Christians to denote growth toward the divine ideal. In the
Bible, however, it has a wider range of meaning, often signifying new
status. Thus, it frequently means "dedication" or "consecration," as when
Paul addresses his letters to the "sanctified ones" or "saints" (e.g.,
Rom. 1:7; 1 Cor. 1:2; 2 Cor. 1:1; Eph. 1:1). He likewise writes
to the Corinthians, "You were washed, you were sanctified, you
were justified" (1 Cor. 6:11). The significance is drawn from the
sanctuary setting. In Israel everything and everyone associated with the
sanctuary had to be set apart from profane use and "consecrated" to God's
service. So, in a world in revolt, God has those who belong to Him, who
are set apart from the world and separated unto Him. Because they have
accepted His grace through faith, they no longer belong to the prince
of evil. They are stamped with God's own identifying stamp; they are His
own property, which He holds dear amid the turmoil of this world (Phil.
2:15; Testimonies to Ministers, pp. 49, 50).
These terms-justification, reconciliation,
forgiveness, adoption, and sanctification-along with the concepts
they entail, all point to our new status as Christians. They tell us how
lofty are our privileges and how holy is the name with which we are named
(The SDA Bible Commentary, Ellen G. White Comments, vol. 6, p.
1070).
These terms also suggest responsibility. Because we
are sons and daughters of the King of heaven, we are to live in a manner
that befits our royal status. Having been acquitted in court because Jesus
has taken our place, we will show our gratitude by the way we live. Since
we have become aware of the divine measures, even Christ's death on the
cross, which led to our reconciliation, we can no longer take lightly
a knowledge of God. With the crushing burden of our guilt rolled away,
we will beware of coming under the bondage of debt again. Now that we
are no longer alone and estranged, we will rejoice in our new family and
seek to honor its name. Because God has called us apart from the world,
we cannot maintain its lifestyle and pursue its goals and ambitions (2 Cor.
6:16-18).
We therefore have a new attitude toward sin and sinning.
The lordship of sin has been broken in our lives; we are servants of Christ,
yielding our members "as instruments of righteousness" (Rom. 6:12-19).
We can do all things through Christ who strengthens us (Phil. 4:13). God
desires us to have victory over every sin: "My little children, I am writing
this to you so that you may not sin" (1 John 2:1). But even if we
slip and fall, our sins are not entirely like those of the unredeemed.
The acts may seem identical from an external viewpoint, but the inner
attitude toward them is radically different. The nonbeliever is at home
in sin, unmindful of its consequences and of God, and often in deliberate
rebellion against His law. When the believer sins, he hates his sin and
sinning, because it was the cause of the death of his Saviour, and he
does not want to crucify the Son of God again (chap. 3:4-10; Heb. 6:6;
The Great Controversy, p. 508).
As long as we stand in the faith relationship with
God, we retain our new status as His sons and daughters. Though at times
we are overcome by temptation, we are not cast off, because we still have
an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous (1 John 2:1),
who is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from
all unrighteousness (chap. 1:9). We remain members of the divine family.
It is not the occasional good deed or misdeed but the general trend of
the life that indicates the direction in which we are moving-whether
we have become rebels at heart again or are still standing in the relationship
of faith (Steps to Christ, pp. 47, 58; The Ministry of Healing,
p. 249).
The new status involves the new relationship. One cannot
be divorced from the other. Having received God's gift of salvation, we
now live by faith. We need to reach out to God day by day in loving trust,
turning from pride in ourselves and relying entirely upon Him. The relationship
will grow and strengthen; if not, it will wither and die. God would have
the former, but He will not prevent the latter. He will not violate the
element of human freedom in faith. If we allow the new relationship to
die, we can no longer claim the benefits of the new status of salvation
(Heb. 6:4-8; John 15:4-8; Selected Messages, book 1, p. 366).
Section 5.
The New Life in Christ
The new status in Christ is inseparably related
to new life. The gift of salvation, received by faith, makes us new persons.
The divine, initiating love evokes within us a responding love, and we
are changed progressively into the likeness of God. This change has several
related dimensions.
1. New birth. No one can fully unravel
the mystery of the new birth. The Holy Spirit works upon us, and we are
"born again" or "regenerated" (John 3:4-8). There is a fundamental change
in the direction of our life, our attitudes, our values. We retain our
individuality, but now it is no longer self-centered; we have turned away
from feeding our ego and toward serving God and man. "That which is born
of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit"
(verse 6).
2. Restoration. Under the power of the
Spirit, the nearly obliterated image of God in us is in the process of
continual restoration.
There is a restoration of the mental, physical, and
spiritual person (1 Thess. 5:23). Instead of anxiety and inner conflict,
we have "the peace of God, which passes all understanding" (Phil. 4:7).
We have the abiding joy of the Lord, willing to do His will and good pleasure
(chap. 2:13), and living for His glory. We honor Him in our body, the
temple of the Holy Spirit, presenting it as a "living sacrifice" in service
(1 Cor. 6:19, 20; Rom. 12:1, 2).
There is a restoration of interpersonal relationships.
We see all persons as God sees them without pride of race, social class,
sex, or religion: we appreciate them for what they are; we seek to understand
the circumstances that have molded their lives; we care for them with
Christlike concern.
There is a restoration of relationships with the physical
world. In sin the dominion over the earth given to our first parents (Gen.
1:26) is exploited; now responsible stewardship under Christ is restored.
We regard the world's resources as God's gifts to us.
3. Growth. The new life is one of growth
in Christ. The divine image in us is progressively restored as we, by
beholding our Lord, are transformed by the Spirit (2 Cor. 3:18).
This process is commonly termed sanctification, although the
Bible refers to it in various ways. "Let us cleanse ourselves from all
filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of
God" (2 Cor. 7:1, KJV). We thus may "grow up into him in all things"
(Eph. 4:15, KJV; cf. Prophets and Kings, p. 233; Testimonies,
vol. 6, p. 350; The SDA Bible Commentary, Ellen G. White Comments,
vol. 5, pp. 1146, 1147).
Spiritual growth is reflected in our words and actions.
These "works," however, are the result of our salvation and not the means
of it. Through the indwelling Spirit we bear the fruit of "love, joy,
peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control"
(Gal. 5:22, 23). This fruit is evidence that we have become sons and daughters
of God (The SDA Bible Commentary, Ellen G. White Comments, vol.
6, p. 1111).
The Christian life involves a new relationship to God's
law. Instead of resenting divine instruction and seeking to evade it,
we now delight to know God's will and to follow it (Ps. 40:8). We put
our will on the side of God's will and shun every known sin; thus His
law comes to fulfillment in our lives (Rom. 8:1-4; 13:8-10; Gal. 5:14).
The path of obedience leads us into ever-increasing
understanding of God's will for us (Prov. 4:18). From its magnification
in the life and teachings of Jesus, we see that it is far more than a
set of rules that call for external compliance. We see that it searches
even our thoughts and motives, and the desires and intents of the heart.
Further, obedience is not merely the absence of transgression; it is a
life of positive goodness. It centers in unstudied, loving activity in
relation to every person whose life we touch. It is a life that, in its
own sphere, mirrors the life of God in His, as "the impulse to help and
bless others springs consistently from within" (Christ's Object Lessons,
p. 384; Matt. 5:20-48; Thoughts From the Mount of Blessing, pp.
76-78).
With this understanding, we cannot attempt to enumerate
our obedience to God's law. Even if we were able to list deeds of evil
that we have avoided and deeds of kindness that we have done, we could
not count the secrets of our own hearts. Nor could we say that we have
loved as we might have loved, as God loves.
The life of obedience is properly measured by the degree
to which we have completely entrusted ourselves to Christ. We have laid
aside trust in ourselves. The more Christlike we become, the less we will
trust ourselves and the more we will realize how far short of the divine
pattern we still are. But by faith we are clothed with the perfect righteousness
of Christ, which has met all the requirements of the law. "Our dependence
is not in what man can do; it is in what God can do for man through Christ.
When we surrender ourselves wholly to God, and fully believe, the blood
of Christ cleanses from all sin. The conscience can be freed from condemnation.
Through faith in His blood, all may be made perfect in Christ Jesus. Thank
God that we are not dealing with impossibilities. We may claim sanctification"
(Selected Messages, book 2, p. 32).
4. Grace and faith. We do not live the
Christian life in a manner other than the way in which we first accepted
salvation. Having accepted salvation through faith, we do not now trust
in human accomplishment (Gal. 3:1-5). At every point in the new life,
from its beginning to its ultimate glorification, we depend entirely on
grace received through faith. "As therefore you received Christ Jesus
the Lord, so live in him" (Col. 2:6; Steps to Christ, p. 69).
By the Holy Spirit, God works in us "both to will and to do of his good
pleasure" (Phil. 2:13, KJV). It is the divine initiative which sustains
our life in Christ, even as it brought into being (The SDA Bible Commentary,
Ellen G. White Comments, vol. 6, p. 1071).
We are to nurture faith. Growth is not automatic; obedience
is not mechanical. God wills to re-create us in His image, but we must
be willing to foster our relation with Him (John 15:1-8). We are to feed
on His Word, commune with Him in prayer, and tell what He has done for
us (2 Tim. 3:16, 17; 1 Thess. 5:17; Mark 5:19). Day by day we
are to understand His will more fully, and experience new dimensions of
commitment.
5. Assurance. The new life involves assurance
(Heb. 10:19-22). Our salvation was secured by the most decisive divine
act in history: Christ's death and resurrection. We know that He who has
begun a good work in us will not leave us to struggle alone. We know that,
so long as we put our trust in Him, He will hold us by a hand that will
never let us go (The Ministry of Healing, p. 182). He is able
to complete His purposes in us, presenting us blameless before His presence
with exceeding joy (Phil. 1:6; 1 Cor. 1:8; 1 Thess. 5:23). Already
we have passed from death to life; already the Spirit bears witness with
our spirit that we are sons and daughters of God (1 John 3:14; 5:18-20;
Rom. 8:16). He gives us His peace in the midst of strife, and His strength
sufficient for our every need (John 14:27; 2 Cor. 12:9). Not only
has God in Christ made the once-for-all sacrifice for our sins, but we
now have a great High Priest in the heavenly sanctuary, where He ever
lives to make intercession for us and to send forth timely help from the
throne of grace (Heb. 7:25; 4:16; Selected Messages, book 2,
pp. 32, 33).
6. Praise. So we rejoice in the Lord (Ps.
20:5; Phil. 4:4). In every experience of life, in the darkness as well
as the light, He is with us (Heb. 13:5). His yoke is easy; He gives us
rest (Matt. 11:28-30). "Rooted and built up in him and established in
the faith," we abound in thanksgiving (Col. 2:7). In everything He is
working for our good; "we are more than conquerors through him who loved
us" (Rom. 8:28, 37). The Sabbath is the celebration of His creation, His
salvation, and His liberating presence. Indeed, every duty of life is
consecrated to the Lord of love who has set us free. Through the faithful
performance of even the humblest task and by lovingly sharing the good
news of salvation, we seek to bring glory to our heavenly Father (Matt.
5:13-16; Colporteur Ministry. p. 77).
Section 6.
The Consummation
"Beloved, we are God's children now; it does
not yet appear what we shall be, but we know that when he appears we shall
be like him, for we shall see him as he is. And every one who thus hopes
in him purifies himself as he is pure" (1 John 3:2, 3). This is the
goal of a sanctified life in Christ.
Now our devotion is flawed, our desires are confused.
Now we know in part. Now we are beset by doubts in the midst of peace,
disappointments in the midst of joy. Now our obedience is hampered by
our frailty. One day, however, we shall be like Him. "Our citizenship
is in heaven, from which also we eagerly wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus
Christ; who will transform the body of our humble state into conformity
with the body of His glory, by the exertion of the power that He has even
to subject all things to Himself." (Phil. 3:20, 21, NASB).
Time reaches toward this climactic end. We live in
the end-time. The prophetic time clock signaled that in 1844 the final
phase of the great controversy between good and evil commenced with God's
preadvent judgment. The people of God in all ages have looked forward
to God's judgment (Revelation 5). They have waited expectantly for it
as the time when God's people will be vindicated and the universe restored
to a perfect, sinless state. So in this judgment hour (chap. 14:6-12)
we thank God for Christ our Advocate, through whom alone we may stand
in the judgment, whose love motivates us to holy living, and who soon
will deliver all things to the Father (1 Cor. 15:24-28).
The consummation is at hand. It is God's final initiative
in His saving activity.
Thus the dynamics of salvation forever center in the
righteousness of God and His Son. God's righteousness encompasses the
sweep of our needs: it leads us from guilt to justification, from sinfulness
to sanctification, from alienation to restoration and on to glorification.
It brings about the decisive change from slavery to sin to new life in
Christ, from bondage in fear to joy in the Spirit. Salvation is from the
Lord; the Lord is our righteousness! (Jonah 2:9; Jer. 23:6).
*The
Revised Standard Version is used throughout this document unless otherwise
noted.
Scriptures quoted from RSV are from the Revised Standard Version of the
Bible, copyright © 1946, 1952, 1971 by the Division of Christian
Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA.
Used by permission.
Scriptures
quoted from NASB are from the New American Standard Bible, (©)
The Lockman Foundation 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975,
1977.
Copyright © 1980 Review and Herald® Publishing Association. Reprinted
from Adventist Review, July 31, 1980, by the Biblical Research
Institute.
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