Wednesday Night Bible Study | 11.17.2021

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Notes

FPC Starkville Wednesday Bible Study

Martin Lifer

November 17, 2021

 

A Very Basic Introduction to the Gospel Truths of God’s Gracious Justification & Sanctification of Believers in Jesus Christ & His Righteousness, by the Work of His Spirit.

 

Prelude: Any focus on “our” salvation – including justification & sanctification – should be NOT first & last on us but on Jesus Christ our Lord (i.e. Christocentric).

 

1 Corinthians 1:30-31 - And because of Him you are in Christ Jesus, Who became to us wisdom from God, righteousness and sanctification and redemption, so that, as it is written, “Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord.”

 

Salvation = Union with Christ à Salvation

 

Romans 8:1 – There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.

 

Galatians 2:20 – I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me. And the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.

 

2 Corinthians 5:17 – Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.

 

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.”

 

Our salvation and all its benefits come from Christ and our Union with Him.  He gives faith... He gives repentance. Salvation springs from Christ alone. Faith and repentance are fruits of the Spirit's regenerating work in the soul. This Biblical order – which Reformed theology affirms – is that regeneration precedes faith (John 6:63, 65, 6:37) and ensures us that our salvation is wholly of God and by grace alone, NOT a cooperation or joint work of man and God. 

J. I. Packer BAPTISM: THIS RITE EXHIBITS UNION WITH CHRIST
Or don’t you know that all of us who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life. Romans 6:3-4

Christian baptism, which has the form of a ceremonial washing (like John’s pre-Christian baptism), is a sign from God that signifies inward cleansing and remission of sins (Acts 22:16; 1 Cor. 6:11; Eph. 5:25-27), Spirit-wrought regeneration and new life (Titus 3:5), and the abiding presence of the Holy Spirit as God’s seal testifying and guaranteeing that one will be kept safe in Christ forever (1 Cor. 12:13; Eph. 1:13-14). Baptism carries these meanings because first and fundamentally it signifies union with Christ in his death, burial, and resurrection (Rom. 6:3-7; Col. 2:11-12); and this union with Christ is the source of every element in our salvation (1 John 5:11-12). Receiving the sign in faith assures the persons baptized that God’s gift of new life in Christ is freely given to them. At the same time, it commits them to live henceforth in a new way as committed disciples of Jesus. Baptism signifies a watershed point in a human life because it signifies a new-creational engrafting into Christ’s risen life.

Theologian Anthony Hoekema – Union with Christ begins with God's pre-temporal decision to save his people in and through Jesus Christ. This union, further, is based on the redemptive work for his people, which Christ did in history. Finally, this union is actually established with God's people after they have been born, continues throughout their lives, and has as its goal their eternal glorification in the life to come.

 

We go on, then, to see union with Christ as having its roots in divine election, its basis in the redemptive work of Christ, and its actual establishment with God's people in time. Union between Christ and his people was planned already in eternity, in the sovereign pre-temporal decision whereby God the Father selected us as his own. Christ Himself was chosen to be our Savior before the creation of the world (1 Pet. 1:20); Ephesians 1:4 teaches us that when the Father chose Christ, He also chose us....

 

We are initially united with Christ in regeneration.

[next] "We appropriate and continue to live out of this union through faith.

Third, "We are justified in union with Christ."

Fourth, "We are sanctified through union with Christ.

"Fifth, "We persevere in the life of faith in union with Christ.

"Finally, "We shall be eternally glorified with Christ." 

 

The Ordo Salutis

The Reformed affirmation of the Biblical “Ordo Salutis.” “Ordo Salutis (Latin: “order of salvation”) is a Biblical way of understanding God’s soteriological causal (not chronological) ordering all the grace-events of redemption in Christians’ lives in their Union with Christ by the Holy Spirit. 

 

The Reformed Ordo Salutis, revealed clearly in Scripture, including in Romans 8:29-30:

1) election/predestination (in Christ);

2) Atonement;

3) gospel call;

4) inward call;

5) regeneration;

6) conversion (faith repentance);

7) justification;

8) sanctification; and

9) glorification.

 

Romans 8:28-30 And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose. For those whom He foreknew

 He also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son,

in order that He might be the firstborn among many brothers.

And those whom He predestined

He also called, and those whom he called

He also justified, and those whom He justified

He also glorified.

 

But Note!!!:

In Reformed theology, the Ordo Salutis is NOT linear but a UNITED Work of God. So God’s grace & redemptive benefits such as regeneration, faith, repentance, justification and sanctification occur concurrently and NOT contingently OR chronological per se.

Theologian Herman Bavinck – “Regeneration, faith, conversion, renewal, and the like, often [in the Bible] do not point to successive steps in the way of salvation but rather summarize in a single word the entire change which takes place in a man."

 

Note in contrast the Arminian ordo salutis:

1) outward call;

2) faith/election;

3) repentance;

4) regeneration;

5) justification;

6) perseverance; and

7) glorification.

 

 

Justification & Sanctification

 

The Westminster Larger Catechism

Q. 77. What is the difference between justification and sanctification?

A. Although sanctification is inseparably joined to justification,1 the two are distinctly different. In

justification God imputes the righteousness of Christ to believers;2 in sanctification his Spirit

infuses believers with grace and enables them to use it.3 In the former, sin is pardoned;4 in the

latter, it is subdued.5 The one exempts all believers equally and completely from the avenging

anger and condemnation of God in this life;6 the other does not work equally in all believers,7 nor

is it completed in any believer in this life,8 but only grows toward perfection.9

1. 1 Cor 6.11, 1.30, Rom 8.30.

2. Rom 4.6,8, Phil 3.8-9, 2 Cor 5.21.

3. Ez 36.27.

4. Rom 3.24-25.

5. Rom 6.6,14.

6. Rom 8.1,33-34.

7. 1 Jn 2.12-14, Heb 5.12-14, 1 Cor 3.1-2, Mk 4.8,28.

8. 1 Jn 1.8,10.

9. 2 Cor 7.1, Phil 3.12-14, Eph 4.11-15.

 

New City Catechism Justification means our declared righteousness before God, made possible by Christ’s death and resurrection for us. Sanctification means our gradual, growing righteousness, made possible by the Spirit’s work in us.

Commentary by Abraham Booth - Though justification and sanctification are both blessings of grace, and though they are inseparable, yet they are distinct acts of God, and there is, in various respects, a wide difference between them. The distinction may be thus expressed:

Justification (1) respects the person in a legal sense, (2) is a single act of grace, and (3) terminates in a relative change – that is, (a) a freedom from punishment and (b) a right to life.

Sanctification (1) regards him in a physical sense, (2) is a continual work of grace, and (3) terminates in a real changeas to the quality both of habits and actions.

The former is by a righteousness without us; the latter is by holiness wrought in us. That precedes as a cause; this follows as an effect. Justification is by Christ as a priest, and has regard to the guilt of sin. Sanctification is by him as a king, and refers to its dominion. Justification deprives sin of its damning power. Sanctification deprives sin of its reigning power. Justification is instantaneous and complete in all its subjects; sanctification is progressive and perfecting by degrees.

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So Justification refers to God’s declaration & determination that someone is righteous in his sight – through a righteousness from God Himself, given to us by faith in & by the Person & Work of Christ!. This justification is a one-time & everlasting act of grace whereby God declares a sinner to be not simply pardoned but also perfectly righteous before Him. The JUST & HOLY basis for God’s divine declaration & determination is Person & Work of Christ, including, centrally, his atoning & redemptive death. God credits (“imputes”) us with Jesus’ righteousness (the perfect merit). We are justified by grace – a gift freely received – through faith: by trusting in Jesus Christ alone.

Sanctification, like justification, is God’s work of grace in us through faith and is given & possible because of the finished work of Christ on our behalf. However, sanctification is a continual process in which by God’s grace, Spirit & Word we  grow in holiness – being made more holy, more & more into the Image of Christ. So sanctification is an ongoing spiritual process of grace in believers & in their lives. God inspires the progressive transformation of everyone who has been justified into the image of Jesus our Savior through the work of the Holy Spirit.

“Positional” Righteousness v. “Appropriated/Practical” Righteousness…

v. “Perfect” Righteousness.

Justification happens outside of us: God declares us righteous.

Sanctification happens inside of us: God makes us grow in righteousness.

Justification is a one-time event, and sanctification is a continual process.

Hebrews 10:14, 2 Corinthians 5:17-21, Titus 3:5-7

Romans 3:24, 4:1-5, 5:1

Romans 8, Hebrews 12:14, Jude 1:20-21, 2 Peter 3;18

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