We Are Not Justified By Sanctification
"One is unlikely to assert that we are justified by sanctification,
but, whether done intentionally or not, that is what happens when we
allow the teaching of Christian living, ethical imperatives, and
exhortations to holiness to be separated from and to take the place of
the clear statement of the gospel. We can preach our hearts out on texts
about what we ought to be, what makes a
mature church, or what the Holy Spirit wants to do in our lives, but if
we do not constantly, in every sermon, show the link between the
Spirit's work in us to Christ's work for us, we will distort the message
and send people away with a natural theology of salvation by works.
Preaching from the epistles demands of the preacher that the message of
the document be taken as a whole even if only a selection of texts, or
just one verse, is to be expounded. Every sermon should be
understandable on its own as a proclamation of Christ. It is no good to
say that we dealt with the justification element three weeks ago and now
we are following Paul into the imperatives and injunctions for
Christian living. Paul wasn't anticipating a three-week gap between his
exposition of the gospel and his defining of the implications of the
gospel in our lives. Nor was he anticipating that some people would not
be present for the reading of the whole epistle and would hear part of
its message out of context."
Graeme Goldsworthy, Preaching The Whole Bible As Christian Scripture, p. 237
Every time I share about grace someone adds something about works to
balance grace out. It can't be done, so think about what Goldsworthy is
saying. Grace is so foreign to our hearts and minds we just can't accept
it, it can't be right, we desperately want to do something that will
put us in God's good graces, to make us feel better, to bring us peace
because of what we have done instead of entering into rest because of
what Jesus has done.
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