Photo by Tamilan pugal 2021 |
As we saw last week, salvation has an instant rewards program beyond compare! We are positionally justified in Christ, a new creation in Him, and sealed and indwelled by the Holy Spirit Who gives us at least one
spiritual gift. We have instant and continual access to God the Father through
prayer, and we are His adopted children and joint heirs with Christ.
But that is only the beginning! Throughout our Christian
life, from the moment we are saved until the moment the Lord takes us home, we
are progressively sanctified, meaning
that we become more like Christ and progressively conformed or shaped into His image (Romans 8:29-30). He is
the Potter, and we are the clay (Isaiah
29:16; 64:8; Jeremiah 18:6; Romans
9:21),
continually molded and reshaped into a vessel of honor increasingly useful for
His service (2 Timothy 2:20-21).
The process of progressive sanctification occurs through meditating
on God’s Word, through prayer, through obedience, and even through trials causing suffering. God may allow trials into our life to increase our faith in and reliance on Him (2 Corinthians 12:9); to give us
compassion and experience to be able to help others going through similar
trials; and to help us identify with and understand Christ’s suffering on the cross (Philippians 3:10) as He
paid our sin debt.
Beginning at the moment we are born again, the Holy
Spirit is there to guide us (Romans 8:9;Galatians 5:25), to teach us from
God’s Word, to let us know through our conscience when we are sinning, to
comfort us in difficult times and to give us wisdom (John 14:16-26).
As our Guide, the Spirit teaches us to understand and know the Word, both the Scripture
and Jesus Christ (John 14:26; 1
Corinthians1:18-31;2:9-15;13:9-12), Who is the express
image of God the Father (Hebrews 1:3),
Through the Spirit, we know that we belong to God evermore (Romans 8:16; 1 John 4:13-16). The Spirit keeps us in communication with
Jesus Christ, and with the Father through Christ (John 14:17,20), allowing us to be filled with all the
fullness of God (Ephesians 3:19).
At the moment of salvation, our indwelling by the Holy
Spirit gives believers the mind of Christ (1
Corinthians 2:16; Philippians 2:5). As we die to our sin nature
and yield to the Spirit, we gain more and more access to that perfect Mind, and
we are more able to walk in the Spirit (Galatians
5:16,25). We increasingly subject our body to His will, offering it to
Him as a living sacrifice (Romans 12:1)
and recognizing that it is the temple of the Holy Ghost (1 Corinthians 6:19-20).
We receive God’s grace
upon grace, in a never-ending stream (John
1:16). Not only did His grace save us (Ephesians 2:8) and justify us (Romans 3:24), but it allows us to serve Him and work to bear
fruit for His kingdom (Hebrews 12:28;
1 Corinthians 15:10). His grace strengthens us in our weakness and
allows us to endure trials (2
Corinthians 12:9). It is a limitless resource, flowing more abundantly
as our need increases (James 4:6; 2
Corinthians 8:7) and as we grow closer to Him in our Christian walk (1 Corinthians 1:3-5; 2 Peter 3:18).
We become His
ambassadors through the work of the Holy Spirit! (2 Corinthians 5:20). As the saying goes, we are the only
Bible many lost people will ever read, and the only Jesus many lost people will
ever see. God has placed every believer in a unique sphere of influence and
equipped each of us in a unique way to represent Him and to spread His Word in
that community as we fulfill the Great Commission (Matthew 28: 19-20).
We grow and have opportunities for service to the community of believers. Led by the Spirit,
we support one another in love (1
Peter 1: 22) as
a church family, bearing one another’s burdens and so fulfilling the law of
Christ (Galatians 6:2). As we become more like Christ, we begin to
love self-sacrificingly, as He did, showing that love not only toward God and toward
fellow believers, but also toward the unsaved and even toward our enemies (Luke 10:27).
Just because we are saved does not mean that our problems will go away. Our health and financial condition may not improve, but our attitude will change toward our life
circumstances. The Spirit helps us to realize that our earthly life is
temporary and transient (James 4:14),
and that we can look forward to eternity with our Lord and Savior! (1 Corinthians 2:9; Revelation 21:23)
Through the fruit
of the Spirit, we will have peace that
passes all understanding about
whatever happens, because we will have faith that God is working it all out for
our good and His glory (John 14:27,
Romans 8:28). To unsaved people, that peace will be incomprehensible, because
they rely on themselves alone to work out problems, and they cannot have peace
when there is no apparent solution (Philippians
4: 6-7).
As part of the fruit of the Spirit, we will have joy in the Lord. The apostle Paul told
us to rejoice always (Philippians 4:4),
and he himself was able to do that despite being imprisoned, shipwrecked,
beaten, and suffering from his thorn in the flesh (2 Corinthians 11:24-30; 12:7-10).
Happiness is based on circumstances, but true joy comes
from knowing that Christ died and rose again to give us the gift of eternal
life (John 3:16). Nothing and
no one can ever take that away from us (Romans
8:38-39.
Whatever sorrow we experience on earth will disappear once we
are with Jesus in Heaven (Romans 8:18).
Earthly sorrow lasts a very short time, but the joy of being in His presence
will last forever.
That is our blessed hope (Titus 2:13), of spending eternity with Christ and with
fellow believers (Romans 15:13).
We hope, not in the sense of wishing for it to happen, but in the faith-filled
anticipation that it will come to pass, for He has said it and it is so! Our
hope is in all the eternal rewards of salvation, which we shall discuss in a future post!
© 2013 Laurie Collett
Reposted from the archives
4 comments:
Dear Laurie,
I like that header photo of the potter shaping a vessel from a lump of clay while it's rotating fast on a wheel. Yet, little is said about the placing of the vessel into the kiln so it can be useable afterwards.
I suppose our sufferings can be likened to the kiln. Just as the heat removes all moisture from the clay, setting it hard so it can hold other fluids without ruining it, so even slowly, I have come to learn that our poor health and physical suffering remove all that is ungodly in our lives to bring us closer to God and to partake in his holiness.
Wishing God's blessings on you and Richard.
Dear Frank,
Great point about our need for suffering, for strengthening and for purification. Your comment reminds me of the potter's shed in the book Hinds' Feet in High Places, where all the vessels uniquely designed by the Master Potter had to be fired before they were fit for service. Praise the Lord that He uses even our suffering for our ultimate good and His glory.
May God bless you and Alex,
Laurie
Hi Laurie,
every Word of God that I read or hear is like speaking with Him in reality. Thank God that He enabled us to have eternal life when we leave this world through the sacrifice of His only Son Who was not born of man, Jesus Christ - the One mediator between man and God. God bless.
Hi Brenda,
Amen -- we are so blessed to have His written Word, through which He communicates with us. Praise to Our Lord Jesus Christ -- the only Way to the Father and the only mediator between God and Man. God bless you and yours,
Laurie
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