Saturday, January 7, 2012

Justified by faith — J. Gresham Machen

“The beginning of the Christian life is not an act of man but a wonderful act of the Spirit of God.

But it is accompanied by a conscious act of man; it is accompanied by the act of faith. Faith is not a meritorious work; the New Testament never says that a man is saved on account of his faith, but always that he is saved through his faith. Faith is the means which the Holy Spirit uses to apply to the individual soul the benefits of Christ’s death.

And faith is a very simple thing; it simply means the receiving of a gift; it simply means that abandoning the vain effort of earning our way into God’s presence we accept the gift of salvation which Christ offers so full and free. Such is the doctrine – let us not be afraid of the word – such is the doctrine of justification by faith.

That has been a liberating doctrine; to it is due most of the freedom that we possess today, and if it is abandoned freedom will soon depart. If we are interested in what God thinks of us, we shall not be deterred by what men think; the very desire for justification before God makes us independent of the judgments of men. And if the very desire for justification is liberating, how much more the attainment of it! The man who has been justified by God, the man who has accepted as a free gift this condition of rightness with God, is not a man who hopes that possibly, with due effort, if he does not fail, he may win through to become a child of God. But he is a man who has already become a child of God. If our being children of God depended in the slightest measure upon ourselves, we could never be sure that we had attained the highest estate. But it does not depend upon ourselves; it depends only upon God. It is not a reward that we have earned but a gift that we received.

A hard battle indeed lies before us. This faith of ours, if we be true Christians, is a faith that works; and it is a faith that fights – against sin. But we begin the battle not with God as our reward, but with God as our ally. There is the high liberty of the Christian man. Let us not throw our liberty away; let us not descend into the bondage of dependence upon ourselves, let us not descend into the hard bondage of agnostic Modernism. But having received the gospel – this great Magna Charta of Christian liberty – let us stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ has set us free.”

— J. Gresham Machen, God transcendent, sermon Justified by faith

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Away from Jesus or with Him — Martyn Lloyd-Jones

“We desire either to get rid of Christ or else to be with Him & give ourselves entirely to Him. There is in reality no other possibility (Mark 5:17-18)

A man is not a Christian until he realizes how weak he is & how strong the enemy is. The Christian does not rely upon himself & his own strength. It is his knowledge of his own weakness that drives him to Christ continually, & his knowledge of the strength of the enemy also. That is why I stand here Sunday after Sunday inviting you to come to Christ & to give yourselves to Him. The contest with the devil is unequal. Greater men than ourselves have already been conquered. You go down day by day & hour by hour. What hope have you of conquering ‘principalities & powers… the rulers of the darkness of this world… spiritual wickedness in high places?’ (Ephesians 6:12) It cannot be done. Realize that you are defeated. Confess your failures. Acknowledge your sin. Yes, the power of the enemy & our own weakness are always good reasons for being with Christ…

You may fall, but you will never be ‘utterly cast down’ (Psalm 37:24). There will be trials & tribulations, but He will bring you through all ‘more than conqueror.’ Believe on Him tonight & give yourself to His keeping. For His Name’s sake. Amen.”

Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Away from Jesus or with Him