Tuesday, December 27, 2022

The Husband is Not Christ

The prophets, priests, and kings of the Old Testament were types and shadows of the 
coming Messiah. Jesus Christ is that perfect prophet, priest, and king. Read how the Reformers saw Him. Heidelberg Catechism 31 is very explicit on this.

Reading this anointing into the role of husband is a misuse and abuse of Scripture.

There is nothing in the New Testament that says a husband is the prophet, priest, and king over his household. The vocation of husband is a unique calling, in that he is called to love and serve his household as Christ loved and gave Himself for his bride, the Church.

What we are told, explicitly is that wives are to honor their husbands. And that children are to obey their parents. There is nothing novel about this. But when a husband, church, or movement makes the role of husband into more than it actually is, you lose the whole beauty of the relationship.

Jesus is our great Prophet, Priest, and King. And as such provides us with the ultimate revelation, sacrifice, and preservation of our redemption.

When we lose sight of these benefits, attributing them to a man, we create an idol. 
Don't idolize marriage. And do not idolize the vocation of husband. Let it be what it is designed to be... A loving union in which two people honor and cherish one another for their mutual happiness and good.


Saturday, December 24, 2022

Christmas and The Church Calendar

If you knew me a decade ago, I was still coming out of a somewhat separatist, hyper-Calvi-Baptist mindset. For years, our family did not celebrate Christmas, although we recognized the incarnation all year. I would urge Christian friends to consider the roots of the traditions they practiced. I said so many things and held so many strange beliefs but if I'm honest the bottom of it was ignorance of church history and practice and some kind of legal spirit that would not let go of my conscience. ...So many things I wish I could take back and do over, especially for the sake of our girls who are now grown and developing their own customs.

Now there are many reasons I now participate in this holiday. The church has celebrated Advent and the Incarnation at this time of the year for generations, and
the church calendar is not new and it is not based on a pagan calendar year. If you follow our Prayer Book, the Anglican Book of Common Prayer the church calendar starts with Advent, builds all the way to Pentecost, then "Ordinary Time". The purpose is to take the Church through redemptive history, from the Promise of Christ's coming through His entire earthly ministry, to the coming of the Holy Spirit, to the outworking of the Gospel in the lives of God's people.


Nothing could be less "Pagan" than the liturgical calendar. It focuses us on our Savior, His work on our behalf, and all His saving benefits throughout the year.

So, as we celebrate Christmas this year, I again fix my gaze on Jesus: the promised seed of the woman in Genesis, the promised seed of Abraham, and the promised Son of David, who took on human flesh, to live a life of personal, perpetual, perfect obedience to the Father ***in. my. place.

Jesus didn't come into this world a full-grown man, climb up on the cross and die for our sins, only. First, He lived! He was conceived by the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary, was born in a stable, and then lived a  righteous life so that His righteousness could become ours. Glory to God in the highest and thanks be to God for sending His one and only Son in love,  for us. 


May His peace rest upon you and your households today and always.



Monday, December 19, 2022

"Where is Your Rest?" A Sermon by Michael Sundberg

Where is Your Rest?

A Sermon by Michael Sundberg (Paramount Church)

You can watch it online, here: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DRXEexux1lQ&ab_channel=ParamountChurch

Text: Hebrews 4

Context: Author is providing an exhortation by drawing a comparison to Israel’s wilderness wanderings on the way to the Promised Land (ch. 3).

It’s important to note the Jewish background of these believers in the letter to the Hebrews that they were tempted by various pressures to revert back to realities that had already passed away.

And this entailed focusing on the temple, the sacrifices, and other ceremonial aspects of the law in the holy land. He labors to show them that much of these external realities were types and shadows but not the ultimate realities themselves. This signified a lack of grasping the ultimate significance of the person and work of Christ. And so the author of the Hebrews labors to make clear the distinctions between the old covenant and the new and better covenant inaugurated through the redemptive work of Christ. Christ the better mediator establishes this better covenant founded on better promises (Heb. 8:6). The author shows the futility of going back to the shadows in light of Christ’s coming and bringing fulfilment. The author is going to do the same thing in regard to the reality of rest and show us where it’s founded, how it can be obtained and its benefits to us.

3 POINTS: 1. The Promise of Rest, 2. Typological Rest, 3. Realized Rest – as this rest unfolds over redemptive history and its relation to the work of Christ and unity in Him.

I. The Promise of Rest

V1. Therefore, let us fear if, while a promise remains of entering His rest, any one of you may seem to have come short of it.

There is a ‘promise’ and an exhortation to “fear” – godly fear to take seriously this offer in contrast ‘to coming short’ that is to not obtain the promise.

Need to look at: BACKGROUND TO HIS REST and highlight a few aspects in order to draw out some important implications of this text. This rest points back to the creation in the book of Genesis where it is first presented in the creational order – the 7 th day when God rested from His works. (V4). Interwoven are these concepts such as rest, the 7 th day of creation, and the Sabbath.

Sabbath and rest go hand in hand; early on it signified a ‘day of rest’ patterned after God’s 7 th day rest (EX 20:8).

First off from the beginning this rest proclaims God’s enthronement.

One scholar writes “This rest of God may be more specifically understood as a royal kind of resting...God created the heaven and the earth to be his cosmic palace and accordingly his resting is an occupying of his palace, a royal session. The dawning of the Sabbath witnesses a new enthronement of Elohim” (Meredith Kline, “Kingdom Prologue”)

This Sabbath-Rest also tied to the idea of consummation.

In the same author’s words: “the Sabbath proclaims the name of the Creator to be Consummator” (Kline, “K.P.”)– He is the First and the Last, Alpha and Omega. The divine rest of God reveals His royal enthronement and His sovereignty as Creator and Consummator as history unfolds under His powerful rule.

The question is how does this apply for God’s people? Where is this rest offered and how is it obtained? Present Rest, Completely Future Rest?

KEY Aspect to Demonstrate: From the standpoint of Israel and the background of the Jewish believers (Whether or not they were already experiencing this rest due to being in the promised land?)

V2 makes clear what this ‘PROMISE’ hinges on. Message of REST - Grounded on the THE GOSPEL (v2) For indeed we have had good news preached to us, just as they also.

Parallel between hearing this message now and back then. Referring to the Gospel in promise, and the work of Christ manifested in types and foreshadowed in the sacrificial system. The Israelites truly received this Gospel beforehand. Paul says, Christ was the rock that was with them (1 Cor. 10:4). In the one covenant of grace, they truly partook of Christ by faith experiencing the Gospel in promise as it was administered in the Abrahamic covenant and a picture of Christ’s coming work in the Old Testament priesthood and sacrifices looking forward to its fulfilment.

How did they fail to reach – the promise of rest? Unbelief (3:19)

V2. but the word they heard did not profit them, because it was not united by faith in those who heard.

Why did this ‘Gospel’ word have no profitable effect. This was in those who had “no faith.”

Conversely Faith is needed for the acceptance and reception of the Gospel.

We know the Holy Spirit creates faith through the preaching of the Gospel, but it does not benefit the unbelieving. In this case where the Gospel is proclaimed in the covenant community, there were those of Israel who participated outwardly in the administration of the covenant but did not inwardly and truly “possess the substance of the covenant,” that is Christ and His saving benefits which is why the author continues to call His audience to faith in Christ.

He is confident of their possession of true faith. V3. We who have believed (Question: Faith in what? – Faith in the word of the Gospel). Reminding this Christian community of their belief in the Gospel, in the person and work of Jesus Christ and what its present implications are now that they are under the New Covenant.

V3. For we who have believed enter that rest.

We “enter,” His rest. In Greek that is the Present Indicative meaning we “Begin to experience”

For us as for them entering this rest occurs in the present by faith in the Gospel, by trusting in Christ. By this, we enter His rest which clues us in to the type of rest that it is.

John Owen: “This rest, then, we say, firstly and principally, is that spiritual rest of God, which believers obtain an entrance into by Jesus Christ, in the faith and worship of the gospel, and is not to be restrained unto their eternal rest in heaven” (Owen, “An Exposition of the Epistle to the Hebrews.”)

This ‘Salvation-rest’ is available now.

In another SCHOLAR’s words: “One of the themes of Hebrews is that through Christ the heavenly realities have become accessible to believers, and rest is one of those realities” (Lincoln in L. Irons, “Entering God’s Rest”). He continues, “the writer of Hebrews views ‘rest’ as an eschatological resting place with associations with the heavenly promised land, the heavenly Jerusalem, and the heavenly sanctuary” (Lincoln in L. Irons, “Entering God’s Rest”).

Such heavenly places are not described in Hebrews as being enjoyed or inherited solely in the final consummation…[They are] supernatural realities presently enjoyed by the people of God by faith.” (Lincoln in L. Irons, “Entering God’s Rest”)

Continue to look at V3+4 we continue to see the VALIDITY AND CONTINUITY OF GOD’S DIVINE REST, highlighting the significance of the seventh day of creation, the rest that remains a vital reality for the people of God to enter into.

CONTRAST: introduced between resting and working – God rested from all His works. Later on this introduces implications for the people of God in the experience this rest. This rest came after works – indicated a paradigm for Adam where participation in God’s divine rest was what he and his descendants had to look forward to.

FROM THE BEGINNING THERE IS A COVENANTAL AND ESCHATALOGICAL SCOPE TO THIS SABBATH-REST:

Listen to how Reformed Scholar Meredith KLINE explains this: “Mankind’s cultural endeavors were to move forward to and issue in a sabbatical rest. In fact, man was to come by way of these works at last into God’s own royal rest (Heb 4:1ff.)…the history of the original covenant was to be characterized by an eschatological thrust and direction. It was to have a sabbatical structure... Entering into the kingdom program as God’s servant-son, man was to reflect the
divine glory, advancing through his six days of work to the seventh day of completion, from kingdom development to a Sabbath of joyous shalom” (Kline, K.P.)

FOCUS ON THE COVENANTAL ELEMENT HERE: Entailed man’s responsibility to fulfill the covenant of works, to perform His duty in a probationary period in the garden exhibited by the command not to eat of the tree of knowledge of good and evil (Gen. 2:17). He was to render perfect, personal, and perpetual obedience to God and obtain the blessing of life for him and his descendants, enjoying fellowship with God in paradise and enter into God’s Sabbath-rest. After the fall, the covenant of works remains in place but it’s no longer the case that fallen man can accomplish it, which brings the vital need for it to be fulfilled.

V6. “It remains for some to enter it.” Some in response to the good news “failed to enter because of disobedience.” – Refers to unbelief (3:18-19).

Expresses this dual-response to the announcement of the Gospel. In some belief, in others hardness of heart and unbelief. Similarly, Paul says of the ‘fragrance of Christ;’ ‘to the one an aroma from death to death, to the other an aroma from life to life (2 Cor. 2:16).

All this emphasizes the need for faith

V7. He again fixes a certain day, “Today,” saying through David after so long a time just as has been said before, “TODAY IF YOU HEAR HIS VOICE, DO NOT HARDEN YOUR HEARTS.”

“Today” – We see the continuing relevance of the promise of rest tied to the announcement of the good news that comes to each new generation, is the message to be received by faith.

If you ‘Hear His voice.’ What is He speaking that requires and should be met with faith?

What’s spoken is not the law. Scripture says, “The law is not of faith” (Gal. 3:12) The law is written on our hearts at creation. The Gospel is the message from heaven, is completely outside of us and comes in blessing to benefit all the hearers who receive it in faith. Z. Ursinus (Commentary on the Heidelberg Catechsim) writes, “The law is known naturally, the Gospel was ‘divinely revealed’ after the fall.

(Context of the chapter and the book) What God is Speaking is His saving Word in Christ (1:3). Looking to this period of redemptive history, He has now finally spoken in the Son, the Word made flesh, the revelation of Jesus Christ through the Holy Gospel, (as Heidelberg Catechism Q. 19 explains), “First revealed in Paradise, afterwards proclaimed by the holy Patriarchs and Prophets, and foreshadowed by the sacrifices and other ceremonies of the Law; and finally fulfilled by His well-beloved Son.” This Gospel message is what is spoken that ushers believers into real rest.

This appeal is really an appeal to hear the voice of the Shepherd, to respond in faith and not unbelief, and by faith to partake in and receive Christ. We could say to receive Christ by faith is

to ‘enter rest.’ Faith apprehending and bringing us into union with the life-giving Christ, where we live and abide in Him and He in us and receive all of His saving benefits. 

II. Typological Rest 

THIS PRESENT AND AVAILABLE REST PICTURED IN ISRAEL’S HISTORICAL EXPERIENCE

V8. For if Joshua had given them rest, He would not have spoken of another day after that.

We can first observe Joshua as a type – a man who by leading Israel in conquest through physical battles acquires this earthly, temporal rest in the promised land, a picture that pointed forward to the attainment of true rest.

1 KINGS 8:56:“Blessed be the Lord, who has given rest to His people Israel, according to all that H promised.”

Israel may have experienced a form of rest, but Joshua did not lead the people into ultimate rest.

V8: Another day after / Later Day. ANOTHER COMMENATOR NOTES: “If in fact Joshua had achieved the promised rest, there would have been no need for the renewal of the promise in Ps 95.” (William L. Lane, Hebrews 1–8).

The author to the Hebrews is saying: JOSHUA DID NOT BRING LASTING REST, SO ON THE BASIS OF PROMISE THERE MUST BE A GREATER REST. This signified that the issuing in of this greater rest must necessitate a ‘Greater-than Joshua’ to lead the people into it.

Calvin explains how through David’s exhortation in this Psalm quoted, “they were reminded of the duty of seeking a better rest.” (Calvin, Commentary on Hebrews)

One vital thing to note, unlike the temporal rest experienced in the promised land after Joshua’s leadership and Israel’s conquest, this greater salvation-rest does not come by our own physical doings. This rest only comes from Jesus Christ which is why He says “Come to Me, all who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest (Matt. 11:28). Truth inherent here is: Our human works by no means establish or secure the reality of eternal rest, nor do they preserve the reality of rest. Only God in Christ brings us into all the blessings of rest. 

Secondly, we see the land of CANAAN as a type. The promised land is typological, pointing to the heavenly land and providing a picture of rest that pointed forward to true and eternal rest ultimately fulfilled in the consummation.

Earthly and temporal – Not ultimate/permanent rest.

Brown and Keele (Sacred Bond) explain the PROMISE OF THE LAND (given in the

ABRAHAMIC COVENANT) and its FIRST STAGE FULFILLMENT: They write, “The nation Israel and the land of Canaan were only pictures and foreshadows of a far greater fulfillment revealed in the N.T.”

CALVIN in reference to Canaan also says: “it was an image and a symbol of the spiritual inheritance. When, therefore, they obtained possession of it, they ought not to have rested as though they had attained to the summit of their wishes.”

The holy land was not the final place of rest. The Israelites did not experience ultimate rest in the land. This is why the author of the Hebrews says Abraham was looking for the heavenly city whose builder and maker is God (Heb. 11:10). The complete Sabbath-rest is only anticipated

through Israel’s experience of the promised land as it pointed to the coming heavenly country paired with humanity’s hope of fellowship with God for eternity. This possession of heaven and living in perfect communion with God has now been secured through Jesus Christ.

Listen to what C. Olevianus says in reference to this: “By His ascension Christ makes us to sit with Him in heavenly places (Eph. 2[:6]), so that we do not simply anticipate heaven in mere hope but already possess it in Christ our Head and Brother.” (Olevianus, An Exposition of the Apostle’s Creed)

His ascending in our very nature is our guarantee that we possess heaven through Him now by faith as we await the new heavens and new earth.

All this that was typified leads us to the core truth: JESUS THE GREATER THAN JOSHUA IS THE ONE WHO LEADS US INTO THIS ENDURING AND GREATER REST, GOD’S SABBATH REST.

III. Realized Rest
 
[corresponds to the eschatological concept the already/not yet]

V9. So there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God.

This “Sabbath rest” is what KLINE calls the “experience of God’s people in the new
covenant…a participation in the divine rest of the ongoing seventh day of creation.” (Kline, K.P.)

This is only possible because Christ did indeed enter that eternal rest of God, acquired paradise on our behalf, and as the God-Man leads His people by His power into all the blessings and spoils of His victory.

Kline again writes: “It is through Jesus, the second Adam, that God’s people find their way into the realm of Sabbath rest with God. It is he who leads them into the true and eternal Canaan, the new Eden (Heb 4:8–10).” (Kline, K.P.)

Such truths underline the superiority of Christ and the New Covenant, the greater and enduring rest, the kingdom eternal that cannot be shaken and its coming consummation glory.

V10. For the one who has entered His rest has himself also rested from his works, as God did from His. 

Scripture teaches first and foremost definitively, the reason why there is this resting which entails a laying aside of works ultimately due to the perfect merit of Christ. – He alone is the ONE who after fulfilling the task appointed by the Father as our Surety, having purged our sins, has ‘SAT DOWN’ at the right hand of the majesty on High (1:3).

Hebrews 9:12: “Not with the blood of goats and calves, but with His own blood He entered the Most Holy Place once for all, having obtained eternal redemption.”

Looks back to the ORIGINAL TASK AT CREATION: Christ perfectly accomplished what Adam failed to do. The covenant of works for man to fulfil in Eden which would culminate in the entrance and ongoing experience of God’s Sabbath rest is now a present reality on account of the work of Christ in the Gospel.

FOR US THIS REST COMES BY THE PERFECT WORK OF CHRIST OUR SAVIOR.

Rom. 5:18: “Through the obedience of the One the many will be made righteous.”

Here’s the significance: WE INHERIT THE BLESSINGS OF THE NEW COVENANT AND THIS REALITY OF REST APART FROM WORKS PRECISELY BECAUSE JESUS FULFILLED THE LAW / HE FULFILLED ALL RIGHTEOUSNESS.

Gal. 4:4-5: But when the fullness of the time came, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the Law, so that He might redeem those who were under the Law, that we might receive the adoption as sons.

In the words of Dutch Theologian BAVINCK: Christ does not [merely] restore his own to the state of Adam before the fall. He acquired and bestows much more, namely, that which Adam would have received had he not fallen. He positions us not at the beginning but at the end of the journey that Adam had to complete. He accomplished not only the passive but also the active obedience required; he not only delivers us from guilt and punishment but out of grace immediately grants us the right to eternal life. (H. Bavinck, Reformed Dogmatics, Vol. 2)

Because of the obedience of Jesus Christ, we have REST FROM THE EXACTING DEMANDS OF THE LAW that says, ‘do this and live,’ from THE ABSOLUTE PERFECTION REQUIRED OF IT, and the impossibility of it as a way of acquiring life for fallen mankind due to sin. For us this rest is by grace, where one does not work but ‘believes.’ (C.f. Rom. 4:4).

Beautiful truth here: Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes! (Rom. 10:4).

Relays a two-fold consequence for us: on the one hand resting from legalistic works and on the other resting from evil works due to the flesh.

Guarding against legalism, this means resting from every notion of a works-based salvation, or the impetus to ‘earn or augment’ salvation by good works, from covenantal nomism (idea of being in by grace completed by works), from the notion that works are somehow instrumental in our salvation. Also consists of resting from a ‘Legal disposition,’ which is detrimental to the gospel way of holiness and our assurance.

Listen to how Ralph Erskine speaks of a “Remaining legal spirit which causes believers to live so little to God.” (R. Erskine, “Law-death; Gospel-life)

He says “Though they have shaken off, in conversion, the authority of the covenant of works as a prince, which is a great matter; yet they are many times under the authority thereof as an usurper, and by reason of the old legal nature…the voice of the law speaks many times in the believer's conscience, and he is terrified at the voice of it; for it presumes to curse him, and to desire him to do, or else be damned; and so it weakens his hand, and makes him think God is a hard master: whereas the voice of the gospel in his conscience, is the still, calm voice, sweetly intreating, and alluring the heart to its obedience, and conveying a secret strength to obey, and making the soul to delight in the Lord's way.” (R. Erskine, “Law-death; Gospel-life)

Resting is then looking away from ourselves, from our own works, setting aside a legal disposition, and looking to Christ by faith and trusting in Him for our entire salvation – richly satisfied with His Gospel.

Reformers viewed this resting from evil works as something occurring daily in the lives of the saints: H.C. Q# 103. In reference to carrying out of the fourth commandment? Part of it says, “that all the days of my life I rest from my evil works, [and] allow the Lord to work in me by

His Spirit, and thus begin in this life the everlasting Sabbath.

This ongoing resting from works reflects dying to self and living to God, a reality hinging on Christ’s death and resurrection and speaks of the effects of our union with Him. In Scripture this ongoing aspect is stated as putting off the old self – that is the flesh which means ‘casting off the works of darkness’ (Ro. 13:11-14) and “putting on” Jesus Christ and living according to our renewed nature. (Eph. 4:22-24)

V11 Therefore let us be diligent to enter that rest, so that no one will fall, through following the same example of disobedience.

We’ve seen the author make clear that failing to enter is a result of unbelief. What does ‘being diligent to enter that rest’ mean in this context?

THIS REST REMAINS FOR SOME TO ENTER. THE EMPHASIS IN THIS ENTIRE
PASSAGE IS FOR ALL WHO HEAR TO BELIEVE ON THE SON AND THE MESSAGE OF THE GOSPEL ON WHICH THE PROMISE OF REST STANDS:

It's not being diligent to work under the laws demands as a way to enter, since the author’s made that clear, much less to work to earn salvation, but to ‘believe in Christ’s work for us,’ to accept the fullness of the rest He truly brings, it’s to trust the sufficiency of His atoning work and cleansing power of His blood. We could say it like this, to be diligent to enter means: to accept the Gospel promise by faith, to receive Christ, this message is Paramount, filling our thoughts, 
conquering our hearts, and a focal point of our attention, the very message that we should continue in, with all the means ordained by God, week after week receiving Christ in Word and Sacrament, gathering in the fellowship of the Spirit who ministers the Gospel to us – it is that which transforms us as we behold Christ!

All this affirms the IMPORTANCE OF BEING ANCHORED AND CONSTANTLY
NOURISHED IN THE GOSPEL.

V12. For the word of God is living and active and sharper than any two-edged sword .

V12 Communicates the living penetrating Word of God, Duel-edged sword: His law and His Gospel, His Word that does not return void, that searches our hearts and thoughts revealing the many responses to God’s Word.

Both the weight of the Law which kills and power of the Gospel bringing life in Christ. 

V13. ‘All things are open and laid bare to the eyes of Him to whom we have to do…to whom we must give account [NJKV].”

The end of verse 13 focuses in on God as He stands as Judge over all mankind, no one is hidden but all are completely exposed before the eyes of God almighty.

In saying this the author highlights humanity’s desperate need of a Savior. Because apart from Christ, mankind in a fallen condition in Adam relates to God as guilty of having broken the Covenant of Works, dead in sin, the Bible says, “all who are under the law are under a curse”

(Gal 3:10), in a state of guilt, fully exposed in shame, suffering physical and spiritual death.

We know an ‘answer’ must be given. Like Adam and eve after sinning in the garden, God said to Adam ‘where are you?’ As Pastor John has taught meaning: ‘Where are you in relation to me now that you have broken My covenant,” There is no cover in the fig-leaves of self-righteousness. Man was exiled, wandering east of Eden. We cannot re-enter by our own doing but are in need of Another to lead us into the Sabbath-rest of God.

All this resonates with Paul’s point in Galatians 3:22: But the Scripture has confined everyone under sin, so that the promise by faith in Jesus Christ might be given to those who believe.

The wonderful truth here is that this is where God meets us with His saving Word in Christ! In our earthly and frail condition, this is the depths to which Christ humbled Himself, clothed in flesh and entered our misery.

After directly after laying out our need, the Apostle proceeds by expounding the wonders of the One who secures our rest! “Therefore…Since’ – having grounds to proceed with assurance ‘because of Jesus.’ On account of the Gospel, we are not left naked and ashamed but are clothed with the righteousness of Christ!

So much to unpack but look at a few things in conclusion. We see the work of Christ in His state of humiliation and then in His ascension / exaltation (v14)

V14 – Great high priest [The obedient Son throughout His life, and our substitute who by His sacrificial death made atonement for sin] – On the heels of His resurrection He ascended and passed through the heavens; He has entered heaven securing the promised inheritance where He now lives to intercede, He has returned us to paradise, restored us to the Father, owing to His priestly work, Jesus, the Son of God.

Admonishment to ‘Hold fast our confession.’ Believing the Gospel, and to live and be influenced daily by its amazing truths, who Jesus is and what He has done for us and all its implications.

As humans the thought may arise but what about the fact that I am weak, burdened by sin, still prone to all sorts of evil, I have indwelling sins and remnants of the flesh remain, at times unfaithful, have struggles, or doubt, maybe tempted, attacked, experiencing heartache, and all sorts of suffering and sorrow. Here’s the same answer: Christ’s work in the Gospel definitively remains even in our weakness. The Gospel is the very power of God unto salvation whereby the 
Holy Spirit strengthens and assures our faith to endure and rely on Him through all these realities, the blood of Christ speaks a better word! (Heb. 12:24)

V15. Because Christ fully acquainted with human suffering can sympathize with our weakness.

He who took on human infirmity, yet without sin. He alone went the distance in paying the penalty for sin, there is now no condemnation. The enemies’ accusations are void, he is defeated, death is stripped of power, who or what can separate us from the love of God in Christ? The One who with great compassion perfectly knows and understands, and who from on high now provides to us in the Gospel the very aid we need. We can rest assured in all of life’s troubles and toils that He knows exactly what we need, comforts us, keeps us by His power as we abide in Him. We can trust that our Savior will indeed hold us fast!

As we close: V16. Draw near (reversal of the Edenic exile): with confidence to the throne of grace. Where goodness and favor is bestowed in Christ in spite of our de-merits and where mercy is the disposition of God’s heart toward us. As truly as Christ our representative perpetually intercedes for us, we can be assured of God’s love and faithfulness to His promise to save us fully as we believe the Good News and trust in Christ’s work for us!

How can we rest today in Christ and the fullness of His Gospel grace?

If we ever feel weary in heart we can rest in His performance on our behalf having obtained perfect righteousness, in His fulfillment of the Law and its curse. We can rest in His canceling the legal debt written against us – paid in full with perfect justice, in His death and satisfaction and propitiating the Father’s wrath. We can rest in His having crucified our flesh, the forgiveness for every sin, freeing us from its guilt and power and in His ability to rescue us from every stain of it.

We can Rest in His Resurrection, in His victory over death, hell and the grave, in His ascending in our very nature so that His entering heaven is proof that we possess it and that every sin of ours has been perfectly dealt with and where He is now exalted as our Prophet, Priest, and King with all power and majesty. We can rest in His intercession at the right hand of the Father which never fails, nor ceases, swallowing up our imperfection, with the comfort that no accusation can
stand as He defends us by His perfect merit and brings our salvation to completion. We can Rest in His coming, the hope of the Gospel, where He will raise up our own bodies and transform them into the likeness of His own.

We share in this season of Advent the joyous truths that through Christ we now experience true rest and at His return we will enjoy the fullness of that Sabbath rest for all eternity. May we take comfort, resting in Christ the Captain of Salvation, the Author and Finisher of our faith.

Michael is a Gospel Gal contributor and member of Paramount Church in Jacksonville, Fla. 

Saturday, December 17, 2022

Marriage & Divorce: A Reformed, Biblical Perspective

Marriage & Divorce: A Reformed, Biblical Perspective
Marissa Namirr (Gospel Gal)

For the past couple of days there has been some discussion about marriage, abuse, divorce, and the permanence view of marriage in a Facebook group I admin. So I wanted to compile some information I've posted on social media over the years and on the blog before. This topic is often discussed my circles.


I want to lead in saying that I personally value marriage. I have been married for over 31 years, respect and love my husband, and esteem my vocation of "wife". I agree with the Word of God, the Church Fathers and Reformed Confessions and Theologians on this topic, and want those in my circle to hear what they had to say.

For clarification, I'll define what the permanence view espouses:

Permanence Teachers:

One author exhorts his readers as many pastors and Bible teachers do: "Is there an escape hatch in marriage? Did God create marriage with a door in and a door out? No! “For the LORD God of Israel says that He hates divorce…” (Malachi 2:16). The only door out is death. Divorce tears apart what belongs together. Even if a marriage comes to the point of divorce, the aim is to bring back together what belongs together. God calls us to keep intact that unity which He created in the beginning between husband and wife. Let each of us in our own place and marriage pray for this unity and work at it.

Whilst the society we live in makes divorce so easy, let us never look to divorce as the way out of marital strife. Divorce, a man-made solution, and hence a sinful solution, cannot solve the effects of sin as experienced in marriage. God's solution to the brokenness of this life, in all its facets, marriage included, is the cross of Christ. On the cross Christ demonstrated, to the fullest extent, the forgiveness and self-denial that alone can keep any marriage intact."

But he does not seem to take into account what multiple sources in the Church have taught on this sensitive topic. I want my readers to listen to the Word of God, the Church Fathers, and Reformed Confessions and Thinkers:

The Bible:

Genesis 2:

18 And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him an help meet for him.

19 And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof.
20 And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found an help meet for him.
21 And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept: and he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof;
22 And the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman, and brought her unto the man.
23 And Adam said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh: she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man.
24 Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh.
25 And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed.

Hebrews 13: 4 Marriage is honourable in all, and the bed undefiled...

Matthew 5:

28 But I say unto you, That whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her already in his heart.

29 And if thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast it from thee: for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish, and not that thy whole body should be cast into hell.
30 And if thy right hand offend thee, cut it off, and cast it from thee: for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish, and not that thy whole body should be cast into hell.
31 It hath been said, Whosoever shall put away his wife, let him give her a writing of divorcement:
32 But I say unto you, That whosoever shall put away his wife, saving for the cause of fornication, causeth her to commit adultery: and whosoever shall marry her that is divorced committeth adultery.

I Corinthians 7:

1 Now concerning the things whereof ye wrote unto me: It is good for a man not to touch a woman.
2 Nevertheless, to avoid fornication, let every man have his own wife, and let every woman have her own husband.
3 Let the husband render unto the wife due benevolence: and likewise also the wife unto the husband.
4 The wife hath not power of her own body, but the husband: and likewise also the husband hath not power of his own body, but the wife.
5 Defraud ye not one the other, except it be with consent for a time, that ye may give yourselves to fasting and prayer; and come together again, that Satan tempt you not for your incontinency.
6 But I speak this by permission, and not of commandment.
7 For I would that all men were even as I myself. But every man hath his proper gift of God, one after this manner, and another after that.
8 I say therefore to the unmarried and widows, it is good for them if they abide even as I.
9 But if they cannot contain, let them marry: for it is better to marry than to burn.
10 And unto the married I command, yet not I, but the Lord, Let not the wife depart from her husband:
11 But and if she depart, let her remain unmarried or be reconciled to her husband: and let not the husband put away his wife.
Clearly, the Lord, Himself, is the Author of marriage. Marriage is good, honorable, pure, good and worthy of our high regard.

Now note what was believed about marriage during the Reformation and what has been taught, recited, and vowed regarding marriage throughout the generations and among the nations in the church. This comes from the Book of Common Prayer (Anglican):



Marriage is a solemn commitment and a covenant between one man and one woman for life. The purpose of this union in society is clear: not the least of which are protection, intimacy, and comfort, representing the union of Christ with His church.

With that clarification, consider this... 

Marriage is not merely a business arrangement, nor is it a piece of paper. But it is also *not a hierarchical relationship like commander to soldier or master to slave. The bond of marriage, as said, is an intimate union, mutually beneficial to both spouses, lending to comfort and happiness.

Marriage is a covenant. It is a contract contingent on conditions. It is, therefore, only as permanent as the vows that are kept by each party. Listen, again, to the 1662 Prayer Book with the vows pronounced in the service of matrimony:

These are the vows and conditions of the covenant. Should these be broken, the marriage covenant is broken: ***Again, when the *vows are broken, *the covenant is broken. It is not a decree of divorce that breaks the marriage. It is the breaking of the vows that does that. So, when considering permanence, the marriage is as permanent as the vows that are kept. This is not to say that people have to divorce if the vows have been broken. It is to say that it is legal/lawful to formally write a bill of divorcement if the vows are broken. What Jesus said, what the Apostle taught, as noted above stand as absolute truth today. But it seems the question remains, what is it to break the covenant? I would suggest that the breaking is whatever fails to honor the marriage relationship: Explicit violations of the covenant: breaking the vows.

The Church Fathers:

Chrysostom (349-407AD):


The Reformers:

And the Reformers taught that the covenant of marriage is broken in certain situations, namely adultery, abandonment, and abuse.

Thomas Cranmer: 1489-1556: (Architect of the Book of Common Prayer):

:


William Ames (English Non-Conformist pastor/author): 1576-1633:




And the Westminster Confession of Faith ((1646): XXIV: V) is explicit in what the breaking of marriage vows is and how the offended party may proceed in relation to the offender:



Finally, listen to a contemporary Reformed pastor on this issue.

'If your spouse relates to you in your marriage in such a way that makes him/her your slave, that's cause for divorce. ~W. Bosch. You can hear the full message here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=CG0d3qYsRag&feature=youtu.be&fbclid=IwAR36UjK2voEjhmpc7KRFGx6DN6j0V1blgzR1n7ybxs3myE9OTgSfq2Px740#bottom-sheet&ab_channel=JubileeChurchOttawa

In closing, I want to clarify that marriage is too significant a union and too important a covenant to undermine it by robbing it of its honorability. We dishonor marriage when we promote the idea that anything goes, and that we need to tolerate anything and all that a spouse may do to offend and violate covenant responsibilities. When we witness then remain complacent about active and verifiable hatred for a husband or wife by a spouse we do violence to what we know marriage is. We do no favors to a couple when we fail to uphold what God says about what marriage is and what its functions are. We do harm to what we say about the Bible before our children, churches, and society in what we tolerate within the context of marriage. Marriage is honorable and pure when the beauty of this union is upheld, protected, and practiced.

If you're in a marriage where vows have been violated, you are, as the Apostle instructs, free. 

If you've broken your marriage vows, you may never regain the trust of your spouse, family, church, or social circle. You should not expect reconciliation but seek peace. But above all, remember that there is a generous Savior, and there is no sin that is unforgivable in Him. Turn away from your sin. Confess it to Him and those you've offended. He is faithful and just to forgive your sins and to cleanse you from all unrighteousness. Be reconciled to God, in Christ. 

To all those hurting from broken marriages, please seek out sound pastoral care, professional counseling and safe community in the church. May the Lord heal your woundedness. 

***Disclaimer: I do not necessarily endorse those I quoted in this article. 




Wednesday, December 7, 2022

Abiding in Christ - John 15

Abiding in Christ - John 15
Marissa Namirr and Joy Dudley

Youtube video by the same title is available here: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RB9ozmdNAVk&ab_channel=GospelGal 


Many times when we think of what it means to abide, we think that we need to do everything we can to stay close to Christ. We think that our relationship with Christ is so one-sided that it is up to us to continue to keep it alive. Unless we abide in Him, we are cut away and thrown into the fire. What comes to mind is an image of a hamster running on a wheel with no rest, motivated by the threat and terror of the law. However, our aim with this post is to show that the famous passage in John 15 is rich with comfort and mercy and that our abiding in the Vine is actually saving faith that connects us to Christ and all of His benefits.

I. Our prior perceptions of abiding in Christ

The teachings I’ve heard in the past seemed to place a supposition of synergism on the text. Abiding is something we do, and although it is said that it is Christ who gives the power to do so, somehow it is suggested that we are able to do things that Scripture contradicts, such as engrafting and pruning. There was no connection made that abiding is actually believing or faith in Christ’s finished and ongoing work for us and in us. This frame created anxiety until I began to think through the analogy of Vine to branches. But the teaching seemed to indicate that we are responsible to maintain our lives in Christ and to produce fruit/growth in a way that is devoid of our understanding of salvation. It disturbed my conscience, but at the same time caused me to question the incongruity of their teaching. ~Marissa

From my experience, abiding in Christ was linked to spiritual disciplines. You were successfully abiding when you were having a consistent time in prayer, bible study, and serving in church. Here is an example from a popular evangelical pastor: “Jack Hibbs (Calvary Chapel Chino Hills): https://jackhibbs.com/a-little-big-word/ : “Believer, none of this happens by chance. It takes a daily discipline of dependence upon God. Abiding means you pray but wait to hear what the Lord has to say. Abiding allows your thoughts to be saturated by your Bible reading. Abiding in Him and He in you is to be empowered by the fruit-producing Spirit. And to this you were called, “By this My Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit; so you will be My disciples.” John 15:8”

The fruits of abiding in Christ were also used as a means to prove your salvation. You can hear a notable example of this perception in Steve Lawson’s devotion called “Unfruitful Branches”. The presupposition of abiding was one of suspicion, not comfort. ~Joy

II. What popular evangelicals are teaching on abiding

Evangelicals too often reinforce teachings that direct us back to our navels rather than to the Source of our life and salvation. Joy and I have taken note of a couple of influential teachers in the current Calvinistic world.

Lawson:

Unfruitful Branches Steve Lawson ( Starting at the 4:33 mark) https://youtu.be/DNzVv981CFU  - Lawson asks the following: “Is there evidence of a transformed life?” In this video Lawson advocates for everyone to examine their lives in light of this verse to see if there is any evidence that their faith is genuine. Lawson communicates that there are many in church that profess faith but don't have a personal relationship with Christ. Lawson further clarifies that the focus of this passage was on someone who is involved in Christian ministry but has never been born again.

MacArthur:

This cooperative view of abiding is picked up by John MacArthur as well.

“Jesus pleads with people who are superficial branches. He says in verse 4, "Abide in Me." He is saying to those who are like Judas, "Be genuine; abide in Me and show that your faith is real; bear fruit and remain on the vine." It is like saying, "You superficial branches: be saved; have a genuine relation to Christ."

…Abiding in Christ is a mark of true salvation. Sometimes a person who is active in the church leaves suddenly and never goes back to church again. Or a leader in the church may become apostate. People in the church wonder what happened. The explanation is in 1 John 2:19 "They went out from us, but they were not really of us; for if they had been of us, they would have remained with us; but they went out, so that it would be shown that they all are not of us.

…Christians who think they are bearing fruit apart from the Vine are only tying on artificial fruit. They run around grunting and groaning to produce fruit but accomplish nothing. Fruit is borne not by trying, but by abiding.

To bear genuine fruit, *you must take your place on the Vine and *get as close to Jesus as you can. *Strip away all the things of the world. Put aside the sins that distract you and sap your energy. *Put aside everything that robs you of a deep, personal, loving relationship with Jesus. Stay apart from sin and be in God's Word. [*Emphasis mine.]

Having done all that, don't worry about bearing fruit. It is not your concern. The Vine will merely use you to bear fruit. Get close to Jesus Christ and His energy in you will bear fruit.” “Abiding in Christ”: Grace to You website. 

A few things stood out as odd to me in this post. First, MacArthur talks about church membership twice: once, as quoted above, and once at the end of the post. Both times he gives the impression that church membership should not be viewed as evidence of true faith or true abiding. The Reformed tradition puts a lot of weight on membership in the visible church. By consistently hearing the Word, receiving the sacraments, and having all of our senses moved by the Gospel, we obtain assurance of pardon and a nourished faith. With a renewed understanding of God’s immeasurable love for us, we move forward in confidence and hope as well-nourished branches who abide in the Vine. Abiding in the Vine means being fed and sheltered within the visible body as He abides in us. The promise is made by the risen Christ in Matthew 28. “19…baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 teaching them to observe everything I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always…” How better to abide in Him than to be persistently nourished by Word and Sacrament, receiving all the appointed means of grace.

Second, MacArthur further creates cognitive dissonance when he says, “To bear genuine fruit, you must take your place on the Vine and get as close to Jesus as you can. Strip away all the things of the world. Put aside the sins that distract you and sap your energy. Put aside everything that robs you of a deep, personal, loving relationship with Jesus. Stay apart from sin and be in God's Word…Having done all that, don't worry about bearing fruit.” But how can one take his place on the Vine? Either he is a branch naturally or he is grafted in by someone else. A branch does not attach itself to a tree. It grows there organically.

Finally, He goes on to exhort the reader to strip away all the things of the world but does not connect this exhortation to being nourished and fed by the Vine. Listen to how Reformation theologians describe abiding.

III. What Reformation thinkers emphasize instead


Where MacArthur exhorts the reader to strip away all the things of the world in an unclear synergistic way, the Reformers describe abiding in Christ as an outflow of the monergistic work of God.

Belgic Confession

Joy added this from the Belgic Confession - Article 22 - “We Believe that for us to acquire the true knowledge of this great mystery the Holy Spirit kindles in our hearts a true faith that embraces Jesus Christ with all his merits, and makes him its own, and no longer looks for anything apart from him. For it must necessarily follow that either all that is required for our salvation is not in Christ, or if all is in him, then he who has Christ by faith has his salvation entirely.”

“But Jesus Christ is our righteousness crediting to us all his merits and all the holy works he has done for us and in our place. And faith is the instrument that keeps us in communion with him and all his benefits. When those benefits are made ours they are more than enough to absolve us of our sins”

That article also states that to add our own performance to the work of Christ for us, outside of us is to make Christ a “half-savior” which is “too great a blasphemy”. I believe that synergistic teachers should take heed to the Reformed Confessions. 

Westminster Confession

I also think of the Westminster Confession which makes it abundantly clear that our justification has nothing to do with anything within us. “Those whom God effectually calleth he also freely justifieth; not by infusing into them, but by pardoning their sins, and by accounting and accepting their persons as righteous; *not for anything wrought in them, or done by them, but for Christ’s sake alone; not by imputing faith itself, the act of believing, or any other evangelical obedience, to them as their righteousness; but by imputing the obedience and satisfaction of Christ unto them, they receiving and resting on him and his righteousness by faith; which faith they have not of themselves; it is the gift of God.” ~WCF

To be clear, we do not deny that there is life produced in the believer, but we are only branches that receive that life from the Vine. It is the Vine that brings forth fruit. It is not the fruit that produces life. None of it, not one iota, is brought forth by our efforts. I often wish that these teachers would make it more clear that abiding is more organic than synergistic. It is not humanly or naturally possible to attach oneself to the Vine and abide there. We must have life from a Source outside of ourselves and a direct connection from the start in order to abide and be fruitful. This is not a discussion of unfruitful vines which are hewn down, but of the true branches that are in the Vine.

Luther

“‘You now have my Word’,” Christ says, ‘whereby you are clean; through it also your fruit is good, and everything pleases God. But if you want to retain this cleanness and to keep on bearing fruit, see that you remain in Me through faith and do not prize your own deeds presumptuously or falsely rely on them. Nor dare you let any trials alienate and tear you from the faith..” Luther's Works Vol 24 : Sermons on the Gospel of St John Chapters 14-16

Calvin

Calvin’s Commentary on John 15 says:
“...he (John) commends to them the doctrine of the gospel from the fruit which it produces, that they may be more powerfully excited to meditate on it continually, since it resembles the vine-dresser's knife to take away what is useless.” So it is the vinedressers knife that takes away what is useless, not the poor soul with no power to purge his own dross.

Calvin goes on. As opposed to MacArthur he says,

“Abide in me. He again exhorts them to be earnest and careful in keeping the grace which they had received, …Abide in me, says he; for I am ready to abide in you And again, He who abideth in me beareth much fruit. By these words he declares that all who have a living root in him are fruit-bearing branches…Without me you can do nothing. This is the conclusion and application of the whole parable. So long as we are separate from him, we bear no fruit that is good and acceptable to God, for we are unable to do anything good. The Papists not only extenuate this statement, but destroy its substance, and, indeed, they altogether evade it; for, though in words they acknowledge that we can do nothing without Christ, yet they foolishly imagine that they possess some power, which is not sufficient in itself, but, being aided by the grace of God, co-operates (as they say,) that is, works along with it; [80] for they cannot endure that man should be so much annihilated as to do nothing of himself. But these words of Christ are too plain to be evaded so easily as they suppose. The doctrine invented by the Papists is, that we can do nothing without Christ, but that, aided by him, we have something of ourselves in addition to his grace. But Christ, on the other hand, declares that we can do nothing of ourselves. The branch, he says, beareth not fruit of itself; and, therefore, he not only extols the aid of his co-operating grace, but deprives us entirely of all power but what he imparts to us.”

His emphasis is not on cooperation, but on the work of Christ for us.

The Prayer Book

And the Anglican Book of Common Prayer, as opposed to MacArthur, places a heavy emphasis on the local church and the means of grace in union with Christ. Listen to the union language in this post-Communion Prayer. There is unmistakable union language here and where else do we receive this kind of feeding but as a part of the visible church:

“Almighty and everliving God,
we thank you for feeding us with the spiritual food
of the most precious Body and Blood
of your Son our Savior Jesus Christ;
and for *assuring us in these holy mysteries
that *we are living members of the Body of your Son,
and heirs of your eternal kingdom.
And now, Father, send us out
to do the work you have given us to do,
to love and serve you
as faithful witnesses of Christ our Lord.
To him, to you, and to the Holy Spirit,
be honor and glory, now and for ever. Amen.”
[*Emphasis mine.]

Michael Horton

Additionally, Horton, a Reformation scholar and author, provides great insight into abiding. 

“Through the centuries many have emphasized the Christian life as the imitation of Christ. There are certainly calls to imitate Christ’s humility and service in the New Testament. However, even these imperatives are based on the indicative fact of union. In other words, Jesus Christ is not simply a great man, even a divine man, who calls us to become like him. The gospel proclaims something far more wonderful than the law of moral striving. It announces that all who are in Christ are actually coheirs with him of his estate, members of his body. Grafted by the Spirit onto the Vine, we bear fruit that is not just like his own, as if he were merely a model to imitate, but is in fact the fruit that ripens from the sap of his own eschatological life, because he is our covenant head” - Michael Horton Pilgrim Theology Kindle pg. 273

“The legal or forensic aspect of this union remains the basis for the mystical and organic effects. As in marriage, the legal transfer of identity and possessions secures the relationship of growing trust and mutual communion. Every subjective blessing that we experience within us is the result of Christ’s objective work for us, outside of us, in history. We are not declared righteous legally nor caused to abide in Christ forensically because we bear the fruit of the Spirit, but vice versa. We do not base our assurance of God’s favor on our experience of growth in godliness; rather, we experience and grow in godliness because we are assured of God’s favor” - Michael Horton Pilgrim Theology Kindle pg.278

IV. Abiding in Christ brings rest

This passage is comforting because the imperative to abide and to remain attached to the vine by faith is grounded in the great indicative truths of the person and work of Christ as described in the White Horse Inn Episode - “I Am The Vine”. At around the 11 minute mark, great emphasis is placed on Christ referring to His declarative work. “The source of our purity is not found in ourselves at all, but rather in Christ’s declarative announcement ‘ Already you are clean because of the word I have spoken to you’”. The podcast episode goes on to mention that this declarative work ought to determine the tone one takes with the entire passage. It is not a threatening or menacing tone, but one of comfort. “Our righteousness is in Christ. He is our righteousness - be it His passive or active obedience - all of it is credited to us on account of Christ..” (Min 15)

Consider how the Gospel Transformation ESV Study Bible draws the reader to the comfort found in this passage:

John 15:1-11 - “The metaphor of vine and branches underscores how our salvation, from beginning to end, is all of grace. Jesus is the faithful remnant of Israel - the true Vine and fruitful Vineyard. By the Spirit’s presence in our lives, we have entered into an organic union with him - a union of branches to Vine. We are engrafted into the true Israel. Our lives are hidden with Christ in God. Here Jesus says that he chose his disciples to be his branches; they did not choose him. This reminds us that our calling, as Christ’s present disciples, is not to trumpet our wise decisions but simply to abide - to dwell, to marinate, to go “deeper still” into Jesus. For apart from Jesus, we can do nothing and will bear no fruit. Failing to abide in Jesus does not suggest the possibility of losing one’s salvation; rather it underscores that salvation can be found nowhere else. Continuance in Christ is a test of reality. The Bible teaches both the perseverance of the saints and that true saints will persevere. We strive ahead, yet even that striving is a gift of grace.”

John 15:12-17 - “Jesus defines the life of abiding as a life of love. Just as the Father loves Jesus, so Jesus loves us. Jesus loves us just as much as the Father loves him. We cannot earn Jesus’ love. Our obedience to Jesus merits nothing but profits greatly. Jesus’ commands are not burdensome, for they are for our best, and he has fulfilled the demands and the judgment of God’s law that could condemn us. The radical grace of the gospel transforms servanthood into friendship. Only grace can free us to obey Jesus out of friendship and worship, and no longer out of fear or self-interest”

We know that we are in Christ: dead and my life is hidden with Christ in God (Colossians 3:3). Our identity is legally engulfed in Christ, so that when the Father sees me, all He sees is His own beloved Son in Whom He is well pleased.

Christ’s objective historical work for me on the cross provides for us the metanarrative for abiding in Christ. I know that I am united to Christ by faith alone.. My fruit bearing was effected in the life, death, and resurrection of Christ. The Bible makes it very clear that we draw near to God through Christ by faith. We are to continue in Christ the same way we have received Him - by faith:

“Therefore as you received Christ Jesus, so walk in him, rooted and built up in him and established in the faith, just as you were taught, abounding in thanksgiving” - Colossians 2: 6

The presupposition for abiding is not suspicion but comfort. Consider what Martin Luther says in his sermons on The Gospel of St. John Chapters 14-16:

“You see, this is how the Lord Christ comforts Himself as He is now about to enter upon His suffering and to go to the cross. The comfort He has typifies and exemplifies our comfort: ‘I, of course, am the true Vine, a Vine unquestionably dear to my Father, and you are the vine branches dear to Me and My Father If ever a vine was carefully and faithfully fertilized, pruned, and trimmed, it is I’”.

“What more do we want? Is it not comforting and kindly enough that the Father so sincerely befriends us as His dear fine and branches? Any evil or harm that might afflict them would also afflict Him. He so governs and guides affairs that whatever happens to me rebounds both to My benefit and to yours”

Listen to Michael Horton on our identity in Christ:

“This new identity is not something we achieve by converting ourselves or by trying to enter into it. It is given to us graciously by God, apart from and outside of ourselves. … Before, righteousness made no claims on us to which we could respond favorably, but now, because we are united to Christ, new affections and new loyalties produce new service.

It is important to realize that Christ does not come to improve the old self, to guide and redirect it to a better life; he comes to kill us, in order to raise us to newness of life. He is not the friend of the old self, only too happy to be of service. He is its mortal enemy, bent on replacing it with a new self. ” ~Union with Christ by Michael Horton, Ph.D.

And on a Twitter post dated 2018 he said, “The point Jesus makes in John 15 is that we are in fact not just diseased but dead branches. We have no life in ourselves. But when grafted onto him-the true and living Vine, we come to life and bear fruit that will last.”
He reiterates what the Reformers taught. Because of Christ, we are new creations. We have been justified. We have been and are being sanctified. And we will be glorified, all based on His own good work for and in us. “He who began a good work in you is faithful to complete it.” In our new lives, we produce the obedience and good works He prepared in advance for us to do, not for merit, but as an added benefit of being in Christ. There is nothing to fear. There is only security in knowing who we are in Christ. Abiding means partaking of Him and all of His saving benefits in the context of His body of believers for a lifetime. When we receive the love of God in Christ, we abide in Him, and He abides with us.

In conclusion, we do not believe that the idea of abiding in Christ should bring the believer a sense of distrust, suspicion, or gloom. The Word of God and our Reformed doctrine provide us with this hope. It is because Jesus abides in us that we assuredly abide in Him. Abiding is an organic relationship: Vine to branches. As we are in Him, we live and remain. We abide.

I’ll close with these assuring words again from Horton: “Although we are justified by Christ’s external righteousness imputed to us, our Savior does not remain outside of us, simply leading the way to a better life; rather, we live in him and therefore in and for each other. “I am the vine; you are the branches,” says Jesus. “Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing” (v. 5). This “abiding” is not something that believers can move in and out of: one moment abiding and another moment not abiding. …Abiding is simply a synonym for faith: cleaving to Christ for all of our life. He is not simply a distant example in history, but our living head in heaven.”

Gospel Gal Intro and Statement of Purpose

I am Marissa Namirr, Gospel Gal. I live and work in North Florida and the Atlanta Suburbs (updated 7/16/2022). I am the wife of Mark, m...