“Soli Deo Gloria; God’s Glory Alone” Genesis 1:26-30
A Sermon Series
The Five Solas
“Soli Deo Gloria; God’s Glory Alone”
Genesis 1:26-30
Introduction
In the previous weeks of this series, we have looked at Scripture alone, Grace alone, Faith alone, and Christ alone. These first four solas fight against the word “addition.”[1] No authority is above God’s Word (it is perfect just the way it is), or comes along to add to its authority. The other three deal with not adding anything to salvation (like works, or means of), and it is Jesus alone and His work on the cross that alone satisfies God’s punishment for our sin. Jesus is the only way that man is justified before God. “How we like to think that there’s something for us to add to the satisfaction and obedience of Christ or to the inspired word of the prophets and apostles, . . .”[2]
The fifth sola, God’s Glory Alone, is a fight for balance in the Christian’s life. No, not balance as in work and family, but as in why were you saved to begin with? Is salvation ultimately about you? You were lost in sin, Jesus came along and saved you, so that you can live a better life? Is that why Jesus ultimately came and died on the cross, so that you can be better off? Now that a person has been saved, then what?
What Is My Purpose?
My Best Life or God’s Glory Alone?
Genesis 1:26 says “Let us make man in our own image, after our likeness.” Being made in the image of God, or bearing His image makes mankind distinctly different from the rest of creation, since mankind is the only being made in the image of God.
The rest of creation points to a Creator, Psalm 19:1 “The heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky above1 proclaims his handiwork.” And Hebrews 3:4 “For every house is built by someone, but the builder of all things is God.” It is so wonderfully complex and orderly, it must have a Creator (as a man who finds an iphone in the forest he knows someone at one point made it).[3] While mankind also points to God as having a creator because of the complexity and beauty the human body holds, it also plays a far more important role. The role of “bearing the image of God.”
So what does this mean, to be made in the image of God? The word “image” in the Hebrew is where the word “idol” comes from. You don’t have to read very much of the Old Testament to see that idols were forbidden, and caused much trouble for the people of God. God’s people, the Israelites, would follow a false god, and create an idol (or representation) of the god, that they would then bow down to and worship it as the one true God. The representatives made of stone, metal, straw, etc. represented the god. These images angered God because they did not accurately represent Him and His character, and it was not the way that God had directed that He was to be worshipped.[4]
There are certain attributes that God possesses as part of his nature that we also possess (holiness, love, truth, righteousness, beauty, etc.) and attributes that we do not possess (omnipresence, omnipotence, eternality, etc.)[5] Mankind can show love; dads love their kids. This is true if a person knows Jesus or not.
Think of being an image bearer where the human is a mirror. He was created to reflect; specifically, he was created to reflect God. It is in reflecting, that God receives glory and the person does what he was created to do. Idols are forbidden because they do not accurately represent God as he truly is “In fact it is only mankind that can “bear His image.” But we bear His image in order to reflect the glory to God our Creator. This does not make us gods, anymore than the mirror is its’ maker.
But because mankind is sinful the mirror is covered with mud (sin). What is reflects is covered with sin. This is mankind apart from a saving relationship with Jesus Christ. We do not bring God glory and we do not live a life of reflecting the image of God. God saves us; we then reflect our Creator (Jesus) and He receives honor, worship, praise, and glory. We have a sense of fulfillment and satisfaction because we finally are doing what mankind was created to do (Genesis 1:26).
There is also another problem. Once a person receives Jesus’ free gift of salvation the reflection that he gives is not a perfect reflection. Yes, Christians still make mistakes! In fact it’s much like a House of Mirrors at the local county fair. The image is distorted, warped, and weird. Thus begins a lifelong process of making the image more and more accurate (theologians call this Sanctification). It is only in eternity when we will as the image bearers of Christ accurately reflect Him as we should. Also, because we are all created different and unique we have been designed to reflect that light differently. One person will reflect the attribute of love differently, but they both reflect love.
You Are Made by God, and You Have a God Given Responsibility (vv. 26-27)
“Then God said, “Let us make man in our image[6], after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.” 27 So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.
Mankind is described as being made in the image of God. To be an image bearer of God is to be like Him, but eternally different from Him. “An image is ‘something cut out” such as an idol (2 Kings 11:18). It describes an exact resemblance, like a son who is an exact resemblance of his father. Genesis 5:3 “When Adam had lived 130 years, he fathered a son in his own likeness, after his image, . . .” Ancient kings would place such effigies of themselves in cities they ruled. However, although man is like God, he is not God (nor a god).”[7]
Mankind will love, but not as God loves. Mankind will think and reason, but he is not omniscient. Mankind will rule and reign, but not as God rules and reins. Mankind will bring life into the world, but not like God brings creation into existence. But, none-the-less we are a reflection of God. This is why the second phrase, “after our likeness,” is added. We are made in the image of God, but only a likeness (not an exact copy).
Genesis is a written account of creation where God communicates through His Word to us. Being made in the image of God is that mankind has the ability to communicate with God through His Word to us. He is giving us instructions, “God can converse with those made in His image, and Scripture is a record of those conversations. Moreover, conversation enables humans to have genuine fellowship with God.”[8] Because humanity bears the image of God, humanity then, has the ability to communicate with God.
Dolphins don’t have Bibles, crickets don’t know any memory verses, birds don’t quote from Ezekiel. But also, as a shadow, or reflection of this is how we communicate with other humans – it should reflect our knowledge of God’s Word (good, purposeful, holy, etc.) Our being bearers of God’s image allows us to have the ability to possess and understand the Words of God.
Mankind is given a responsibility leading from this act of creation. To be made in the image of God is to have the ability to have dominion over all of creation. God oversees all of time and space, all of reality, all of the created order, all of the heavenlies, all of wonders we don’t even know about.
So, as a reflection of God, humanity oversee this created order. The verses then go back to how humanity is made in the image of God — having two forms, male and female. “Sexual distinction is also created. The plural in v. 27 (“he created them”) is intentionally contrasted with the singular (“him”) and prevents us from assuming the creation of an originally androgynous man.”[9] In these two forms (which we call genders) humans oversee creation. Men and Women will each play a part in having dominion over creation.
In the previous days of creation, whenever fish, birds, plants, insects, are discussed, there is no mention of gender – even though there are male birds, and female fish, insects, etc. It is only humans that God highlights “male and female he created them.” We are made in the image of God; when God created man He said, “Let us make man in our image,” – there is a plurality in God, and as His image bearers, we have plurality (humanity is male and female).[10]
The human relationship between a man and a woman is a reflection of the relationship between God and Himself. We don’t understand God unless we understand Him as a Trinity (Father, Son, and Spirit). We don’t understand humanity and our identity unless we understand this plurality of men and women and how they are designed to be together.
Psalm 8:5-8 “Yet you have made him a little lower than the heavenly beings and crowned him with glory and honor. 6 You have given him dominion over the works of your hands; you have put all things under his feet, 7 all sheep and oxen, and also the beasts of the field, 8 the birds of the heavens, and the fish of the sea, whatever passes along the paths of the seas.” Mankind is an image bearer and he is given the responsibility to oversee and rule over all of creation, as men and women, and in this responsibility, he has been “crowned with glory and honor.”
Genesis 9:5-6 shows us all of mankind are crowned with glory and honor from God, and you cannot take a human’s life without a reckoning from God, “And for your lifeblood I will require a reckoning: from every beast I will require it and from man. From his fellow man I will require a reckoning for the life of man. 6 “Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed, for God made man in his own image.” (Do not murder, Ex. 20:13)
In Amos 2 we see that God’s people are facing the judgement of God, “For three transgressions of Israel, and for four, I will not revoke the punishment, because they sell the righteous for silver, and the needy for a pair of sandals — 7 those who trample the head of the poor into the dust of the earth and turn aside the way of the afflicted;”
All humans are made in the image of God so they should not be murdered, enslaved, or mistreated. How we treat other people is rooted in our seeking to honor how they have been created in the image of God – crowned with glory and honor by God. This person is God’s creation, we should be careful how we treat God’s creation.
Also, to be made in the image of God is to be made eternal. Mankind was originally designed to live forever.
You Are Blessed By God to Give God Glory (vv. 28-30)
28 And God blessed them. And God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it, and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.” 29 And God said, “Behold, I have given you every plant yielding seed that is on the face of all the earth, and every tree with seed in its fruit. You shall have them for food. 30 And to every beast of the earth and to every bird of the heavens and to everything that creeps on the earth, everything that has the breath of life, I have given every green plant for food.” And it was so.
Genesis 2:18 “Then the LORD God said, “It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him a helper fit for him.” God created man with a desire, he was incomplete by-himself. It was the woman who fulfills that part of him that he knows he is missing.
Being created by God, given dominion over the earth, he has also given them the blessing of being able to themselves create life, to “Be fruitful and multiply.” “God is the original possessor of life. Therefore, life is a gift from God – both spiritual life by new birth and natural life by the creation of the soul. . . If each human life is the life of a soul as well as a body, then each human life is created by God. Humans may act as participants in the making of a new body, but humans do not create the soul. God does.”[11]
Psalm 95:6 “. . . let us kneel before the LORD, our Maker!” Psalm 139:13-14 “For you formed my inward parts; you knitted me together in my mother’s womb. 14 I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made.”
Men and women as a unit, that complete each other, both play a role in bringing new life into the world. Neither is capable of bringing life into the word without the other. Each gender has a role to play in having dominion over creation and bringing new life into the world.
“Being human means being a sexual person. Human sexuality and sexual bonding between husband and wife are deemed “very good” (1:31) by God and are to be honored as the divine ordinance for men and women. There is no place in God’s good order for unisexuality or for diminishing or confusion of sexual identity.”[12]
(v. 27) “male and female he created them. 28 And God blessed them.” – “God created in his image a male and a female. Both share the image of God. Sexuality Is not an accident of nature, nor is it simply biological phenomenon. Instead it is a gift of God.”[13]
Thinking about men and women and bringing children into this world, go back and look at v. 26 “Let us make man in our image,” and then later in v. 27 “So God created man in his own image,” – God has just completed creation for the first five days, but here God stops, “but before undertaking the next act of creation God took counsel. This unique reference to God’s reflecting in community before making something underscores both the importance and the uniqueness of what God was about to create.”[14] But God creates in the context of plurality.
The Godhead stopped and discussed how humans would affect them. The Father knew they would rebel and so he would have to send the Son to redeem them, The Son knew it would cost them His life, abandonment and wrath from the Father, the Spirit would have to counsel them, convict them of sin, etc. – so God, amongst Himself, considered these things. It is this communication and contemplation that serves as an example for us – husbands and wives considering and discussing.
(see Psalm 8:5-8) “He [God] crowned him [humanity] in three ways; first by bestowing upon him a posterity – ‘Be fruitful and multiply’ (1:28a). From Adam and Eve the whole human race was to spring. Adam is consistently seen in the Bible as the federal head of the human race.” Secondly, “God crowned Adam with a position (1:28b) giving him dominion over the fish of the sea, over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing.” And Finally, “God crowned Adam with a possession (1:29-31). He gave him paradise to enjoy.”[15]
(v. 28) “And God blessed them,” – “To bless is to bestow not only a gift but a function, and to do so with warm concern.”[16] Genesis 2:3 “So God blessed the seventh day and made it holy, because on it God rested from all his work that he had done in creation.” You are given a gift, but it is also the living out, an expectation of using the gift, or exercising the gift, that is the full blessing. You are expected to do something with the gift that has been given.
The crowning with glory and honor, the ability to exercise dominion over creation, and the blessing from God to bring life into this world, all flow from God to humanity and they are expected to follow His God ordained order of creation. Men and Women receiving and obeying God’s Word, fulfilling their God-given calling, being blessed by God and bringing life into this world, in the context of a godly marriage and family.[17]
Conclusion
Humanity was created by God to give Him glory, and Humanity was redeemed back from sin and the fall to give God glory – ultimately our salvation if for God’s glory alone.
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[1] The two overriding concerns of the Reformation were religious authority and the doctrine of salvation.
[2] David Vandrunen, God’s Glory Alone, The Majestic Heart of Christian Faith and Life (Grand Rapids, Michigan; Zondervan Publishing, 2015) 16.
[3] Romans 1:18 ff.
[4] Exodus 20:3, 4
[5] Mark Driscoll and Gerry Breshears. Doctrine (Crossroads; Wheaton, Illinois, 2007) 121.
[6] imago dei
[7] Clifton Allen, General Editor, The Broadman Bible Commentary, Volume 1 (Nashville, Tennessee; Broadman Press, 1969) 125.
[8] John E. Hartley, New International Biblical Commentary, Genesis (Peabody, Massachusetts; Hendrickson Publishers, 2000) 49.
[9] Gerald Von Rad, The Old Testament Library, Genesis (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; The Westminster Press, 1956) 58.
[10] Frank E. Gaebelein, General Editor, The Expositor’s Bible Commentary, Volume 2 (Grand Rapids, Michigan; Zondervan Publishing, 1990) 38.
[11] John Piper, Providence (Wheaton, Illinois; Crossway Publishing, 2020) 343.
[12] Kenneth A. Matthews, The New American Commentary, Genesis 1-11:26 (Nashville, Tennessee; Broadman and Holman Publishers, 1996) 174.
[13] Victor P. Hamilton, The New International Commentary on the Old Testament, The Book of Genesis, Chapters 1-17 (Grand Rapids, Michigan; William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1991) 139.
[14] Hartley, 47.
[15] John Phillips, Exploring Genesis, An Expository Commentary (Grand Rapids, Michigan; Kregel Publications, 1980) 46.
[16] Derek Kidner, Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries, Genesis, An Introduction and Commentary (Downers Grove, Illinois; Inter-Varsity Press, 1967) 52.
[17] Mark 10:6-8, Matthew 19:4-5
The Fundamentals of Our Faith; What We Believe Sermon Series, “We Believe in Salvation” Miscellaneous Verses
The Fundamentals of Our Faith;
What We Believe Sermon Series
“We Believe in Salvation”[1]
Miscellaneous Verses
Introduction
Muddy mirror
Prayer
Humanity Is Made in the Image of God
We will begin our talk today with the question of where did men and women come from? What is the origin of humanity? Both the Old Testament and New Testament writers viewed Adam (and Eve) as a person, a person as historical as Jesus Christ Himself.[2] These accounts leave no room for a mythical or allegorical interpretation.
Genesis 1:26 tells us, “Then God said, “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness.” We are carefully though out and purposely planned. It also says in Genesis that God said, “It is not good for the man to be alone” and to complement man, He made woman to be Adam’s helper (Gen. 2:18), 22).
So How Are We Made in the Image of God?
Moral likeness. God has given humanity an inner sense of right and wrong (Eccl. 3:11; Rom. 2:15). We call it our conscience[3] (or they were self-conscience), in intended to prompt us to act in a moral way, and when we do we reflect God’s moral likeness.
Spiritual likeness. Like God is a spirit, humanity also has a spirit (John 19:30; Acts 7:59). We relate to God in prayer, praise, and in worship (John 4:24). Since God is spirit, our spirit reflects His likeness. God made Adam from the dust (body), and breathed life into Him (soul) – God is spirit, and there is a part of man that is spirit as well.
Intellectual likeness. Mankind can reason, think logically, and learn in a way that sets us apart from the animal kingdom. Adam was given the responsibility to name the animals when they were presented to him (Gen. 2:19-20). Only humans ponder the future, create beauty (music, art, literature), and make scientific and technological advancements. As we use our intellect we reflect the image of God.
Social likeness. God is a Trinity, there is one God existing in three coeternal and coequal persons. It takes all three members of the Trinity to make up God. Likewise, both male and female make up humanity. Humanity reflects the trinity in how men and women cooperate together, each being equal to live out different roles assigned by God.
Genesis 1:27 “So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.” When God created human beings, He created them in His image. This image has been distorted by sin, but not lost completely because of man’s sin (Gen. 9:6). This distorted image of God will be restored when Jesus returns (Rom. 8:29; 1 Cor. 15:49).
Humanity’s Image of God Has Become Corrupted.
At the beginning of time, Adam and Eve rebelled against God in the Garden of Eden. Before the rebellion man’s natural inclination was toward God. This rebellion contaminated their spirits so that their inner nature now tended toward sin (Rom. 7:14-15), and while they were still capable of doing good, they became incapable of not doing wrong.
The very nature of man changed with the fall. Before the fall mankind’s heart was oriented toward God, but after the fall mankind’s will was to war with God – to fight against Him. We are not sinners because we sin – we sin because it is our nature to do so. An apple tree is not an apple tree because it produces apples. It produces apples because it is an apple tree.
John 3:19 “And this is the judgment: the light has come into the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light because their works were evil.” Mankind’s nature is bent toward sin, and we don’t like it when our sin is called what it is – wrong, sin, corrupt, etc.
Why did God not stop this evil from happening in the beginning? There, at the tree of knowledge of good and evil, He could have kept the serpent from tempting Eve, or stopped her before she took a bite, or done something to keep sin from entering into His perfect creation. He is all powerful, all knowing, and present everywhere. God could have created Adam and Eve so that they would not sin – but to do so would remove the freedom of choice.
The consequences which God warned them of involved both physical and spiritual death, that is a separation from their creator. This “Fall” involved all of the natural creation (Rom. 8:21-22).
This corrupted nature is passed down from generation to generation (Rom. 5:12-25). This condition is called “total depravity.” This does not mean that we are totally bad, or as bad as we could be – but it means that every part of our humanity has been corrupted by sin (physically, emotionally, intellectually, spiritually, socially – in every way).
In Romans we can look at two verses and from there we cannot avoid the fact that humanity is lost and in need of salvation. Romans 3:23 “for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God,” and Romans 6:23 “For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” There is no room for debate, humanity is lost and needs to be saved.
There are typically two schools of thought with regard to this problem. 1) everyone has to earn his or her salvation. 2) thinking everyone will be saved, regardless, the idea that God is too loving and kind to send anyone to hell. The Bible shows that both of these ideas are false. Titus 3:5 shows that you are not going to heaven based on your good works,“ . . . he saved us, not because of works done by us in righteousness, but according to his own mercy, by the washing of regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit,” and,
Matthew 7:13-14, Rev. 20:15 shows that not everyone is going to heaven, “Enter by the narrow gate. For the gate is wide and the way is easy that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. 14 For the gate is narrow and the way is hard that leads to life, and those who find it are few.”
Humanity Needs a Savior.
Humanity must have God’s grace, or “unmerited favor.” God is love, and from that love He has provided you a way (the only way) to be spared the normal consequences of sin, which is eternal separation from God. Ephesians 2:8-9 says, “For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, 9 not a result of works, so that no one may boast.”
The gift that is given to humanity is God’s grace and mercy offered to a person who places their faith in Jesus as the way to be saved from their sins. The faith mentioned here is not just acknowledging that God exists, — to believe information about something. It means to place our trust in that information.
The Smithsonian tells a story of the Daredevil of Niagara Falls. During the winter of 1858, a 34-year-old French acrobat named Jean François Gravelet, better known as Monsieur Charles Blondin, traveled to Niagara Falls hoping to become the first person to cross the “boiling cataract.” He always worked without a net, believing that preparing for disaster only made one more likely to occur. A rope 1,300 feet long, two inches in diameter and made entirely of hemp would be the sole thing separating him from the roiling waters below.[4] Blondin would say, “do you believe I can cross without falling?” The audience would say, “yes, we believe.” “Then he would say, then get on my back.” Or “get in the wheelbarrow.”
There is a difference between saying you believe in something (while standing on the shore), and then place your whole life in their hands (sitting in the wheelbarrow).
Part of placing our faith in Christ and being saved, is that a person must repent of their sin. Repentance means “changing one’s mind.” It is the other side of the coin of belief – faith and repentance go together.
CS. Lewis in Mere Christianity once said, “Fallen man is not simply an imperfect creature who needs improvement; he is a rebel who must lay down his arms . . . This process of surrender – this movement full speed astern – is what Christians call repentance.”[5]
What Happens with Salvation? There are several words that help us to understand the meaning of salvation:
Redemption – this means “to purchase from the marketplace.” This would be the same word agarazo, that you would use for buying a piece of fruit from the grocery store. You will pay the price that is required for the piece of fruit.
With regard to our salvation, there was a sin debt that was owed, or in order to pay the price for our redemption. But it does not just mean we have been purchased, it also means that it takes us out of the market. Just like your piece of fruit is yours, it’s “out of the market.” We have been removed from the marketplace of sin.
Justified – this means to be declared righteous by God. We can not be declared righteous by God unless we are righteous in God’s eyes. But how can God see us being righteous when we know we have sin in our lives?
Romans 4:2-3 “For if Abraham was justified by works, he has something to boast about, but not before God. 3 For what does the Scripture say? “Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness.” We are justified before God by our faith in Jesus Christ. Jesus acts as our representative, and by dying in our place we are justified by our faith in His act (1 Cor. 15:45). When we give our lives to Christ to follow Him, our sins are forgiven, we are born again, and Jesus’ righteousness becomes ours.
Adoption – when a person is adopted, they are made a legal member of another family, with all the rights and privileges of that family. Ephesians 1:5 “he predestined us for adoption to himself as sons through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose of his will,”
We were in the power of sin, of the world, and we belonged to the family of Adam – we were lost and without hope. But God, through Jesus took us from that family and adopted us into His, and adoption wipes out the past and makes us new. God knows all the sins that we have ever committed and will commit in the future and they are true even if we don’t feel different. The earth is round and rotates, whether you believe it or feel it – its still true.
Romans 8:15 “For you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the Spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, “Abba! Father!” 16 The Spirit himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God,” This is a deeply person term, Abba, Daddy – God has chosen us to show love and kindness to us forever.
How Do I Know If I Have Been Saved?
It is not uncommon for Christians to struggle with doubt as to whether or not they are saved. But the Bible gives assurance that we can know that we are saved.
Psalm 130:4 “But with you there is forgiveness, that you may be feared.” It is possible to be forgiven.
John 6:37 “All that the Father gives me will come to me, and whoever comes to me I will never cast out.” A person must come to Jesus, believe in Him, and ask Him to save us – but when we do, God will not ignore our pleadings for forgiveness.
1 John 5:13 “I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, that you may know that you have eternal life.” God has given us the Word of God, so that we may know that we are saved.
Can I Lose My Salvation?
Eternal security is the belief that once Christians are saved they will always be saved. So in order to see if eternal security is true, then we need to remember what happens when a person is genuinely saved:
1) They are made a new creature: 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.” A new believer is not simply an improved version of who they were, he is an entirely new creature, in Christ.
2) You have been purchased at the price of the death of the Son of God. Your sin debt has been paid – there is nothing left to pay. All your sin past, present, and future have been taken care of. You can not lose that, it is already been done.
3) The have been declared righteous by God (justified) – God has told those that place their faith in Christ that they are declared righteous. God would have to go back on His word and declare unrighteous that which He already declared righteous.
4) You are sealed with the Holy Spirt – Ephesians 1:13-14 “In him you also, when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation, and believed in him, were sealed with the promised Holy Spirit, 14 who is the guarantee of our inheritance until we acquire possession of it, to the praise of his glory.”
When a person placed their faith in Christ they are sealed with the Holy Spirt until eternity. The guarantee of our inheritance of eternal life in heaven is the presence of the Holy Spirit – not our actions. There is nothing that a person can do for the promised seal to be broken.
There will come a time when the Christian will be glorified in eternity. Romans 8:30 “And those whom he predestined he also called, and those whom he called he also justified, and those whom he justified he also glorified.” (not will glorify)
A Christian is guaranteed glorification. According to Romans 5:1, justification is ours at the moment of faith. According to Romans 8:30, glorification comes with justification. A Christian cannot lose salvation.
Most, if not all, of what the Bible says happens to us when we receive Christ would be invalidated if salvation could be lost. Salvation is the gift of God, and God’s gifts are “irrevocable” (Romans 11:29).
A Christian cannot be un-newly created. The redeemed cannot be unpurchased. Eternal life cannot be temporary. God cannot renege on His Word. Scripture says that God cannot lie (Titus 1:2).
Do you realize that you have a nature corrupted by sin? Is the Holy Spirit convicting you of sin, and pulling you to give your life to Christ today? You need to be saved – God in His limitless love and compassion provided Jesus as the way to fix your sin problem (that you can’t do on your own). Won’t you accept His free gift of salvation today
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[1] Alternate title, “Man’s Disorder and God’s Design”
[2] Paul Little, Know What You Believe, A Practical Discussion of the Fundamentals of the Christian Faith (Colorado Springs, Colorado; Cook Communications, 1999) 71.
[3] 1 Tim. 1:5
[4] https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-daredevil-of-niagara-falls-110492884/
[5] C. S. Lewis, Mere Christianity (New York; New York; Macmillan, 1960), 38-39.