For the next two weeks, we will examine the doctrine of the
Christian life, exploring how the Bible defines the Christian
experience. This doctrine describes Gods work of grace in
the life of a believer.
Man is a free being who many times chooses to fall into sin.
The Christian life is one of salvation, justification and of
union with Christ. The biblical terms describing the Christian
life are weighty issues, but are significant in understanding new
life found in Christ. This doctrine will be explained by defining
various biblical terminologies that describe the experience of
new life.
Salvation
Salvation is all that God has done in Christ for man and all
that He will do. Someone once explained the threshold of
salvation, saying,If a man is lost in the woods at night or
out on the sea in a fog at night and then is rescued, he ought to
know what it means to be saved.
When found in the New Testament, the word salvation
has for its semantic element the meaning of open air, freedom,
liberation, unhampered, airy, spacious, to have the shackles fall
off, the traps broken.
Consider Psalm 124:7-8: Our soul is escaped as a bird
out of the snare of the fowler
The late Robert Naylor, president, Southwestern Baptist
Theological Seminary, once said: Ask the man in Egyptian
slavery what it means to be in bondageto curse the sunlight
of a new day and to die like a beast under a tyrants
fearful lash. Salvation is escape into the open air; there are
struggles, yes, but there is deliverance.
When discussing Joshua and Caleb, Jesse Northcutt, SWBTS dean
of theology, said, It is a thousand times better to die in
the desert a free man than to live to a ripe old age in the land
of bondage making bricks.
One may be delivered from bondage (sins) but must bear the
responsibility to stay free.
Jeremiah 7:1-11 urges us not to take the deliverance of the
Lord for granted.
In the New Testament, salvation is also spoken of as
liberationthe setting of a man free to live the life of
salvation. Consider John 17:19 (Moffat), For their sakes, I
make the most out of my life. Because I do this, they can live
abundantly; and Hebrews 7:25, saved to the uttermost
God can save sinners forever!
Salvation is spoken of as an accomplished fact, a continual
relationship and completed consummation. Consider: Ephesians
2:8-9, For by grace are ye saved (in a state of
having been saved); 2 Timothy 1:9, Who saved us and called
us with a holy calling. (salvation has a continual
relationship which abides day by day); 1 Corinthians 1:18, But
to us who are being saved, it is the power of God; 2
Corinthians 2:15,
the aroma of Christ; Romans
13:11,
salvation nearer than when we first believed;
1 Peter 1:5, Those who are guarded ready to be revealed for
the last time (a unique emphasis on salvation.)
We may choose disease rather than health, slavery rather than
deliverance, but there is freedom in Christ.
Union with Christ
Perhaps no other thing can define union with Christ better
than the word of God. Bible scholar H. R. MacIntosh noted that
the phrase in Christ occurs 240 times in the New
Testament. Consider 2 Corinthians 5:17, If any man be in
Christ, he is a new creature; old things have passed away;
behold, all things are become new.
In Romans 6:4, the believer is identified with the death of
Christ: We are buried with Him in baptism unto death.
And in Ephesians 2:5, When we were dead through our
trespasses, He made us alive in Him.
Adoption
New birth is Johns favorite term to describe the
Christian life. Adoption is Pauls favorite term. Paul felt
he was not an heir but is made legally an heir by adoption.
Consider Galatians 3:23-29: In Christ Jesus you are all
sons of God through faithheirs according to the promise.
Paul in Galatians wrestles with the relationship of law and
grace Romans 8:15-21: We are children, we are heirs,
we are joint heirs with Him; John 14:18: I will not
leave you orphans, I will come to you; and Romans 8:23:
Even though we have been adopted, we are waiting for a
fuller adoption. We wait for adoption as sons for redemption of
our bodies.
Next week we will look at the terms redemption,
reconciliation, forgiveness, new birth and sanctification.
This is part of the on-going series on doctrine.