Tag: Justification

Game Over…Or Is It?

Game over
Game over. Credit: cottonbro studio.

What are some of the core features that comprise the typical video game?

Despite what type of game it is (platformer, adventure, role playing game, etc.), most video games have the same core elements:

  • Main characters
  • Storyline and plot
  • Lives
  • Continues
  • Game overs

How do you feel when you’re on your last continue, you make a mistake, your character dies, and you get a game over? If you are anything like me, you get frustrated – frustrated with the game, yourself, or possibly both. You spent a lot of time getting to that point, and now you’re either going to have to start back at the beginning of the game (let’s hear it from the old-school gamers in the back!), or your last save point. If you lost any essential items or power ups, you may need to collect those again, and depending on the game, this could take a significant amount of time. Sometimes it is a long, hard journey to get back to where you were! When you get a game over, you go backward before you can continue going forward.

Life Like a Video Game

Isn’t that similar to life? Again, if you’re anything like me, this has happened to you. You made a mistake, wanted to let it go, but didn’t. You kept it in, it kept bothering you, embarrassed you, made you mad, (or insert other negative emotions), and you let it fester and boil inside. This is going backward instead of forward. When you hang on to these types of emotions, it prevents you from living your best life.

This sometimes happens to us in our spiritual lives as well. We sin, either intentionally or unintentionally, and once we realize our actions were against God’s will, we take those feelings about our sin (anger, resentment, etc.) and lock them away. Maybe it’s because we don’t think God is capable of forgiving us because the sin is “too big” to be forgiven. Or maybe we think we are beyond redemption. Whatever the reason, that isn’t the way it works. Let’s take a look at Psalm 103:11-12:

“For as high as the heavens are above the earth, so great is his steadfast love toward those who fear him; as far as the east is from the west, so far does he remove our transgressions from us.”

God has compassion on his people as sinners. Christ is ready to forgive us of our sins. Whatever it is you have done is what has separated you from God and He is ready to reconcile you back to Himself. He is ready to wipe the slate clean. He is ready to take all of the corrupted files from your hard drive, move them to the trash, and empty the trash so they are no longer recoverable. He is ready to give you more continues with no more game overs. He is ready to renew you.

Unlimited Continues

There is a retro video game arcade near where I live that has no game overs! All of the games are set to free play and there are unlimited continues! You can regenerate and continue playing even if you die hundreds of times!

This is also like our spiritual life! Even though we’ve made mistakes, we’ve sinned, and we’ve separated ourselves from God, it doesn’t have to be the end of the story. We can move forward and find life! However, we need Christ in order to do it. To be renewed, we need to repent of our sins, allow Christ to forgive us, and then move in another direction away from sin.

Continue?
Continue. Credit: cottonbro studio

Sin and Grace

What is important to remember, though, is that we should not intentionally sin in order to receive God’s grace and forgiveness. Paul speaks of this in his letter to the Romans. In Romans 6:1-2, Paul says, “What shall we say, then? Shall we go on sinning so that grace may increase? By no means! We are those who have died to sin; how can we live in it any longer?” When we repent of our sin, we move in another direction and strive to continue living without that sin. We can do this because when we repent, we give that sin over to God and it has no more power over us. Dr. James Edwards puts it this way, “Since Christ has broken the claim of sin over our existence, sin no longer determines our existence.”[1] This is freedom in Christ!

Keep Going!

German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer discusses this in his classic book The Cost of Discipleship. In it, he distinguishes between cheap grace and costly grace: “Cheap grace is the preaching of forgiveness without requiring repentance…Costly grace is the gospel which must be sought again and again, the gift which must be asked for, the door at which a man must knock.”[2] God’s grace increases where sin increases. However, what cheapens the grace is when we believe that “it’s easier to ask for forgiveness than permission.” The kind of grace the Apostle Paul and Bonhoeffer are referring to is the grace we seek by following Christ and laying down our lives for him.

When we make mistakes in a video game, we can keep going. When we run out of lives, the game over is not final. We will get another chance. When we sin, we can keep going when we turn to Christ and allow God’s grace to cover it.

———-

Please check out my blog post Justification and the New Birth for more on the topic of forgiveness of sin.

I highly recommend reading Bonhoeffer’s The Cost of Discipleship. His writing is difficult for many, but I encourage you to work through it, perhaps reading it a little at a time or along with others so you can discuss it together.

I encourage you to listen to “East to West” by Casting Crowns. It aligns well with this message and paints a word picture for Jesus’ forgiveness of sin.


[1] James R. Edwards, New International Biblical Commentary: Romans (Peabody: Hendrickson Publishers, Inc., 1992), 159.

[2] Dietrich Bonhoeffer, The Cost of Discipleship (revised) (New York: MacMillan Publishing Co., Inc., 1976), 47.

Justification and the New Birth

Summer sunset over city.
Summer sunset. Photo credit: the answer is grace.

John Wesley, in his theology of salvation, made a clear distinction between justification and regeneration. He referred to them as the two general parts of salvation and, while they work in conjunction with one another, they are two different aspects of Christian salvation. Justification and regeneration both have some similar features, but they operate differently and they each have a different role in the overall salvation process. The greatest source to discover John Wesley’s definitions of justification and regeneration and how they function in the process of salvation is his 43rd sermon, “The Scripture Way of Salvation.” However, other primary and secondary sources will be used as well.

Justification

Justification is a synonym for pardon and “is the forgiveness of all our sins.”[1] This forgiveness comes through Jesus Christ’s atoning work on the Cross. Justification is the initial work of salvation and occurs instantly when one becomes a believer and forms a relationship with Christ. Some of the effects of justification can be seen immediately, such as peace, hope, and joy.[2] This justification comes only by the grace of God who freely forgives the sins of humanity.[3] A simpler way of stating it is that justification comes from God through Christ to humanity. Wesley believed one could not read Scripture without coming into contact with the doctrine of justification.[4] Justification is seen throughout the whole of the Bible because it is in God’s character to forgive His people of their sins against him.

Now that justification has been defined, it is important to understand how it works in the salvation process. John Wesley’s doctrine of salvation can easily be seen in his sermons. In his sermon “Salvation by Faith,” he uses Ephesians 2:8 as the guiding text: “By grace are ye saved through faith.” Salvation begins with God’s grace. He even says, “Grace is the source, faith the condition, of salvation.”[5] Karl Barth would agree as he believed that justification occurs by grace through faith and is not compatible with human initiative; it is solely the work of God.[6] Thus, salvation is dependent upon the grace of God and humanity’s faith in Him. Further, in “The Almost Christian,” Wesley says, “He that hath the form of godliness uses also the means of grace; yea, all of them, and at all opportunities.”[7] Wesley describes what salvation through faith is in “Salvation by Faith.” Salvation through faith is present, from sin and its consequences (justification), a deliverance from guilt and punishment by Christ’s atonement, deliverance from the power of sin “through Christ formed in his heart.”[8] Salvation necessitates God’s grace and is effected through faith in Jesus Christ and His atoning work on the cross. Salvation cannot occur without both God’s grace and Christ’s atonement. In fact, without God’s grace, Jesus Christ would not have even been sent for us. Justification has a role to play in this process. It begins with sin. Sin necessitates justification. Without sin, there is no need to be justified. Once this sin and the need for reconciliation with God are recognized, one comes to faith in Jesus Christ’s atoning work on the cross and they are justified by God’s grace.

Regeneration

Regeneration is the second part of John Wesley’s two general parts of salvation. It is also known as the new birth. “Regeneration is the birthing work of God the Spirit by which the pardoned sinner becomes a child of God, loving and serving God with the affections of the heart, so as to receive the Spirit of adoption by whom we are enabled to say, ‘Abba, Father.’”[9] While justification occurs in an instant and at one specific moment of time in a believer’s life, regeneration is a process that occurs throughout the remainder of a Christian’s life. It is the very beginning of sanctification. Thomas C. Oden quotes Wesley, “He that is ‘born of a woman,’ then begins to live a natural life; he that is ‘born of God,’ then begins to live a spiritual.”[10] Prior to justification, one lives only their physical existence; however, once one enters into regeneration after justification, they have a spiritual existence as well. There is a distinction to be made between the physical and spiritual lives of an individual. While humans grow physically, reach their prime, and then begin to degenerate, the spiritual life is not the same. The spiritual life of an individual continues to grow throughout the duration of their life; they have just hit their prime when they have finished the race and entered heaven!

Blades of combine threshing wheat.
Combine blades threshing wheat. Photo credit: the answer is grace.

Justification enables the new birth and sanctification enables the process of growth.[11] Without justification there can be no new, spiritual birth and without sanctification there can be no growth. The Christian faith and life is a continuous movement toward holiness – toward becoming more and more set apart for God’s purposes. The way to holiness is through regeneration. “Regeneration is the birthing work of God the Spirit by which the pardoned sinner becomes a child of God, loving and serving God with the affections of the heart, so as to receive the Spirit of adoption by whom we are enabled to say, ‘Abba, Father.’”[12] It is by the process of regeneration that Christians are adopted into son-ship and made “co-heirs with Christ” (Romans 8:17). Regeneration brings with it a new spiritual nature that ushers in a new will and a new beginning.[13]

Justification and regeneration work in tandem with one another, but it begins with grace. Christ’s work on the cross expresses God’s act for humanity while the new birth accomplishes the outworking of this act of God in his people. Justification modifies the believer’s relation to God while new birth refines the believer’s motivation and disposition of the soul. Justification reinstates the whole person by pardon to God’s favor while new birth regenerates the whole person by faith to God’s image. And, finally, justification removes the guilt of sin while new birth removes the power of sin.[14] Neil Cole says it well, “Regeneration is an ongoing process of the Holy Spirit working in our lives, so that each of us should be more like Christ this year than we were the year before.”[15]


[1] John Wesley, “The Scripture Way of Salvation,” The Wesley Center Online, accessed December 8, 2020, http://wesley.nnu.edu/john-wesley/the-sermons-of-john-wesley-1872-edition/sermon-43-the-scripture-way-of-salvation, I 3.

[2] Ibid.

[3] John Wesley, “Righteousness of Faith,” The Wesley Center Online, accessed December 8, 2020, http://wesley.nnu.edu/john-wesley/the-sermons-of-john-wesley-1872-edition/sermon-6-the-righteousness-of-faith, I 2.

[4] Chris Lohrstorfer, “Know Your Disease, Know Your Cure: A Critical Analysis of John Wesley’s Sources For His Doctrine of Original Sin,” (PhD diss., University of Manchester, 2006), 121.

[5] John Wesley, “Salvation by Faith,” The Wesley Center Online, accessed December 8, 2020,  http://wesley.nnu.edu/john-wesley/the-sermons-of-john-wesley-1872-edition/sermon-1-salvation-by-faith, 3.

[6] William Lane Craig, Reasonable Faith: Christian Faith and Apologetics (3rd ed.) (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 2008), chap. 1, iBooks.

[7] John Wesley, “The Almost Christian,” The Wesley Center Online, accessed December 8, 2020, http://wesley.nnu.edu/john-wesley/the-sermons-of-john-wesley-1872-edition/sermon-2-the-almost-christian, II 7.

[8] Wesley, “Salvation by Faith,” II 7.

[9] Thomas C. Oden, John Wesley’s Teachings, Volume 2 (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2012), chap. 8, iBooks.

[10] Thomas C. Oden, John Wesley’s Teachings, Volume 1 (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2012), chap. 9, iBooks.

[11] Thomas C. Oden, John Wesley’s Teachings, Volume 2 (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2012), chap. 3, iBooks.

[12] Ibid., chap. 8, iBooks.

[13] Ibid.

[14] Ibid.

[15] Neil Cole, Search & Rescue: Becoming a Disciple Who Makes a Difference (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2008), chap. 2, iBooks.

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