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Salvation - In Three Tenses
Contributed by Pastor Renji George on Jun 16, 2024 (message contributor)
Summary: Salvation is to be experienced by us in three tenses- past, present and future. We have been saved from the penalty of sin. Now we must be saved from the power of sin. Then finally, we will be saved from the very presence of sin.
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It is a good saying that half-truth is even more dangerous than a lie. A lie we can detect at some point of time in the future. But if we believe a half truth, there is a possibility that we would never come to the full truth.
Gospel is the gospel of God. It doesn’t need any human touch on it. It is the most powerful message in the universe. None can remain the same if he encounters the gospel of Jesus Christ. If a 100kg concrete block falls on you, you will never be the same. You cannot say, nothing happened to me. Gospel is heavier than the heaviest substance in the whole universe!
Apostle Paul says in Romans 1, “I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to everyone that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek” (Romans 1:16)
Then why don’t we value it sufficiently? Why? The answer is ‘we haven’t paid for it’. Someone else paid for it. If we don’t understand the price paid for the gospel and the salvation- we won’t value it at all. Salvation is the most important subject in the history of human race. The only subject that has shaken the angels of heaven in amazement. This is our spiritual destiny. We must make sure we are on the list. The word ‘salvation’ is defined as ‘the act of being delivered, redeemed, or rescued from destruction and peril, including restoration to a state of safety’.
Only those who recognise that they are sick will go to a doctor. Only a sinner needs salvation. Our first need is to admit that we are born sinners (Romans 3:10-12). Whatever our religion may be, we are all sinners. We have sinned against God’s holy laws, in thought, word, attitude, deeds and motives. Sin is more dangerous to our soul than sickness to our body.
God’s desire for us is our sanctification in all levels. Our spirit, soul and body must be kept pure (1 Thessalonians 5:23). When a person is born again, his spirit is born again. The last stage in the life of a believer is the redemption of his body. As we grow in our spiritual life, the life we have received in the spirit should pass on to our soul and gradually to the body. Our conversion in the spirit will become evident through our soul and body.
Man is hopelessly LOST. Romans 3:23 says, “No difference, all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God”. Men are evil, ungodly and full of sins. If the secret motives and thoughts that pass through the mind is exposed, even a so called ‘holy man’ cannot stand with it before the public. Because heaven cannot tolerate sin, even one sin can send us to hell. If God wants to make some of these evil men His children, He must do something. They must be pardoned. But a righteous God cannot pardon a criminal as it is something like a judge releasing a proven criminal to be free without punishment. So, the solution is ‘death of the wicked or substitution for the wicked’. God became a man. He was truly man and truly God (Colossians 2:9). On the cross, He carried the sins of His people. The perfect justice of Holy God that should have been poured out on the heads of the people and all the fierce wrath, anger and hatred of the holy God against the evil that should be poured out on the wicked men were poured out on the Son of Man, Jesus! (2 Corinthians 5:21)
The punishment for sin is spiritual death- which means to be cut off from God’s presence for ever. That’s what hell is, the place forsaken by God. That is what Jesus Christ experienced on the cross for us. He was forsaken by His father (Matthew 27:46). It was God’s great public declaration and vindication of the Son to the universe that Jesus was the Messiah, the Christ and only saviour and what He did on the cross was the act of Salvation! (Acts 4:12). The Bible says, God commands everyone to repent and believe in His son for salvation (Acts 17:30).
Salvation would involve more than forgiveness. It would involve His pulling me out of the pit that I have fallen into. God forgave our sins, that by itself would be wonderful news. But the good news of the gospel is that Christ has not only forgiven our sins but saves us from the power of sin as well. Salvation is to be experienced by us in three tenses- past, present and future. We have been saved from the penalty of sin. Now we must be saved from the power of sin. Then finally, we will be saved from the very presence of sin, when we meet with the Lord (1 John 3:2-3).