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Results from: Answered Bible Questions, Answers, Unanswered Bible Questions, Notes Ordered by Verse | ||||||
Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
1 | The Utter Uselessness of Pietism | Gal 3:3 | DocTrinsograce | 243339 | ||
"How many of us try to clean ourselves up before approaching the Lord's Table, as if there were some degree or level of purity that we could reach that would make us acceptable to God? The command to love God with all your heart and your neighbor as yourself should be sufficient to make you recognize your utter inability to do so. In all likelihood, the thinking that we have to make ourselves right and acceptable before God before he will accept us probably derives its origin from the influential but flawed theology of Pietism. For what man could ever clean himself up enough to make himself acceptable to God? And if he could clean himself up to that degree, then what further need would he have of a Savior or the nourishment of the Lord's Supper? He would be self-sufficient. The whole point of both the gospel and the Lord's Supper for Christians is to continually recognize our own spiritual bankruptcy and dependency on the grace and promises of Christ. "In his letter to the Galatians Paul asks Christians who were in danger of thinking they could add to Christ's work or make themselves acceptable by some other way, 'Having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh?' (Gal 3:3). No, this is folly, because what God still wants from us as Christians is a broken Spirit, one which still recognizes its own moral and spiritual inability and complete need of God's grace to move on. One that says, 'have mercy on me, I am insufficient for the task.' Anyone who thinks, therefore, that they can approach the Lord's table with a pure undefiled heart are really missing the point of the gospel. "This erroneous concept of post-Christian self-sufficiency, I believe, comes from the mentality that we were saved at some point of time in the past, when we prayed or confessed our faith, but now since we are already a Christian it is our job to keep ourselves 100 percent pure. If not 100 percent, what will God accept? 99 percent? We don't even approach that. We start by grace but think the Christian life is maintained by self-effort and that Christ blesses us in accord with how well we are doing. We believe we got into the kingdom without works but now think that to maintain good standing before God we must personally maintain our justification before God. Now we must scale the mountain of the Christian life by making ourselves good enough for God." --John Hendryx (2006) from his essay, Pietistic versus Biblical Sanctification: http://www.reformationtheology.com/2006/03/pietistic_vs_biblical_sanctifi.php |
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2 | The Utter Uselessness of Pietism | Gal 3:3 | EdB | 243340 | ||
What the author seems to miss is the fact that there is a vast difference between trying perfect oneself and obedience to walk in holiness. We can only be made acceptable to God by the blood of Jesus. But we are also called to walk in holiness. This is often confused with pietism by those that would rather live neglecting the call to holiness. This is far different than what the Galatians were doing. They were trying to gauge their acceptability to God by their holiness. This is far different than walking in obedience toward holiness. True both require self effort but the Galatians were trying to base salvation on works where the other is walking in obedience to Christ's call to us to be holy. |
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Questions and/or Subjects for Gal 3:3 | Author | ||
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srbaegon | ||
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Bobby Conner | ||
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andreat | ||
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DocTrinsograce | ||
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DocTrinsograce | ||
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DocTrinsograce | ||
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EdB |