The Bible says that we
have been saved by grace and we must work out our
salvation with fear and trembling.
Below is an excerpt to an article by D. Martin Lloyd Jones called
"Working Out Our
Own Salvation":
Wherefore, my beloved, as ye have always obeyed, not as in my presence
only, but now much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with
fear and trembling. For it is God which worketh in you both to will and
to do of his good pleasure. — Phil. 2:12-13
We are considering these two verses for the second time because we have
found that it is impossible to deal with them adequately in just one
study. I have suggested that perhaps the best way of dividing up this
statement would be to look at it in three ways: first of all, generally:
then theologically, and lastly practically, and in our previous study we
dealt with the first two headings.
We also saw that the Apostle's object in writing the words was not to
give a disquisition on theology, but rather to make a practical appeal.
Yet, as is his custom, he cannot make a practical appeal without putting
it in terms of doctrine. That is where the New Testament way of life
differs from a merely ethical system. Any appeal to the world to live a
Christian life before it has become Christian, is, as we have seen, a
negation of Christian teaching. We have here a perfect illustration of
the Apostle's method. But it is true also of all the New Testament
writers; it is the characteristic way of making an appeal for conduct
and Christian behaviour. We are not put under a law but an appeal is
made to us. There is a great law of life in the New Testament, but it is
what the
New Testament calls 'the perfect law of liberty'. This does not mean
that the Christian is living a lawless life, but that he has a higher
kind of liberty. The New Testament always lays down its doctrine first,
and then, having done so, says, 'If you believe that, cannot you see
that this is inevitable?' It is an appeal to equity, to fair play. It
does not confront us with a way of life, and say, 'Go and live it.' It
first of all tells us of certain things that have been done for us, and
then says, 'Now then ...'As you make the transition from doctrine to
practice in the epistles, there is always a 'wherefore' or a
'therefore', and I am at pains to point out that the essential approach
is to be found in such a connecting word. Without that, there is no
appeal, but because of that, there is a very definite appeal to reason
and to commonsense.
Perhaps, I can put it like this: is there anything that so thoroughly
tests our whole profession of the Christian faith as our reaction to it
when it calls upon us to live a certain kind of life? I put it like that
for this good reason: do we not all know something in our experience
about this unnatural and artificial dichotomy? We may like to hear the
gospel with its grand good news and all that it has to offer, but we do
not always feel quite so pleased when it goes on to call us to live in a
particular way. There are people who say, 'But it is so narrow.' When it
outlines a 'straight and narrow way', they say, 'Narrowness again!'
Because of the 'wherefore', because of this indissoluble connection
between doctrine and
practice, because, too, of this inevitable logical sequence from
doctrine to behaviour, our attitude towards the appeal tells us a great
deal about our ultimate attitude to the doctrine. The New Testament says
that these things are really inevitable, they are linked together, so if
I object to doing them, it surely implies that there is at any rate
something wrong with my view of the doctrine. end quote
The author called the statement in the Holy Bible-the
one that says "work out your own salvation with fear and
trembling"- written by Paul, an appeal. I call it a command from
God written by Paul. But whatever we may call it, the Bible is God's
word to man and must be heeded in humility and obedience. The author
made an excellent point that the "wherefores" of conduct are
merely an outworking of the doctrine in the life of the one believing
the doctrine. If we believe the doctrine, the obedience will follow
according to our belief or disbelief of it. The scriptures allow no
dichotomy between faith and practice as does modern teachings especially
as those espoused by C.I. Scofield who maintained there is a difference
between "position" and "practice" in the Christian
life.
Lloyd-Jones wrote: "We also saw that the Apostle's object in
writing the words was not to give a disquisition on theology, but rather
to make a practical appeal.Yet, as is his custom, he cannot make a
practical appeal without putting it in terms of doctrine." In other
words, the doctrines are the reasons behind the appeals for the godly
behavior. Isn't it amazing you can read and hear sermons that explain
the doctrines and behavior (position and practice) are entirely separate
matters? In other words there is widespread teaching in the church that
one's position in Christ is entirely unrelated to ones practice of
faith—that there is a dichotomy between one's position as a blood-washed
believer seated in the heavenlies and one's obedience to the doctrines
he professes to believe. One's position is supposedly immovable
regardless of whether that faith is a practical, sanctifying one. (The
Bible clearly refutes this lie, but it is taught and believed widely.)
In fact it is believed that saving faith and sanctifying faith are
completely things apart, and that one may have saving faith without
experiencing the sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit as evidence of true
salvation. These teachings are mainly in the "hyper-dispensationalism"
realm of teaching but are becoming more and more mainstream in teaching
because of the fleshly nature of such teaching: people love to hear that
grace will increase even if sin abounds. They love to hear that they may
sin and NOT reap what they sow-the "position" vs.
"practice" false teaching.
I do post sermons by others about salvation if I believe they are
correct but I do this with fear and trembling knowing how serious it
would be if I were to lead someone astray. The Lord has led my husband
and I to learn about dispensationalism in particular because this brand
new theology (brand new in the sense of being so new to the church; it
was introduced on a widespread basis through Scofield's 1917 Reference
Bible and took a few decades to become firmly entrenched in the
churches) has changed drastically the way the gospel of Jesus Christ is
being preached and has evolved over the years into another gospel.
This "another gospel" is not a gospel that requires one to
obey portions of the ceremonial law of Moses in addition to faith
in the Lord Jesus Christ, this "another gospel" is one
in which the ones believing it may use the Lord Jesus Christ for
cleansing of "positional" sin but spurn his cleansing of
"practical" here-and-now sin. This "another gospel"
also enables the one believing it to reject the authority of the Lord
Jesus Christ over his life because he is "under grace." Under
this widely held false notion of salvation, grace is a substitute
for obedience.
Does the Bible truly teach that you must be under authority of the Lord
Jesus Christ in order to be truly in the faith? (Yes!) Or does the Bible
indeed teach that faith in Christ is a substitute for obeying him as a
purchased possession? Are we in a unique dispensation that actually
allows us to be saved by grace while in rebellion towards God? Is it
true we can do what we would? (NO! See Gal. 5:17)
Does God permit Christians to obey
their own will as a lifestyle (sin willfully) and
remain safe from His wrath under the blood of Jesus Christ? No. If we sin willfully after we have received the knowledge of
the truth there remains no more sacrifice for sins. God calls this
"troddening under foot the Son of God. See Hebrews 10:26-31. Is it
true, that for the first time in biblical history, God's people DO NOT
have to obey him? (And anyone who quotes dozens upon dozens of verses
from the New Testament to prove that we do is accused of teaching a
"works salvation!") Does the Bible teach the dispensation of
grace gives us a DIFFERENT KIND of salvation? A less-than-holy
salvation? A sin-all-you-want kind of salvation?
If the Bible does not teach the above, then
why does the professing
church in the U.S. and Canada in particular, live after the course of
this
world? Why does the professing church have a huge dichotomy
between their doctrinal beliefs and the practice of them? Why is
their walk not in line with their doctrine?
Because they are being lied to by their
leaders. Christians are not being told the whole counsel of
God in respect to the nature of salvation. The teaching from most
pulpits, yes even "fundamental ones" in the United States,
leaves out the essential truth that obedience is the fruit of true
salvation. We have this foolish, non-scriptural saying in the
churches of "Well, God knows the heart. I can't know hearts;
if that person professes salvation, I have to take them at
face-value." This is not true and NOT what scripture
teaches. What's more, pastors are trained in seminary that justification without sanctification
is taught in the Bible.
Most of the pastors have been trained in seminaries where the tenets
of dispensationalism are firmly entrenched and this hermeneutic is the
lens through which the see the entire Bible. Since they are taught
that one's position in Christ and practice of being led by the Spirit are not related and that one's position
is stable and unchanging even though one's practice may be of habitual
sin then it is no wonder their congregations are not denying themselves
and taking up their crosses and following Jesus.
The pastors teach these verses are for the Jews only and they need
not obey the words of the Lord Jesus Christ as engrafted branches of the
True Vine. They are actually taught to disregard the teachings of
their own Savior and told in effect that they have a "different
kind" of salvation . . . A salvation entirely different in quality from
the one Jesus taught about.
Salvation is reconciliation to God. There is only one Lord Jesus
Christ and only one kind of salvation! May God help us to see the
teaching (taught by C.I. Scofield, in his Reference Bible!) that we
should disregard the teachings in the gospels—which are the teachings
of the Lord Jesus Christ—is in fact teaching us to deny the Lord who
bought us with his own blood.
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