A response to the last comment on Tozer's passage:
I absolutely agree that by grace alone we are able to go to heaven. We have salvation by no work of our own. Thank goodness it isn’t on us! I think Tozer would have agreed if he was here with us today. But this doesn’t make what he wrote any less true. “In the Bible the offer of pardon on the part of God is conditioned upon intention to reform on the part of man.” He writes this and the key word here is INTENTION. He is not saying we have to live perfectly, we can no longer sin, but we do need to expereince repentence. In the Bible the people who encountered Christ were told to “go and sin no more.” Most of their lives were utterly and magnificently transformed: paul, moses, peter, david and sampson to name a few. Did they still sin? Absolutely…but they reformed, they were changed.
Tozer was merely defuting a trend in Christian culture that has only inflated since his time; a belief that we do not need to live by the Lord’s standards because we are covered by the blood. In this, we are lessoning the grace of the Lord…true grace causes a desire to change in the heart of the person experiencing the Lord’s compassion.
Before one accepts Christ, one must understand his need for Christ. To understand that, it is necessary to see the shortcomings and desire a change of heart, soul, spirit and yes, even action. Then, and only then can one understand grace. In Matthew and in John, Jesus says, “if you love me, you will obey me.” James writes that “faith without works is dead.” This is non-arguable scripture that does not contradict the fact that we do receive salvation when we do not deserve it, the fact that we do not earn it. I do want to claify something though, the pharisees were incorrect in their motive and heart, not in their action. People who cling to truth get labeled a pharisse too quickly. If their heart is to uphold the Lord’s ways because they love and compassion of the Lord is so great and because they trust Him so much they desire to follow Him in their action, if their motive is correct, then how awesome is that!?!?
Someone once wrote “our actions give a fair and accurate showing of the reality of our salvation”, but it is not 100% perfect depiction because as you said, we are human. Regardless, are actions today are very important to God because he commands us to live differently. It is not something we can reason around doing. If we love Christ, our actions will change by Gods power and our choice to obey Him.
I appreciate your comment greatly. I agree with everything you said, but I think it was missing the point of Tozer’s passage and missing a part of God’s heart in His desire to see His people set-apart.
I absolutely agree that by grace alone we are able to go to heaven. We have salvation by no work of our own. Thank goodness it isn’t on us! I think Tozer would have agreed if he was here with us today. But this doesn’t make what he wrote any less true. “In the Bible the offer of pardon on the part of God is conditioned upon intention to reform on the part of man.” He writes this and the key word here is INTENTION. He is not saying we have to live perfectly, we can no longer sin, but we do need to expereince repentence. In the Bible the people who encountered Christ were told to “go and sin no more.” Most of their lives were utterly and magnificently transformed: paul, moses, peter, david and sampson to name a few. Did they still sin? Absolutely…but they reformed, they were changed.
Tozer was merely defuting a trend in Christian culture that has only inflated since his time; a belief that we do not need to live by the Lord’s standards because we are covered by the blood. In this, we are lessoning the grace of the Lord…true grace causes a desire to change in the heart of the person experiencing the Lord’s compassion.
Before one accepts Christ, one must understand his need for Christ. To understand that, it is necessary to see the shortcomings and desire a change of heart, soul, spirit and yes, even action. Then, and only then can one understand grace. In Matthew and in John, Jesus says, “if you love me, you will obey me.” James writes that “faith without works is dead.” This is non-arguable scripture that does not contradict the fact that we do receive salvation when we do not deserve it, the fact that we do not earn it. I do want to claify something though, the pharisees were incorrect in their motive and heart, not in their action. People who cling to truth get labeled a pharisse too quickly. If their heart is to uphold the Lord’s ways because they love and compassion of the Lord is so great and because they trust Him so much they desire to follow Him in their action, if their motive is correct, then how awesome is that!?!?
Someone once wrote “our actions give a fair and accurate showing of the reality of our salvation”, but it is not 100% perfect depiction because as you said, we are human. Regardless, are actions today are very important to God because he commands us to live differently. It is not something we can reason around doing. If we love Christ, our actions will change by Gods power and our choice to obey Him.
I appreciate your comment greatly. I agree with everything you said, but I think it was missing the point of Tozer’s passage and missing a part of God’s heart in His desire to see His people set-apart.
