musterion
Well-known member
1 Cor 1:29
"Glory" means "boast, exult proudly."
If you are believing a gospel that requires you to obey [meaning "do spiritual works of righteousness"] in order to get salvation, earn salvation, keep salvation or prove your salvation, then while you will never admit this, you're looking forward to glorying before God about what you did to get into Heaven. YOU'LL HAVE TO.
Think about it. You'll HAVE to be able to boast at least a little in His presence. You'll HAVE to boast to Him about all the good works you did, if you're right that God will decide your eternity based on whether you obeyed Him well enough.
Whatever forms your personal obedience take doesn't matter. If you believe you're going to be judged based on your works, you automatically are saying you HAVE to offer God a list of good things you did that will document your righteousness and holiness and justify you being in His presence for ever.
And if you do happen to "make it," you certainly would have room for (at the very least) a quiet sense of pride for all eternity, precisely because God will have deemed you worthy after having worked hard enough to "make it."
Conversely, to believe the Gospel of the grace of God is to be humbled into the dust with every possible saving work of righteousness being not only worthless and filthy to God but blasphemous when set next to the Cross as the reason He should accept you.
Christ either paid for ALL of our sins without one exception, or He did not.
To obey/work to prove you are saved, or worthy of saving, proves you don't believe He paid it all, and that God requires something more than faith from you.
It's also why you'll drop straight into Hell if you die five seconds after reading this.
Better change your mind while you have time and breath. Christ died for your sins, was buried, and rose again the third day for your justification.
Forgiveness...justification...it's all covered. Nothing left that you CAN do or NEED to do except believe that.
That way, no glory goes to your flesh. It all goes where it should, to the Son and the Father.
"Glory" means "boast, exult proudly."
If you are believing a gospel that requires you to obey [meaning "do spiritual works of righteousness"] in order to get salvation, earn salvation, keep salvation or prove your salvation, then while you will never admit this, you're looking forward to glorying before God about what you did to get into Heaven. YOU'LL HAVE TO.
Think about it. You'll HAVE to be able to boast at least a little in His presence. You'll HAVE to boast to Him about all the good works you did, if you're right that God will decide your eternity based on whether you obeyed Him well enough.
Whatever forms your personal obedience take doesn't matter. If you believe you're going to be judged based on your works, you automatically are saying you HAVE to offer God a list of good things you did that will document your righteousness and holiness and justify you being in His presence for ever.
And if you do happen to "make it," you certainly would have room for (at the very least) a quiet sense of pride for all eternity, precisely because God will have deemed you worthy after having worked hard enough to "make it."
Conversely, to believe the Gospel of the grace of God is to be humbled into the dust with every possible saving work of righteousness being not only worthless and filthy to God but blasphemous when set next to the Cross as the reason He should accept you.
Christ either paid for ALL of our sins without one exception, or He did not.
To obey/work to prove you are saved, or worthy of saving, proves you don't believe He paid it all, and that God requires something more than faith from you.
It's also why you'll drop straight into Hell if you die five seconds after reading this.
Better change your mind while you have time and breath. Christ died for your sins, was buried, and rose again the third day for your justification.
Forgiveness...justification...it's all covered. Nothing left that you CAN do or NEED to do except believe that.
That way, no glory goes to your flesh. It all goes where it should, to the Son and the Father.