The foundation of the gospel of Christ in a believers life has the following implications:
Ephesians 2:4-7
The Past Tense
“But God, being rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved)…”
In order to be alive together with Christ, one must be alive. Duh. However, Paul explains in Ephesians that one must be “made alive” by God through Christ. We don’t have to assume why because he specifically states that “we were dead.” Christians, as formerly spiritually dead people, have been brought to life in Christ. This is the past tense of the good news.
The Present Tense
“…and raised us up with Him…”
The gospel does not end with that past act, it is still good news. As a Christian, one is in a constant state of being alive together with Christ. Christians are not merely raised from the dead and left alone; they are united together with the One who saved them. To look at the gospel as merely past tense and “move on” to the next step in Christian faith is to move away from the foundation. In Colossians Paul says, “as you have received Christ Jesus as Lord, so walk in Him.” As you have probably noticed, it is not easy to walk in Christ. There remains this problem of sin. Yes Christians have been raised up with Him and live in a state of spiritual life, but they are not perfect. This is why the gospel is still good news. Christians have an Advocate with the Father, who daily pleads their case before a just Judge (I John 2:1). Every day, we receive forgiveness and pardon of what we rightfully deserve. This is the present tense of the good news.
The Future Tense
“…and seated us with Him in the heavenly places in Christ, so that in the ages to come He might show the surpassing riches of His grace in the kindness toward us in Christ Jesus.”
The beauty of being alive together with Christ is that it never ends. The future hope of the good news is that Christians spend eternity with Christ. And that is better than we can ever imagine.
This is a nice article with good insight. I like the point that foundations are not interchangeable. If a person changes the foundation and builds, he is not building on the true foundation of Christ, but is building on something different. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeletethanks for your thoughts and passion to share the gospel in a clear, direct way! keep em comin mark.
ReplyDeleteGood post - welcome to the world of blog, Marcus.
ReplyDeletemarcus aurelius! great to read your thoughts! I will do my best to read this with consistency :) - Padlock
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