God's Preservation: Assurance of Eternal Faithfulness
Devotional
Day 1: God's Initiative in Our Faith Journey
The preservation of the saints is a profound truth that emphasizes God's role in keeping us in faith. It is not by our own strength or efforts that we remain faithful, but by God's divine initiative. This begins with regeneration, where God calls us from spiritual death to life, ensuring that what He starts, He will complete. This assurance is rooted in the promise found in Philippians, where it is stated that He who began a good work in us will bring it to completion. Our confidence lies in God's unwavering commitment to His people, not in our ability to persevere. [04:57]
"For it is God who works in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure." (Philippians 2:13, ESV)
Reflection: In what ways can you acknowledge God's work in your life today, recognizing that it is His power that sustains your faith?
Day 2: The Nature of True Faith
True faith, once given, is never lost. This means that those who genuinely have faith will never fall away. If someone appears to fall away, it may indicate that their initial profession was not genuine. However, it is important to exercise charity and refrain from judging others' spiritual states, as only God knows the heart. This understanding calls us to humility and compassion, recognizing that we are all on a journey and that God alone is the judge of our faith. [14:37]
"Examine yourselves, to see whether you are in the faith. Test yourselves. Or do you not realize this about yourselves, that Jesus Christ is in you?—unless indeed you fail to meet the test!" (2 Corinthians 13:5, ESV)
Reflection: How can you practice humility and compassion towards others in your community, especially when you are tempted to judge their spiritual journey?
Day 3: Grace in Our Failures
Even when Christians fall into serious sin, they are not beyond God's grace. Such falls are temporary, and God uses them to bring about repentance and restoration. The lives of David and Peter serve as powerful examples of this truth. Despite their significant failures, they were restored by God's grace. This reminds us that no matter how far we fall, God's grace is sufficient to bring us back to Him, and He uses our failures to deepen our reliance on His mercy. [11:24]
"For a righteous man falls seven times, and rises again, but the wicked stumble in time of calamity." (Proverbs 24:16, ESV)
Reflection: Is there a past failure you need to bring before God today, trusting in His grace for restoration and healing?
Day 4: The Holy Spirit's Assurance
The Holy Spirit plays a crucial role in our preservation, sealing us and serving as the earnest of our future inheritance. This divine guarantee assures us that God will fulfill His promise to bring us to eternal life. The Holy Spirit's presence in our lives is a testament to God's unwavering commitment to His people, providing us with the assurance and confidence that we are secure in His hands. [17:36]
"In him you also, when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation, and believed in him, were sealed with the promised Holy Spirit, who is the guarantee of our inheritance until we acquire possession of it, to the praise of his glory." (Ephesians 1:13-14, ESV)
Reflection: How can you become more aware of the Holy Spirit's presence in your life today, and what steps can you take to listen to His guidance?
Day 5: Christ's Intercession and Our Confidence
Jesus, our High Priest, intercedes for us, ensuring our ultimate salvation. His grace and intercession are the foundation of our confidence in preservation, as He sustains us through His power and love. The distinction between Judas and Peter highlights the power of Christ's intercession. While both betrayed Jesus, Peter's restoration was secured by Jesus' prayer for him. This truth gives us confidence that Christ's love and intercession will carry us through to the end. [20:46]
"Consequently, he is able to save to the uttermost those who draw near to God through him, since he always lives to make intercession for them." (Hebrews 7:25, ESV)
Reflection: In what areas of your life do you need to rely more on Christ's intercession, trusting that He is actively working for your good?
Sermon Summary
In this final session on the nature of Reformed theology, we delve into the concept of the perseverance of the saints, a key tenet of the TULIP acrostic. While traditionally referred to as perseverance, I prefer the term "preservation of the saints" to emphasize that it is God who preserves us in faith, rather than our own efforts. This preservation is rooted in the divine initiative of regeneration, where God calls us from spiritual death to life. The promise of God, as stated in Philippians, is that He who began a good work in us will bring it to completion. This assurance is not based on our strength but on God's unwavering commitment to His people.
The perseverance of the saints means that those who truly have faith will never lose it. If someone appears to fall away, it may indicate that their initial profession was not genuine. However, we must exercise charity and refrain from judging others' spiritual states, as only God knows the heart. Even when Christians fall into serious sin, as exemplified by David and Peter, they are not beyond God's grace. Such falls are temporary, and God uses them to bring about repentance and restoration.
The Holy Spirit plays a crucial role in our preservation, sealing us and serving as the earnest of our future inheritance. This divine guarantee assures us that God will fulfill His promise to bring us to eternal life. Additionally, Jesus, our High Priest, intercedes for us, ensuring our ultimate salvation. The distinction between Judas and Peter highlights the power of Christ's intercession. While both betrayed Jesus, Peter's restoration was secured by Jesus' prayer for him.
Ultimately, our confidence in our preservation lies not in our ability to persevere but in the power of Christ to sustain us. His grace and intercession ensure that we will be brought safely through to the end.
Key Takeaways
1. The preservation of the saints emphasizes that it is God who keeps us in faith, not our own efforts. This divine initiative begins with regeneration, where God calls us from spiritual death to life, ensuring that what He starts, He will complete. [04:57]
2. True faith, once given, is never lost. If someone falls away, it may indicate an initial lack of genuine faith. However, we must exercise charity and refrain from judging others' spiritual states, as only God knows the heart. [14:37]
3. Even when Christians fall into serious sin, they are not beyond God's grace. Such falls are temporary, and God uses them to bring about repentance and restoration, as seen in the lives of David and Peter. [11:24]
4. The Holy Spirit seals us and serves as the earnest of our future inheritance, assuring us that God will fulfill His promise to bring us to eternal life. This divine guarantee is a testament to God's unwavering commitment to His people. [17:36]
5. Jesus, our High Priest, intercedes for us, ensuring our ultimate salvation. His grace and intercession are the foundation of our confidence in preservation, as He sustains us through His power and love. [20:46] ** [20:46]
Bible Study Discussion Guide: The Preservation of the Saints
Bible Reading:
Philippians 1:6 - "Being confident of this, that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus."
John 10:28-29 - "I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one will snatch them out of my hand. My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all; no one can snatch them out of my Father’s hand."
Romans 8:38-39 - "For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord."
Observation Questions:
What does Philippians 1:6 say about the work God has begun in believers? How does this relate to the concept of preservation? [04:57]
According to John 10:28-29, what assurance do believers have regarding their eternal security? How does this passage support the idea of preservation over perseverance? [07:52]
In the sermon, how is the distinction between Judas and Peter used to illustrate the power of Christ's intercession? [21:35]
What role does the Holy Spirit play in the preservation of the saints, as discussed in the sermon? [17:36]
Interpretation Questions:
How does the promise in Philippians 1:6 provide comfort and assurance to believers who struggle with doubt about their salvation? [04:57]
In what ways does the sermon suggest that the preservation of the saints is more about God's actions than human effort? [03:23]
How does the example of Peter's denial and subsequent restoration illustrate the concept of temporary falls versus final falls from grace? [11:24]
What does the sermon imply about the importance of charity and non-judgment when observing others who may have fallen away from the faith? [14:37]
Application Questions:
Reflect on a time when you felt distant from God. How does the assurance of God's preservation encourage you in those moments? [04:57]
How can you actively remind yourself of the Holy Spirit's role in your life as a seal and guarantee of your future inheritance? What practical steps can you take to be more aware of His presence? [17:36]
Consider someone you know who has fallen away from the faith. How can you show them love and charity without judgment, as encouraged in the sermon? [14:37]
In what ways can you rely more on Christ's intercession for you, especially during times of spiritual struggle or doubt? [20:46]
How can the examples of David and Peter inspire you to seek repentance and restoration when you fall into sin? [11:24]
What specific actions can you take to strengthen your faith and trust in God's promise to complete the work He has started in you? [04:57]
How can you support others in your community who may be experiencing a spiritual fall, ensuring they feel the love and grace of God through your actions? [12:24]
Sermon Clips
I believe, of course, that saints do persevere in faith and that those who have been effectually called by God and have been reborn by the power of the Holy Spirit endure to the end, so that they do persevere. But they persevere not simply because they are so diligent in their making use of the mercies of God, but the only reason we can give why any of us continues on in the faith even till the last day is not because we have persevered so much as that is because we have been preserved. [00:03:02]
Now what does Paul write to the Philippians? He says that "He who has begun a good work in you will perfect it to the end." Therein is the promise of God that what God starts in our souls He intends to finish. And so the old axiom in Reformed theology about the perseverance of the saints is this: If you have it, that is if you have genuine faith and are in a state of saving grace, if you have it, you will never lose it. And if you lose it, you never had it. [00:05:08]
Even after we're regenerated we still lapse into sin, and not only into sin but into serious sin. And we say that it is possible for a Christian to be engaged in a very serious fall. And we talk about backsliding; we talk about moral lapses and so on. I can't think of any sin, other than blasphemy against the Holy Spirit, that a truly converted Christian is not capable of committing. [00:08:51]
We look for example at the model of David in the Old Testament where David was surely a man after God's own heart. He was certainly a regenerate man. He had the Spirit of God in Him. He had a profound passionate love for the things of God, and yet this man not only committed adultery but he also was involved in a conspiracy to have his lover's husband killed in war, which was conspiracy really to murder. [00:09:29]
And so his fall was for a season. And that's why we say that true Christians can have radical and serious falls but never total and final falls from grace. Even in the church when people profess faith and become involved in very serious and egregious sin, sin so serious that they are involved in church discipline. And even with the process of church discipline that goes through several stages, the final stage of which is what? Excommunication. [00:12:05]
Even that act of excommunication is done with the hope that the person is a true believer who is now engaged in a very persistent state of sin and that this final discipline of being cut off from fellowship in the body of Christ will be that which the Spirit of God uses to bring them to repentance. And we see that example found in the New Testament in the Corinthian situation with the incestuous man. [00:13:24]
But God does read the heart. And when God says that a certain person never was in a true state of faith, we can rest assured that that person never was in a true state of faith. Now but what about if we happen to encounter somebody who is in the midst of a serious, protracted fall where they have repudiated the faith publicly? Can we then know that they're not Christians? No, because we don't know tomorrow. [00:15:35]
The whole purpose of God's election is to bring His people safely to heaven, so that what He starts He promises to finish. And He not only just initiates the Christian life, but the Holy Spirit as the sanctifier, the convictor, and the helper is there to help in our preservation. Now two important terms are told with respect to the work of the Spirit in the Christian's life that are related to this idea of the preservation. [00:17:09]
The term earnest of the Spirit is drawn from the commercial language of Biblical days, and the only thing I can think of that's a parallel in our own day would be what we call earnest money when somebody is going to purchase a home that when you make the initial contract you give a little bit of money as pin money or as a down payment, which is a promise that you intend to get your loan and close the deal and pay the rest of the balance due. [00:17:55]
When God the Holy Spirit is given to you by the Father as an earnest, when the Spirit Himself who is indwelling you is the Father's earnest for your future, do you really doubt that the Father is going to fail to bring the final payment? We possess not a handful of dollars but the indwelling Holy Spirit of God Himself as God's promise to finish the job. [00:18:41]
Somehow we have a tendency or sometimes, I think, we have the tendency to think that when Jesus came and lived His life of perfect obedience and fulfilled all of the demands of the law that we have failed to fulfill and then by His passive obedience paid the price for our sins with His perfect atonement that He's done everything that we ever need Him to do for us, but we forget that when He ascended into heaven and was seated at the right hand of God and enthroned as the King of kings and the Lord of lords, He was not just going for His royal realm, but He also entered into heaven as our great High Priest. [00:20:01]
My confidence in my preservation is not in my ability to persevere, but my confidence rests in the power of Christ to sustain me with His grace and by the power of His intercession for us that He is going to bring us safely through. [00:22:21]