Transformative Fullness: Becoming Like Christ Through Grace

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A Christian is a man who has received of the fullness of the Lord Jesus Christ and Grace upon Grace, and that is why we are examining this great and comprehensive statement in such detail. There are many ways in which the truth can be approached, but this seems to me to be a particularly good one. [00:36:52]

The Apostle John, there at the very beginning of his gospel, gives a summary of it all. In fact, most of these New Testament writers do that. They were very fond of doing that. That is a mark of primitive early Christianity, that they delighted in repeating the whole. [01:18:64]

The process of sanctification is a very vital part of our salvation and is therefore a very vital part of the Christian message, the Christian Gospel. Our Lord, says the Apostle John in his first epistle in the 3rd chapter in the 8th verse, was sent into this world to destroy the works of the devil. [05:01:72]

The business of the process of sanctification is to make all this actual and real in us. Now, when we are told that Christ is our sanctification, it doesn't mean, as certain people have taught, such as Charles G. Finney and others, that the sanctification is entirely in him and not in us. [08:44:79]

A Christian is a man then who is to become more and more like the Lord Jesus Christ. So I take my last quotation from that mighty statement made by the Apostle in The Second Epistle to the Corinthians, the 3rd chapter and the last verse, Verse 18. [11:53:19]

The Holy Spirit does this work, and he does it in two main ways. He does it indirectly; he does it directly. We've been spending most of our time so far upon his indirect work, and that is his work upon us in enlightening our minds, in stimulating us to prayer. [15:55:95]

The active work of the Spirit in our sanctification is to produce in us this wonderful fruit. Now, let's look at this. The first thing we've got to emphasize is that it is the Holy Spirit who does this. It is the fruit of the Spirit. [22:43:15]

The fruit of the Spirit does not mean gifts; it means graces. You notice the list that he gives us: love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance. Now those are graces; they're not gifts. The Spirit does give gifts. [28:48:96]

What is sanctification? Well, it is that the man produces or has produced in him and through him more and more these graces, this fruit of the Spirit. And what is this fruit? Well, isn't it obvious? It's the character of the Lord Jesus Christ himself. [30:05:67]

The Christian life is just this process of sanctification. The Christian is a man who's living between the rebirth and the glorification, and there is nothing more wonderful than to think of ourselves and to conceive of ourselves always in this way and manner. [14:56:24]

The Spirit has been sent by him that he may produce him in us, and we may be made more conformable unto His image, and we may grow and be changed from glory into glory and receive grace upon grace, and it goes on and on until finally we shall indeed see him as he is. [48:57:99]

And now unto him who is able to keep us from falling and to present us faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy, to the only wise God our Savior be glory and majesty, dominion and power, both now and ever. [51:47:96]

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