Understanding Salvation: Justification, Redemption, and Propitiation

Devotional

Sermon Summary

Sermon Clips

"Now the first time I ever came to America, I was taken by a friend to see a game of baseball, and he talked to me for an evening about sliders, splitters, curveballs, and changeups. I did not have the faintest idea of what he was talking about. If you were to visit England, I could take you to see a game of cricket, and I could talk to you at great length about the bouncer, the yorker, the in swinger, and the googly which has nothing whatsoever to looking things up on the internet. Sports have their own distinctive vocabulary. People who love baseball learn the baseball words, people who love cricket, well we love learning the cricket words, and people who love Jesus learn the bible words and find great joy in all that they convey." [00:31:20]

"Propitiation is very simply a gift or a payment that is offered to placate the anger of a person who has been offended. It's a gift or it's a payment that is offered to placate the anger of a person who has been offended. Perhaps the best way to get at this is for me to give you an illustration so let me introduce in this story to two characters Neil and Sally. Neil was in his early twenties when he began dating Sally, a girl that he met in the office. Neil had a little bit of a reputation for being a bit on the wild side and there were certainly some times when Sally felt less than comfortable with him." [00:49:54]

"Now think about this: our sin is an offense against God, and what follows from that is that it is God who is the one to determine what the propitiation should be. The question that matters is what will satisfy God. We may have our ideas as to what should resolve the case; none of that is relevant. God is the offended party. There's really only one question: what will satisfy God? And the Bible gives us the answer right here: Christ Jesus, whom God put forward as a propitiation. God presents His Son Jesus and says He is the propitiation." [00:09:00]

"Now the Bible speaks about the wrath of God being poured out and spent. Listen to this in Ezekiel chapter 7 and verse 8: God says, 'I will soon pour out my wrath upon you and spend my anger against you.' So the wrath of God can be poured out, and when it is poured out, it is spent, it is exhausted. The pouring out and the spending go together. John Stott puts it this way: what is poured out cannot be gathered again, and what is spent is finished." [00:10:26]

"Brothers and sisters in Christ, can we take in the marvel of this good news? Shortly we're going to come around the Lord's table and we're going to savor what He's done for us in Jesus Christ. Let's get it settled in our minds: in Jesus Christ, brother, sister, you are saved. All that was ever due to you for all of your sin put together was poured out on Jesus, spent, exhausted. There's nothing left for you. That is why there is therefore now no condemnation for you because you are in Christ Jesus." [00:29:01]

"Faith is simply your hand open to receive Christ and all that He offers, and Christ and all that He offers is yours freely as a gift. That is why again and again the New Testament says it is by grace that we have been saved through faith. Your faith didn't earn it; your faith simply received it, and it is the most marvelous free gift of God's grace." [00:31:23]

"Peace with God never comes from looking at your own faith. What faith is, is it's looking at Jesus, and that's where peace comes from. Peace with God comes from looking by faith at what Jesus accomplished on the cross. If I were ever to ask the question, 'Have I grown and progressed enough in the Christian life to the point where God could expect God to justify me?' the answer to that question is always going to be no, of course not." [00:33:28]

"Now notice how we are justified: it's on the basis of what Christ has done for us in the propitiation and the redemption that He accomplished on the cross. How does it actually become ours? Notice that we are just how we are justified is described in three ways in this passage and elsewhere in the New Testament. The first and by far the most frequent is by faith." [00:24:23]

"Faith joins you to Jesus so that all that He accomplished in His death on the cross actually becomes effective for you. Perhaps one way of thinking about this, an analogy that the Bible itself uses, is the analogy of a marriage. The Bible speaks about the relationship between Christ and His people being like the joining of a husband and a wife in marriage." [00:26:00]

"You're twice mine. You're mine because I made you, and you're mine because I bought you. My friend, that is what Jesus Christ can say of you and me. You're twice mine. You're mine because I made you, and your mind because I bought you. That's the meaning of the word redeemed: to be bought, purchased by Jesus Christ. You are redeemed, brother and sister in Christ, in other words, ransomed, bought back." [00:16:41]

"Justification very simply is a legal term. It means to declare righteous. Justification is a verdict such as would be passed by a judge. The opposite of justification would be condemnation, which is also a verdict that would be passed by a judge. God knows all things; no secret is ever hidden from Him, and every person who has ever lived will one day stand before the Lord who is the judge." [00:20:00]

"Don't ever get the idea that God loves you because Jesus died for you. No, Jesus died for you because the Father loves you. He gave His one and only Son; He put Him forward as the propitiation. In Christ, God was reconciling the world to Himself, and here we come to the very heart of the mystery of the Trinity because God was in Christ. God was bearing His own wrath; it was turned in on Himself." [00:12:00]

Ask a question about this sermon