Posted on Sunday, March 15, 2015 by Samuel
James Montgomery Boice:
The Reformers never tired of saying that ‘justification is by grace alone through faith alone because of Christ alone.’ When put into theological shorthand the doctrine was expressed as “justification by faith alone,” the article by which the church stands or falls, according to Martin Luther. The Reformers called justification by faith Christianity’s “material principle,” because it involves the very matter or substance of what a person must understand and believe to be saved. Justification is a declaration of God based on the work of Christ. It flows from God’s grace and it comes to the individual not by anything he or she might do but by ‘faith alone’ (sola fide). We may state the full doctrine as: Justification is the act of God by which he declares sinners to be righteous because of Christ alone, by grace alone, through faith alone.
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Filed under: Bible, Christianity, Faith, Grace, James Montgomery Boice | Tagged: Christ alone, faith alone, grace alone, Reformers | 1 Comment »
Posted on Sunday, March 1, 2015 by Samuel
James Montgomery Boice:
The words sola gratia mean that human beings have no claim upon God. That is, God owes us nothing except just punishment for our many and very willful sins. Therefore, if he does save sinners, which he does in the case of some but not all, it is only because it pleases him to do it. Indeed, apart from this grace and the regenerating work of the Holy Spirit that flows from it, no one would be saved, since in our lost condition, human beings are not capable of winning, seeking out, or even cooperating with God’s grace. By insisting on ‘grace alone’ the Reformers were denying that human methods, techniques, or strategies in themselves could ever bring anyone to faith. It is grace alone expressed through the supernatural work of the Holy Spirit that brings us to Christ, releasing us from our bondage to sin and raising us from death to spiritual life.
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Filed under: Bible, Christianity, God, Grace, Holy Spirit | Tagged: God’s grace, James Montgomery Boice, Reformers, Sola gratia | 1 Comment »
Posted on Monday, February 16, 2015 by Samuel
James Montgomery Boice:
The church of the Middle Ages spoke about Christ. A church that failed to do that could hardly claim to be Christian. But the medieval church had added many human achievements to Christ’s work, so that it was no longer possible to say that salvation was entirely by Christ and his atonement. This was the most basic of all heresies, as the Reformers rightly perceived. It was the work of God plus our own righteousness. The Reformation motto solus Christus was formed to repudiate this error. It affirmed that salvation has been accomplished once for all by the mediatorial work of the historical Jesus Christ alone. His sinless life and substitutionary atonement alone are sufficient for our justification, and any ‘gospel’ that fails to acknowledge that or denies it is a false gospel that will save no one. (“The Five Solas of the Reformation”)
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Filed under: Bible, Christianity, James Montgomery Boice, Salvation | Tagged: atonement, Justification, Reformers, solus Christus | 3 Comments »
Posted on Tuesday, November 27, 2012 by Samuel
James M Boice:
“The Reformers, and particularly John Calvin, stressed the way the objective, written Word and the inner, supernatural ministry of the Holy Spirit work together, the Holy Spirit illuminating the Word to God’s people. The Word without the illumination of the Holy Spirit remains a closed book.”
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Filed under: Bible, Bible Study, Christianity, God, Holy Spirit, Reformed Christian Topics, Samuel at Gilgal | Tagged: Reformers | 2 Comments »