Dcopymope
Well-Known Member
To be ignorant of it is not wisdom.
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To be ignorant of it is not wisdom.
........M'kay....and? Who was claiming to be "wise"?
There's no *strange obsession* regarding glorification. God's plan of salvation did not stop with simply saving sinners from Hell. His ultimate objective for His children -- who are significantly called "Children of Light" -- is their glorification (the order being justification, sanctification, and glorification -- Rom 8:29,30).I don't understand this strange obsession with becoming a "light" really.
I think that is "glorified," not "glorification" which is the process to become glorified.
Yeah, all "processes" are of the [created/fallen] world...and justification, sanctification, and glorification are not - they are of God.I have always been taught that we are justified, and then go through a process of sanctification. This teaching has set up the church for weakness. Always in the process of being sanctified unto good works, but never quite making it. But when I noticed that the word sanctified is used past tense in the scriptures for a Christian, I asked God what then is the name of the process we go through. He immediately spoke and said "Glorification." Sanctification happens at the same time as justification. Our old sins are taken away and we are immediately set apart unto good works. But not just individual sins, the whole sin nature. It is the singular of the word sin, and with a capital S. Thus justification and sanctification are back to back. Now God starts to transform our minds into the mind of Christ Who has all the glory. We go from glory to glory. When we realize we are holy vessels, sanctified for good works, our whole concept of ourselves shifts from loser ever striving to be sanctified, to winner - I CAN do all things through Christ who strengthens me. We need to stop striving to be sanctified, and realize we are!
I thought you might like to hear David Herzog on another area of the Glory that is happening around the world these days. Boy, are we close to the end - or what!!
https://sidroth.org/television/tv-archives/david-herzog-5/?src=weeklybroadcastemail_070918
The process which leads to glorification is sanctification, the setting apart of ourselves to God and to His will, making our calling and election sure.
Yeah, all "processes" are of the [created/fallen] world...and justification, sanctification, and glorification are not - they are of God.
This is a topic for "rightly dividing the word." The world and God (darkness and Light) are different and separate, and must be divided in the word as such in order to understand what God is saying. Certainly, He does not mix the two...nor should we.
The whole "process" idea is of the world and relative to time, which is created. God, on the other hand, is timeless.
I'm just now studying this, and still do not see sanctification as a process. But I do see glorification as a process in my way of thinking. As soon as our sin nature was taken away, we were sanctified for a new purpose than sinning. Our free will then longs to do righteousness, and developing the mind of Christ. Taking on that godly trait is part of being glorified. We are not still being set apart. We either are or we aren't.
Indeed, it is a mere state of mind...and not a process at all.What would you call this process and why"
2 Peter 1:
5 But also for this very reason, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue, to virtue knowledge, 6 to knowledge self-control, to self-control perseverance, to perseverance godliness, 7 to godliness brotherly kindness, and to brotherly kindness love. 8 For if these things are yours and abound, you will be neither barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. 9 For he who lacks these things is shortsighted, even to blindness, and has forgotten that he was cleansed from his old sins.
10 Therefore, brethren, be even more diligent to make your call and election sure, for if you do these things you will never stumble; 11 for so an entrance will be supplied to you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Not justification, because he is already cleansed of his old sins. So is this the process of being set apart as vessels for good works (sanctification), or literally becoming like God in mind, thought and deed as children of God (glorification).
Yeah, all "processes" are of the [created/fallen] world...and justification, sanctification, and glorification are not - they are of God.
This is a topic for "rightly dividing the word." The world and God (darkness and Light) are different and separate, and must be divided in the word as such in order to understand what God is saying. Certainly, He does not mix the two...nor should we.
The whole "process" idea is of the world and relative to time, which is created. God, on the other hand, is timeless.
No...this is a bit more abstract than that. This is God's business, and He doesn't just see the end before it happens, there is no clock or calendar in these matters. That is not how God works - It is finished.Yes, God is timeless - He sees the end before it happens to us. So for us it is a process to get to that end. So do you see glorification as at our death only? This is what I'm trying to figure out. The difference between sanctification and glorification. Justification I think is clearer - it is when our past sins are cleansed. Many believe that includes the sins we are presently committing and those we haven't committed yet. Scripture doesn't bear witness to that belief regarding willful sin, but may only on unintentional sin. It is our past sins that are cleansed, both willful and unintentional. That is why the Holy Spirit is given to us at that moment - so we don't commit intentional sin in the future. I believe that at justification, our whole sin nature is replaced to one which cannot commit willful sin. What do you think? However, even without that sin nature, we still commit unintentional transgressions. So how is that possible to even commit transgressions without a sin nature still intact? The only safe thing to do is to never get out of the Spirit, but to continually walk in the Spirit.
No...this is a bit more abstract than that. This is God's business, and He doesn't just see the end before it happens, there is no clock or calendar in these matters. That is not how God works - It is finished.
On the contrary, all chronology is a mere component of created time, an illusion that gives one the impression of past, present, and future - that is not real with God. This is Him reading a story that is already written to His children, a story of what is, not what will be. The only thing that makes it appear as the future unfolding, is that we are hearing about it for the first time. But God is not the god of what will be, but the god of what is. Therefore, He does not say, I was, or I will be, but rather, I am.
When we see Him as He is (as "I am"), then we will be like Him. 1 John 3:2
I am not sure what a Universalist is...so no. But I do know what "I am."I'm not sure if we are one the same page or not. Regarding our sins and our sin nature, what is justification to you. You aren't a Universalist are you?
I am not sure what a Universalist is...so no. But I do know what "I am."
Justification is what happened in the twinkling of an eye when Jesus said, "It is finished."
No. I am afraid your use of 'isms has you going off in left field. We were talking about "processes", and my point was/is that there are no processes.That sounds like Universalism. Hmmmm... So since Jesus died, is the whole world justified? Is the whole world now saved? And even those before Christ?
No. I am afraid your use of 'isms has you going off in left field. We were talking about "processes", and my point was/is that there are no processes.
The idea of processes comes from a misunderstanding of what is actually the case - the would be chronology of time is not a chronological process at all, but a revelation in a manner which God has determined we can bear. In other words, when Jesus explained, “I still have many things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now", He had reached the end of the apostles ability to bear all that had been revealed to them in the short time of His teaching them - they, and the world, simply needed more time, meaning more unfolding revelation.
It is for this reason, that Paul declared, "But now after you have known God, or rather are known by God, how is it that you turn again to the weak and beggarly elements, to which you desire again to be in bondage? You observe days and months and seasons and years [i.e. time]." Saying "I am afraid for you..." and therefore preached the "renewing" of the mind.
Yet here we are, still struggling to bear the full measure of the timeless truth and reality of God, insisting that it all must surely come in terms of time, which is ungodly. And therefore, it is true that "we do not precede the dead" in such knowledge, for it would seem that we prefer the ways of men and of the world.
Nevertheless, if you can receive it, "the truth shall make you free."
That sounds like Universalism. Hmmmm... So since Jesus died, is the whole world justified? Is the whole world now saved? And even those before Christ?
The penalty for sins was paid in full at the Cross. But no sinner can be justified (declared righteous in Christ) until and until he obeys the Gospel and believes on the Lord Jesus Christ. See Romans 4.Justification is what happened in the twinkling of an eye when Jesus said, "It is finished."
Okay...back to shallow waters then...and the fallen world of time.You are still talking riddles. My question is not that hard to give a clear answer. If, as you say, justification is at the cross, then are we involved at all? Are all saved? Or must each person repent first before justification applies to them. And if no process is involved, is each person a mature Christian day one? Have they mature fruit? Have they all the gifts? Do they understand all scripture perfectly as the Author meant it? They don't go from glory to glory, but are already in the glory day one?