“Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.” Acts 4:12
Suggested Further Reading: Isaiah 12
What
a great word that word ‘salvation’ is! It includes the cleansing of our
conscience from all past guilt, the delivery of our soul from all those
propensities to evil which now so strongly predominate in us; it takes
in, in fact, the undoing of all that Adam did. Salvation is the total
restoration of man from his fallen estate; and yet it is something more
than that, for God’s salvation fixes our standing more secure than it
was before we fell. It finds us broken in pieces by the sin of our first
parent, defiled, stained, accursed: it first heals our wounds, it
removes our diseases, it takes away our curse, it puts our feet upon the
rock Christ Jesus, and having thus done, at last it lifts our heads far
above all principalities and powers, to be crowned for ever with Jesus
Christ, the King of heaven. Some people, when they use the word
‘salvation,’ understand nothing more by it than deliverance from hell
and admittance into heaven. Now, that is not salvation: those two things
are the effects of salvation. We are redeemed from hell because we are
saved, and we enter heaven because we have been saved beforehand. Our
everlasting state is the effect of salvation in this life. Salvation, it
is true, includes all that, because salvation is the mother of it, and
carries it within its bowels; but still it would be wrong for us to
imagine that is the whole meaning of the word. Salvation begins with us
as wandering sheep, it follows us through all our confused wanderings;
it puts us on the shoulders of the shepherd; it carries us into the
fold; it calls together the friends and the neighbours; it rejoices over
us; it preserves us in that fold through life; and then at last it
brings us to the green pastures of heaven, beside the still waters of
bliss, where we lie down for ever, in the presence of the Chief
Shepherd, never more to be disturbed.
For meditation: Past
salvation from sin’s penalty (justification): present salvation from
sin’s power (sanctification): prospective salvation from sin’s presence
(glorification)—what a great salvation (Hebrews 2:3). Don’t miss it.
Sermon no. 209
15 August (1858)
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