Your Daily Bread

Santification

Biblical and World HIstory Subjects

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Hello, my name is Paul, and I am the voiceover for a new ministry provided to you by Jim Pug at God is Government called Your Daily Bread, taken from Christ's teaching of the Lord's Prayer in Matthew 6, verse 11. This is a daily devotion ministry focused not only on uplifting Scripture, but Scripture that will grow your spiritual connection with Christ. We hope that you receive these devotions to uplift you, encourage you, but most importantly, advance your knowledge base of the Holy Scriptures. Today's focus discussion will be on sanctification. You probably know that most people in America and many more worldwide identify themselves as Christians. But how many of them can explain and defend the gospel, articulate basic biblical theology, or live lives that support the claims of their faith? The tragic fact is that compared to the vast number of people who claim to be Christians, very few are actually growing to be more like Christ. That process of spiritual growth is called sanctification, and it's a vital part of every believer's life. For the past several weeks, we've been looking at some popular purported methods of sanctification, commonly called spiritual formation, and weighing them against the biblical models for spiritual growth. As we near the end of this series, I want to highlight some basic, clear teaching from Scripture about the nature of sanctification and help you properly evaluate your own spiritual growth. It's important to distinguish what sanctification is and is not. It is not simply feeling closer to God or experiencing his presence. It's not a collection of secret insight and personal encouragement from him to you. And it's not a vague sense of subjective spirituality. In fact, it's not measured, engaged, or informed by your emotions or feelings at all. In the moment of your salvation, you are declared justified by the Lord through the sacrifice of his Son and freed from the guilt of sin. From there, sanctification frees you from the pollution of sin, helping you destroy sinful patterns and relinquish your former wickedness. And just as with salvation, sanctification is not accomplished by our will or actions, it's the work of the Lord in the lives of his people. In 1 Thessalonians, Paul prayed that the Lord would complete his sanctifying work in their lives. 1 Thessalonians 5, 23 to 24 says, Now may the God of peace himself sanctify you entirely, and may your spirit and soul and body be preserved complete, without blame at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. Faithful is he who calls you, and he also will bring it to pass. The word translated here as sanctify literally means to be set apart. In its noun form, it is usually translated as holiness. So in basic terms, sanctification is the Lord's process of separating us from sin and setting us apart for holiness. Paul's prayer is that the Lord would bring about that transformation in the lives of the Thessalonian believers. That their lives would reflect a decreasing frequency of sin and an increasing frequency of holiness. As Paul says in Romans 6, it's a function of your new nature in Christ. Romans 6, 12-13, 17 says, Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body, so that you obey its lusts, and do not go on presenting the members of your body to sin as instruments of unrighteousness, but present yourselves to God as those alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness to God. But thanks be to God that though you were slaves of sin, you became obedient from the heart to that form of teaching to which you were committed, and having been freed from sin, you became slaves of righteousness. Sanctification is the fruit of salvation. It's the transforming process by which God's people shed their past sinfulness and grow to reflect His holiness. And if you truly belong to God, you're undergoing the process of sanctification right now. Thank you for joining us in this exploration of sanctification. Until next time, remember to keep the faith, stay strong, and continue to shine your light in the world. To hear these daily devotions of your daily bread, please log on to goddessgovernment.com. Goodbye, and may your faith always lead the way.