Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Sanctification & The Means of Grace - Michael Horton...

Here is a pretty accurate transcription of Dr. Michael Horton giving a definition for sanctification in response to Dr. R. Scott Clark's question on Office Hours. Both men are professors at Westminster Seminary California:
Sanctification is the process of being made holy, being cut-off or separated from that which is common - not necessarily just that which is dirty or sinful but of taking something out of the category of common or ordinary an associating it with God himself.
God, ultimately, is holy in a qualitatively different way than anything that he makes holy. He may make us holy, but we aren't holy essentially as God is holy. So God, primordially, is the one who is set apart from everything else. He is the creator. We are the creature.
Set apart, consecrated or holy use - We have been set apart by the blood of Christ. And by faith and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, by union with Christ, we have been set apart from death and sin and the dominion of sin and death; and have been transferred into the kingdom of God and his dear Son...
A little later Dr. Horton addresses the word grace:
Grace is not [a] something. Grace is God being favorable. It's God's favor. It's also God's gift. God no longer looks on me as an outcast, as a rebel, as a wicked sinner who must be condemned. He looks on me as his son, as a co-heir with his natural son, Jesus Christ... taken me into his family. He has justified me. He is sanctifying me. He will glorify me one day. That is his favor, due to his favor, his grace. 
His grace is the motive and his grace is also the gift, the gift of justification, the gift of sanctification, the gift of his Spirit who also sanctifies us. That gift is not some thing. It is a person, namely Jesus Christ with all his benefits and the Holy Spirit as the deposit, indwelling me, guaranteeing my final redemption.
Dr. Horton continued, explaining that God's ordinary way of communicating his grace to his people is through ordinary means. To communicate his grace God has always used, and does today, creaturely means such as the spoken Word, human ministers of the gospel, bread and wine, the written Word. He does that rather than ordinarily working through the extraordinary, i.e. immediate and direct acts of his Spirit within individuals. This is borne out by the scriptural record. It's not that God can't work in extraordinary ways, for on occasion he does. But rather, he has shown himself as the God who has chosen to ordinarily communicate his favor to his people through common means of his creation.  This may sound foreign to many Christians today because the extraordinary view has gained such predominance in much of the church over the last 100-150 years.

Listen to Part One here!

4 comments:

  1. I wonder if this guy would like a conversation with fellow evangelical Mihe Horton?

    http://katiecouric.com/videos/who-is-carl-lentz/

    One evangelical option is to say that Jesus never talked about morality and behavior modification but only about how your "heart" feels. But Horton correctly points out that the gospel is about Christ's satisfaction of the law. If there is no law, we don't need any gospel.

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  2. What does Horton mean by a "FINAL" Redemption?

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  3. What does Horton mean by a "FINAL" Redemption?

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    1. jjjsnc, I think he is simply referring to the consummation of our salvation on the last day. Similar to Paul's words:

      "And grieve not the holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption."

      and -
      "In whom ye also trusted, after that ye heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation: in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise,
      Which is the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession, unto the praise of his glory."

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