Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Jerry Bridges on "Gospel-Driven Sanctification"

The problem:

As I see it, the Christian community is largely a performance-based culture today. And the more deeply committed we are to following Jesus, the more deeply ingrained the performance mindset is. We think we earn God's blessing or forfeit it by how well we live the Christian life.

Most Christians have a baseline of acceptable performance by which they gauge their acceptance by God. For many, this baseline is no more than regular church attendance and the avoidance of major sins. Such Christians are often characterized by some degree of self-righteousness. After all, they don't indulge in the major sins we see happening around us. Such Christians would not think they need the gospel anymore. They would say the gospel is only for sinners.

For committed Christians, the baseline is much higher. It includes regular practice of spiritual disciplines, obedience to God's Word, and involvement in some form of ministry. Here again, if we focus on outward behavior, many score fairly well. But these Christians are even more vulnerable to self-righteousness, for they can look down their spiritual noses not only at the sinful society around them but even at other believers who are not as committed as they are. These Christians don't need the gospel either. For them, Christian growth means more discipline and more commitment.

Then there is a third group. The baseline of this group includes more than the outward performance of disciplines, obedience, and ministry. These Christians also recognize the need to deal with sins of the heart like a critical spirit, pride, selfishness, envy, resentment, and anxiety. They see their inconsistency in having their quiet times, their failure to witness at every opportunity, and their frequent failures in dealing with sins of the heart. This group of Christians is far more likely to be plagued by a sense of guilt because group members have not met their own expectations. And because they think God's acceptance of them is based on their performance, they have little joy in their Christian lives. For them, life is like a treadmill on which they keep slipping farther and farther behind. This group needs the gospel, but they don't realize it is for them. I know, because I was in this group.


Do these groups describe anyone you know? Maybe you can relate to that last one yourself. Here's the solution:

Gradually over time, and from a deep sense of need, I came to realize that the gospel is for believers, too. . . . Christians need to hear the gospel all of their lives because it is the gospel that continues to remind us that our day-to-day acceptance with the Father is not based on what we do for God but upon what Christ did for us in his sinless life and sin-bearing death. I began to see that we stand before God today as righteous as we ever will be, even in heaven, because he has clothed us with the righteousness of his Son. Therefore, I don't have to perform to be accepted by God. Now I am free to obey him and serve him because I am already accepted in Christ (see Rom. 8:1). My driving motivation now is not guilt but gratitude.


The truths contained in that last paragraph rocked my world around eight years ago. They can't be repeated too often. There will always be tension in the Christian life. A tension between what we know ourselves to be and what we desire to be. Desire will always outstrip performance for the growing Christian. That tension is itself an evidence of growth -- the person who thinks he's "arrived" is the one in real danger. The gospel -- preached and applied to ourselves daily -- is what will keep us going, saving us from despair on the one hand, and "easy believism" on the other. It provides the fuel to struggle against sin and grow in godliness. It points me away from myself and toward Jesus. And the real miracle is, the more I look to Him the more I become like him. Wow!

Read the whole article @ ModernReformation.org

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