Skip to main content

Believe Into Jesus

In the gospel of John in particular we meet that phrase often: believe in Jesus (e.g., Jn 3.16)

However, the problem with the translation 'in' is that it can so easily be misunderstood to mean believing certain things about Jesus and that's all.  Of course, it is critical that we do believe things about Jesus Christ because they are foundational to believing in Him.

If we don't believe that Jesus is the Son of God (Jn 20.31) then our belief in Him will be defective.

If we don't believe that He has settled the unrighteousness of world's sin (Jn 1.29) by bearing it away from us then we will scarcely know why Jesus' coming as the Man is even important for our lives.

Nevertheless, on knowing these things, it is still possible to remain outside God's salvation. To believe in Jesus = to believe into Him implying commitment, trust in Him; just as I am trusting the chair I am sitting on will hold me up.

Hence, believing in Jesus means to rely on him for salvation. Those who are lost in some way are rescued. That's what all of those who have turned to Christ in repentance by committing their hearts and lives to Him have been: rescued.

Rescued from the penalty of sin because final consequences of sin's rebellion is eternal life; rescued from the power of sin in this present life; and finally, rescued from the presence of sin when Christ returns in all his glory.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Reigning With Christ by F J Huegel

Reigning With Christ by F J Huegel (1963) is a book of only 88 pages yet it is filled with crucial truths of the Christian faith organised around the theme of the enthroned believer . It's fair to say that the theme he concisely addresses in this small book is much neglected today. For the press of technological life with its bustle and speed is such that we can forget that present life, so ' real' to us, is temporary (2 Cor 4.18) and as in the first century, 'the form [Greek, "schema"] of the world is passing away' (1Cor 7.31). It's easy to read this work and though it has 20 chapters, they are short and pithy. However, reading it requires a meditative attitude so as to allow the Spirit to work on our hearts.

God's Proof of His Love-While We Were Still Enemies

I've just come across an excerpt from a wonderful book I have, The Divine Forbearance or The Dynamics of Forgiveness (2001) by Paul T. Harrison 1 . I want to focus on some points he makes from Rom 5.1-11 concerning the love of God. In Romans ch 4, the subject is faith: 'the means by which we are rightwised 2 to God' (Harrison, p. 52). But what, Harrison asks, arouses faith; what 'has Christ revealed about God that makes us able to trust Him?' Fire of God Ministries International Church-see http://fireofgodservants.blogspot.com.au And to that question he answers, God's forgiving love . God's love is so faithful and true that we may depend on it absolutely. Why is that so? That is explored in Rom 5.6-11. Our status before God as ungodly sinners (Rom 5.6, 8) in the past meant that we were the 'enemies of God' (Rom 5.10). Think of that! Being an enemy of God means to be subject to his wrath (Rom 5.9) and displeasure. People don't give their live

Christian Atheism!

" The great lesson that our blessed Lord inculcates here...is that God is in all things, and that we are to see the Creator in the glass [mirror] of every creature; that we should use and look upon nothing as separate from God, which indeed is a kind of practical atheism; but with a true magnificence of thought survey heaven and earth and all that is therein as contained by God in the hollow of his hand, who by his intimate presence holds them all in being, who pervades and activates the whole created frame, and is in a true sense the soul of the universe." These pungent words were given to me by an overseas correspondent and come from a sermon by John Wesley (1748) on the 'Sermon on the Mount'. Part of the context for his words apparently were that Wesley originally baulked at the idea of preaching in the open air until he realised that the Lord Jesus had preached outside! But, more especially for our edification is that Wesley fixed on the truth that nothing