twin1954
Baptist by the Bible
If we are not justified in eterniity then God had to have hated us until we believed. Eternal justification means that God has alwys looked on us in Christ and united to Him from before the foundation of the world. Justification by faith is simply our experience of it. We find out we are justified when we believe but our justification took place in the decree and purpose of God before the world began. Eph. 2: 3 says that were were by nature children of wrath even as others but it doesn't say that we were ever children of wrath. We are by nature children of Adam but the last Adam, Christ Jesus the Lord, has from eternity been our substitute and Surety. Just as we were by nature in the first Adam and sinned in fact when he sinned, Rom. 5:18 all the elect have been eternally in Christ and in fact are justified by Him from before the foundation of the world. God has never dealt with His people as sinners.Thanks for something to chew on, JM. I guess my question would be what is the difference between decretive justification and actual justification (As AW Pink differentiated in the quote you provided)
The first thing that comes to mind when talking about this is the teaching of Paul that justification is by faith. I do not deny that God planned to justify His elect from eternity past. But I see faith in temporal time (which God guarantees will happen) as the moment of justification proper.
If I held to eternal justification, the implications of that are many. (I'm still learning, though, and open to teaching). For example, we could say that we were "right with God" even before we trusted in Christ and were united to him by saving faith. That doesn't sit right with me. Mainly because the Bible tells us that it is because of our being believers that we are now translated from darkness to light, adopted, no longer at enmity with God, but now have peace, etc etc etc. The Bible tends to emphasize a moment in temporal time when this drastic spiritual change occurred.
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