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From a Calvinist standpoint, detailed, but in laymens terms.
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shadrach_ said:From a Calvinist standpoint, detailed, but in laymens terms.
Best intro on it I've read is the chapter in John Murray's "Redemption Accomplished and Applied".
shadrach_ said:It was explained to me last night by someone that justification naturally leads to a discussion on perserverance.
Cajun Huguenot said:Great book, but its a hard read. Keep your dictionary close by, because it is not written in layman's terms.
Here is a quote from J.I. Packer on the subject:
What justification is, said the Reformers, must be learned from Paul, its great New Testament expositor, who sees it clearly and precisely as a judicial act of God pardoning and forgiving our sins, accepting us as righteous, and instating us as his sons. Following Augustine, who studied the Bible in Latin and was partly misled by the fact that justificare, the Latin for Paul's dikaiou'n, naturally means "make righteous," the Mediaevals had defined justification as pardon plus inner renewal, as the Council of Trent was also to do; but the Reformers saw that the Pauline meaning of dikaioun is strictly forensic. So Calvin defines justification as acceptance, whereby God receives us into his favour and regards us as righteous; and we say that it consists in the remission of sins and the imputation of the righteousness of Christ." Justification is decisive for eternity, being in effect the judgment of the last day brought forward. Its source is God's grace, his initiative in free and sovereign love, and its ground is the merit and satisfactionthat is, the obedient sin-bearing deathof Jesus Christ, God's incarnate Son.
For the rest of Packer's article, SOLA FIDE: THE REFORMED DOCTRINE OF JUSTIFICATION, click on the article title.
Coram Deo,
Kenith
edb19 said:Far be it from me to argue or disagree with Packer (which I don't). I would add though that our justification isn't solely the result of Jesus the Christ's sin bearing death, but also the result of His sinless life. It is both events combined that allows us to be regarded as righteous.
edb19 said:What it isn't (contrary to what I hear from more than a few people) is an ongoing process, rather it is a one time act followed by the ongoing process of sanctification. People seem to use the two interchangeably.
edie
I guess; or sanctification.shadrach_ said:It was explained to me last night by someone that justification naturally leads to a discussion on perserverance.