Pages

Subscribe:

Ads 468x60px

Thursday, January 05, 2012

true faith of the gospel


"He that believes (on the Son of God) has the witness in himself." 1 John 5:10.

The Spirit of God breaking, humbling, healing the heart; taking his own truth and transcribing it upon the soul; witnessing, sealing, sanctifying; opening the eye of the soul to the holiness of God's law—to its own moral guilt, poverty, helplessness, and deep need of Christ's blood and righteousness, thus leading it to rest on Him as on an all-sufficient Savior; thus producing "righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit"—this is the truth experienced—this is the religion of the heart; and all other religion, beautiful as may be its theory, and orthodox as may be its creed, is worth nothing! Without this experience there is no true belief in God's Word. The revelation of God asks not for a faith that will merely endorse its divine credentials; it asks not merely that skepticism will lay aside its doubts, and receive it as a divine verity; it asks, yes, it demands, more than this—it demands a faith that will fully, implicitly, practically receive the momentous and tremendous facts it announces—a faith that brings them home with a realizing power to the soul, and identifies it with them—a faith that believes there is a hell, and seeks to escape it—a faith that believes there is a heaven, and strives to enter it—a faith that credits the doctrine of man's ruin by nature, and that welcomes the doctrine of man's recovery by grace—in a word, a faith that rejects all human dependence, and accepts as its only ground of refuge "the righteousness of Christ, which is unto all, and upon all those who believe." Oh, this is the true faith of the gospel! Do you have it, reader?

Octavius Winslow