Monday 12 September 2022

Position and Practice

 MEMORY VERSES: Ephesians 1:3; 5:8; Hebrews 12:6-8


Another essential thing in the Christian life is to understand the difference between position and practice or relationship and fellowship. What we mean by this is that the believer has a new position and relationship before God that is eternal and perfect and unchanging and that depends entirely upon Christ, but the believer also has a practice in this present world that is less than perfect and that depends on his obedience.

 

Multitudes of professing Christians have become discouraged or even shipwrecked from failure to understand this truth. This almost happened to Harry Ironside, the famous Bible commentator. He began his Christian life as a zealous member of the Salvation Army. Believing their doctrine of a second blessing of sinless perfection, Harry set out to obtain this experience. He fasted and prayed and sought God as earnestly as he knew how. Finally he went out into the woods, determining to stay as long as necessary, and he experienced what he thought was the second blessing. He returned to a Salvation Army meeting and stood up to testify that he “had found it.” Soon, though, he realized that the “old man” was still present in his life, and he became so discouraged that he had a breakdown and ended up in a hospital. He determined to forget about the Christian life, since it “didn’t work,” but God sent two believers to instruct him properly in biblical sanctification. He was then able to establish his Christian life on a proper foundation and go on to be a very fruitful servant of Christ.

 

Relationship and Fellowship

 

The believer has been adopted into God’s family as a son because of Christ’s blood (Galatians 3:26), and this new relationship will never change. It is a gift that was purchased at great price. God will never “kick” the believer out of His family. At the same time, in this present world fellowship with God depends on


whether or not I walk in the light. Walking in fellowship with God is the subject of 1 John (1 John 1:5-7). If I walk in darkness I am out of fellowship, but this does not change my relationship. God does not throw away His children; He spanks them to bring them back into fellowship (Hebrews 12:6-10).

 

Relationship and fellowship can be illustrated by human relationships. I was born into my father’s family and I am his son. Nothing has ever changed that. There were times when I was disobedient and foolish and I displeased my father, and we did not have good fellowship together during those times. My father still loved me and yearned for my fellowship, but I had to repent and honor him before that could happen. The same is true in God’s family.

 

Position and Practice, Standing and Walk Another way to describe this is position and practice or standing and walk. Consider the book of Ephesians.

 

The first three chapters describe the believer’s new position or standing in Christ, whereas the last three chapters describe his practice or walk in this world.

 

The key phrase in chapters 1-3 is “in Christ” (Ephesians 1:1, 3, 10, 12, 20; 2:6, 10, 13; 3:6, 11). In God’s eyes, the believer is in Christ. He is forgiven, justified (declared righteous), redeemed, adopted, and given eternal life. The believer is “blessed with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ” (Ephesians 1:3). This new position is not based on the believer’s works. It is God’s free gift in Christ (Ephesians 2:8-9). The price was Christ’s own blood (Eph. 1:7). Therefore, the new position is sure and unchanging.

 

In chapters 4-6 the subject changes to the believer’s practice in this present world. The key word here is “walk” (Ephesians 4:1, 17; 5:2, 8, 15). This word describes Christian living. If the believer doesn’t “walk” in obedience, he does not have right fellowship with the Lord. If he walks in sin, he displeases the Lord and grieves the indwelling Spirit (Ephesians 4:30). But he does not lose his position in Christ. That is settled and sure and eternal.


The two aspects of the Christian life are seen together in Ephesians 5:8. The believer is a child of light “now.” It is a present possession and position that was purchased by Christ and received as a free gift through faith. Since we are children of light, we should walk as children of light. In other words, since we are saved and have eternal life and are children of God, we should live like it.

 

Conclusion

 

1.      If the believer does not understand these things, he can become very discouraged and confused when he sins. Those who believe that a born again child of God can lose his salvation do not understand this clear teaching of Scripture.

 

2.    The fact that the believer’s position is not affected by his daily walk is no excuse to sin. We have already seen in these studies the terrible price that believer must pay if he does not walk in fellowship with his Lord. We have also seen that it is possible to be a professor of salvation without being a possessor.

 

 

REVIEW QUESTIONS ON POSITION AND PRACTICE

 

1.  What did Harry Ironside try to experience?

 

2.  How did God help him to become grounded in the truth?

 

3.  What verse says the believer becomes a child of God by faith in Jesus Christ?

 

4.  What is the subject of 1 John?

 

5.  What does God do His children when they sin?

 

6.  How is relationship and fellowship illustrated by human families?


7.  What is the theme of Ephesians 1-3?

 

8.  What is the key phrase in those chapters?

 

9.  What was the price that was paid to place the believer "in Christ"?

 

10.  What is the theme of Ephesians 4-6?

 

11.  What does the Christian's "walk" refer to?

 

12.  Since we          children of light, we should            as children of light.

 

13.  True or false: Since the believer cannot lose his salvation, it does not matter how he lives.


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