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Self Sufficiency Must Die!

2 min read
#Grace #Soteriology #Irresistible Grace
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2 min read
What does the Bible say about self-sufficiency?

The Bible warns against self-sufficiency, emphasizing that salvation is entirely dependent on God's grace.

In Scripture, self-sufficiency is portrayed as a barrier to recognizing one's need for God. Psalm 38:21-22 highlights the plea for God's mercy and help, signifying that true understanding of our condition leads us to rely solely on Him. The notion that salvation depends on human effort exalts the flesh and dishonors God, illustrating the need for humility. We come to the realization that salvation cannot be earned but is a gift of grace, leading us to cry out for mercy in our helplessness.

Psalm 38:21-22

How do we know God's grace is sufficient for salvation?

God's grace is sufficient as it completely covers our need for salvation, eliminating self-reliance.

The doctrine of grace asserts that our salvation is entirely the work of God, an essential truth found throughout Scripture. When we acknowledge our helpless state, we encounter grace most profoundly; it is in our weakness that we are reminded of Christ's strength. The belief that we can contribute to our salvation undermines the power of grace. Therefore, recognizing our total inability to save ourselves leads us to depend wholly on God's grace, fulfilling the requirement for genuine faith and repentance. This reliance on grace aligns with the biblical teaching that salvation comes through faith and not by our works.

Ephesians 2:8-9, Romans 5:20

Why is humility important for Christians?

Humility is crucial for Christians as it allows for true submission to God's will and acknowledgment of our need for His grace.

Humility acts as the key to receiving God's grace. The Scriptures teach that God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble (James 4:6). In humbling ourselves, we recognize our spiritual poverty, which opens our hearts to God's saving grace. As believers, the gospel calls us to forsake self-sufficiency and embrace our dependence on Christ. Understanding our position before God leads to a genuine posture of worship and reliance, enabling us to glorify Him rather than ourselves. This transformation through humility positions us rightly within the grace that sustains our faith and walk with God.

James 4:6, Matthew 5:3

“Forsake me not, O LORD: O my God, be not far from me. Make haste to help me, O Lord mysalvation” (Psalm 38:21-22).

     The fact that conversion and salvation are of God is a humbling truth. Grace puts its hand on the boasting mouth and shuts it once for all, and then it takes its hand off the mouth and that mouth praises Christ for His sovereign grace. It trembles at the thought of taking any honor and glory from God.

     The doctrine which leaves salvation to the creature and tells him that it depends upon himself is the exaltation of the flesh and dishonoring to God. On the other hand, this preaching gives a deathblow to self-sufficiency.

     Some preachers want to arouse man’s activity. What we want to do is kill it once for all, to show him that he is lost and ruined and that his activities are not able to save him. Some seek to make the man stand up; we seek to bring him down and make him feel that he is in the hands of God and that his business is to submit to God, bow to the claims of Christ, and to cry, “Lord, save me or I perish.”  We hold that a man is never so near grace as when he feels that he can do nothing at all but cry formercy. When he says, “I can pray, I can believe, I can do this or that,” the marks of self-sufficiency are on his brow.

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