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Octavius Winslow

Acts 20:21

Acts 20:21
Octavius Winslow September, 9 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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September, 9 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about repentance and faith?

The Bible teaches that true repentance and faith are essential for salvation, starting with a heartfelt return to God and trust in Jesus Christ.

Acts 20:21 emphasizes the necessity of both repentance toward God and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. This passage highlights the transformative order of spiritual operations—regeneration must precede sanctification. An unrenewed heart cannot pursue holiness as it is devoid of spiritual life. Therefore, the first step for a person is genuine repentance and a recognition of their sin, leading them to seek life, pardon, and acceptance through faith in Jesus. Both elements are crucial for a true relationship with God, as without this faith, efforts towards holiness are futile.

Acts 20:21

How do we know the necessity of regeneration is true?

Regeneration is necessary as it is the divine act that empowers a sinner to repent and believe, enabling sanctification.

The necessity of regeneration is underscored in the understanding that true sanctification cannot occur without it. The order of spiritual operations reveals that first, the heart must be renewed by the Holy Spirit to enable a person to truly repent and exercise faith. Without this divine renewal, a soul remains spiritually dead, incapable of producing good fruit or responding to God's holiness. As seen in scripture, this work of the Spirit is foundational—it provides both the life and motivation needed for a genuine pursuit of holiness, marking the crucial beginning of one's salvation journey.

Acts 20:21

Why is understanding repentance and faith important for Christians?

Understanding repentance and faith is vital as it aligns believers with the essential truths of the Gospel and their spiritual journey.

For Christians, comprehending the roles of repentance and faith is paramount since these doctrines are the heart of the Gospel message. They inform the believer’s understanding of their need for a Savior and the means by which they receive grace. Repentance involves acknowledging one’s sin and guilt before God, while faith is the act of trusting Jesus Christ for salvation. This order—repentance followed by faith—prevents misunderstandings about the nature of salvation and guards against the fatal errors of self-righteousness and false security. When Christians grasp this truth, they are equipped to live in accordance with God’s design for their spiritual growth and their ultimate calling to holiness.

Acts 20:21

“Testifying both to the Jews, and also to the Greeks, repentance toward God, and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ.”

— Acts 20:21

THERE is an order, as well as a harmony, in the operations of the Spirit, which it is highly important should be observed. An ignorance or an oversight of this has led to great and fatal perversions of the gospel. All the self-righteousness of the Pharisee, and all the self-devotion of the deluded disciple of the Papal superstition, have their origin here. Now, the order of the Spirit is this—regeneration of the heart first—then its sanctification. Reverse this, and we derange every part of His work, and, as far as our individual benefit extends, render it entirely useless. Sanctification is not the first and immediate duty of an unrenewed person. Indeed, it were utterly impossible that it should be so. Sanctification has its commencement and its daily growth in a principle of life implanted in the soul by the Eternal Spirit; and to look for holiness in an individual still dead in sins is to look for fruit where no seed was sown—for the actings of life where no vitality exists—it is to expect, in the language of our Lord, to "gather grapes from thorns, and figs from thistles." The first and imperious duty of an unrenewed man is to prostrate himself in deep abasement and true repentance before God; the lofty look must be brought low, the rebellious will must be humbled; and in the posture of one overwhelmed with a sense of guilt. He is to look by faith to a crucified Savior, and draw from thence life, pardon, and acceptance. True, most solemnly true it is, that "without holiness no man shall see the Lord;" yet all attempts towards the attainment of holiness, before "repentance towards God, and faith in the Lord Jesus Christ," will but disappoint the soul that looks for it.

This work of renewal done, sanctification is comparatively an easy and a delightful employ. Motives and exhortations to a life of holiness now find a ready response in the heart, already the temple of the Holy Spirit. The "incorruptible seed" there sown germinates into the plant, blossoms and ripens into the fruits of holiness, and the "living water" there welled springs up, and pours forth its stream of life and purity, adorning and fertilizing the garden of the Lord. Let us, then, be careful how we disturb the arrangement and reverse the order of the blessed Spirit in His work. Great errors have in consequence arisen, and souls have gone into eternity fearfully and fatally deceived. Especially cautious should they be in this matter, who are appointed to the office of spiritual instruction—to whose care immortal souls are intrusted—lest, in a matter involving interests so precious and so lasting, any should pass from beneath their teaching into eternity ignorant of the one a true method of salvation.

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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