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Octavius Winslow

Colossians 1:12

Colossians 1:12
Octavius Winslow October, 8 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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October, 8 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about our fitness for heaven?

The Bible teaches that our fitness for heaven comes from the Father, who prepares us through the work of the Son and the Spirit.

Scripture emphasizes that our fitness for heaven is not based on mere profession or external observance, but on the work of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit in our lives. Colossians 1:12 reminds us that it is the Father who qualifies us as partakers of the inheritance in light. To be fit for heaven, one must be born again of the Spirit, fleeing to Jesus for salvation, and possessing the earnest of the Spirit within—these are marks of genuine faith and relationship with God.

Furthermore, believers are urged to cultivate a growing fitness for heaven by actively pursuing holiness and spiritual growth. This involves recognizing that heaven is a holy place and striving to be more like Christ. The call is not to rest on past grace or attainments but to continually press forward, putting on the full armor of God and shedding the weights that hinder our walk of faith. In this way, our readiness for eternal communion with God is reflected in our everyday lives.

Colossians 1:12

How do we know God the Father is involved in our salvation?

God the Father's involvement in our salvation is evident through His provision of the Savior and the inheritance prepared for us.

The involvement of God the Father in our salvation is profoundly illustrated in Scripture. According to Colossians 1:12, it is the Father who has made us fit to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light. This highlights His pivotal role in the entire process of redemption. The Father provides the Savior, the beloved Son, and it is through Him that we receive forgiveness and righteousness.

Moreover, the Father is actively engaged in the sanctification of the believer through the Holy Spirit. This suggests that not only does the Father initiate the process of salvation, but He continues to work in the lives of believers, preparing them for their eternal inheritance. His power upholds us during our journey toward heaven, and therefore, we owe all thanks, adoration, and praise to Him, recognizing that our hope and security in salvation is rooted in His unchanging love and purpose.

Colossians 1:12

Why is thankfulness to God the Father important for Christians?

Thankfulness to God the Father acknowledges His role in our salvation and the blessings that flow from His love.

For Christians, expressing thankfulness to God the Father is a vital aspect of their faith and worship. The act of giving thanks recognizes the Father as the ultimate source of all our blessings, specifically our salvation and inheritance as outlined in Colossians 1:12. By acknowledging the Father's mercies, we cultivate a deeper relationship with Him, appreciating the comprehensive nature of His involvement in our redemption.

Furthermore, thankfulness reinforces our dependence on God and affirms our recognition of His sovereignty and grace. It is an expression of our acknowledgment that it is through His love that we are made fit for heaven. As we grow in our thankfulness toward the Father, we also inspire ourselves to live a life that reflects His holiness and grace, prompting us to cultivate our spiritual fitness for the inheritance that awaits us in glory.

Colossians 1:12

“Giving thanks unto the Father, which has made us fit to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light.”

— Colossians 1:12

BEAUTIFUL is the order of the Holy Spirit here. Observe to whom this grateful acknowledgment is made—"unto the Father." Then the sweet truth stands revealed—luminous in its own celestial light—that heaven is a Father's gift. And oh, how sweet, to trace all our mercies to a Father's love, to a Parent's heart—to look to Jesus, whose righteousness gives us a title—to look to the Holy Spirit, whose sanctifying grace gives us a fitness, as the precious gifts of a Father's love; then to rise through these up to the Father Himself, and trace the gift of heaven—the consummation of the inner life—to the heart of the First Person of the glorious Trinity. Who, after reading this passage, will any longer rest entirely and exclusively in Jesus—precious as He is? Who will not, through Jesus as the Mediator, rise to the Father, and trace up all the blessings of redemption, and all His hope of glory, to the part which the Father took in the great and wondrous work? Oh, how unutterable blessed is it to see the Father engaged, equally with the Son and the Spirit, in preparing for us, and in preparing us for, "the inheritance of the saints in light!" "Giving thanks unto the Father." Upon what grounds, beloved? Oh! it was the Father who provided the Savior, His beloved Son. It is from the Father that the Spirit emanates who renews and sanctifies. It is the Father who has prepared the inheritance, and who, by His upholding power, will at last bring us safely there. All thanks, then, all adoration and praise unto the Father, "who has made us fit to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light."

Let me affectionately ask you, my reader, in what does your fitness for heaven consist? Put not the question from you—transfer it not to another; let it come home to your own conscience: for in a little while your destiny will be fixed—eternally, irrevocably fixed; and one half-second of hell's torment will fill your soul with remorse, terror, and unavailing regret, that in the land of hope and in the day of grace your turned your back upon both, refused the mercy of God in Christ, rejected His dear Son, and died in your sins. In what does your fitness for heaven, then, consist? If it is only the fitness of a mere profession—if it is but the fitness of a mere notional reception of truth—if it is the fitness merely of an external waiting upon the sanctuary, the public means of grace—it is a fitness not for heaven, but for banishment from heaven! Are you born again of the Spirit of God? Have you fled to the Lord Jesus Christ for salvation? Have you the "earnest," the pledge of heaven, in the indwelling of the Holy Spirit of God—in the life of God in your soul? Have you the first sheaf of the harvest bound up in your bosom? Have you been sealed by God's Spirit as an heir of glory?

To God's saints I would say—cultivate an habitual, a growing fitness for heaven. Do not be satisfied with past attainments, with your present measure of grace and standard of holiness; but, beloved, since heaven is a holy place, cultivate holiness—an habitual growing fitness for "the inheritance of the saints in light." Be advancing, be progressing, be pressing onwards; "putting on the whole armor of God," "laying aside the weight that so easily besets you," the garment that trails upon the earth, pressing onward and heavenward, until you reach the confines of bliss, and enter within the portals of glory.

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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