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Octavius Winslow

Galatians 6:14

Galatians 6:14
Octavius Winslow November, 11 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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November, 11 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about the significance of the cross?

The cross signifies Christ's atonement, showcasing the holiness of God and the sinfulness of humanity.

In Galatians 6:14, Paul expresses that all glory should be in the cross of Christ, which highlights the gravity of sin and the holiness of God. The cross serves as a pivotal point where the realities of sin and divine holiness meet; without it, our understanding of both becomes obscured. Through the lens of the cross, believers are able to see their sin in its full depravity while also grasping the depth of God's holiness, making it essential for a true comprehension of the Christian faith.

Galatians 6:14

How do we know the doctrine of sin and salvation is true?

The doctrine of sin and salvation is grounded in Scripture and illustrated through our need for the cross.

The reality of sin and salvation is not just a theological concept but an experiential truth that believers confront daily. Biblical passages reveal the need for atonement and express that the only solution for sin is through the Lord Jesus Christ and His crucifixion. The acknowledgment of Christ's atoning work on the cross points believers to a deeper understanding of both their nature and God's grace, affirming the truth of salvation found in Him alone.

Romans 3:23, John 14:6

Why is conformity to the death of Christ important for Christians?

Conformity to Christ's death enables believers to understand the gravity of sin and empowers them to overcome it.

Conformity to the death of Christ is essential because it allows believers to engage intimately with His sufferings. As they meditate on the cross, they begin to grasp the seriousness of sin—both indwelling and outward manifestations. This relationship fosters a desire for a radical transformation that leads to victory over sin. Paul's aspiration to 'know Him and the power of His resurrection' reflects a longing for this conformity, indicating that true Christian living is fundamentally oriented around the cross and its implications for daily life.

Philippians 3:10, Galatians 2:20

What does it mean to have fellowship with Christ in His sufferings?

Fellowship with Christ in His sufferings involves sharing in both His pain and the transformative power of His death.

To have fellowship with Christ in His sufferings means participating in the reality of His pain as well as His victorious power over sin. This fellowship is characterized by an intimate communion where believers identify with Christ's suffering and apply the significance of His crucifixion to their own lives. The text emphasizes that while sin may not be entirely eradicated, its power can be subdued through constant reliance on the cross, allowing believers to share in the transformative work of Christ, enabling them to fight against the indwelling principle of sin effectively.

Romans 6:5, 2 Corinthians 1:5

“But God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world.”

— Galatians 6:14

CONFORMITY to the death of Christ can only be obtained by close, individual, realizing views of the cross. It is in the cross sin is seen in its exceeding sinfulness. It is in the cross the holiness of God shines with such ineffable luster. This is the sun that throws its light upon these two great objects—the holiness of God, the sinfulness of the sinner. Veil this sun, remove the cross, blot out the Atonement, and all our knowledge of holiness and sin vanishes into distant and shadowy views. Faith, dealing much and closely with the cross of Christ, will invariable produce in the soul conformity to His death. This was the great desire of the apostle: “That I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship of His sufferings, being made conformable unto His death.” This was the noble prayer of this holy man. He desired crucifixion with Christ; a crucifixion to sin, to indwelling sin, to sin in its every shape—to sin in principle, sin in temper, sin in worldly conformity, sin in conversation, sin in thought, yes, sin in the very glance of the eye. He desired not only a crucifixion of sin, of one particular sin, but of all sin; not only the sin that most easily beset him, the sin that he daily saw and felt, and mourned over, but the sin that no eye saw but God’s—the sin of the indwelling principle; the root of all sin—the sin of his nature. This is to have fellowship with Christ in His sufferings. Jesus suffered as much for the subduing of the indwelling principle of sin, as for the pardon of the outbreakings of that sin in the daily practice. Have we fellowship with Him in these sufferings? There must be a crucifixion of the indwelling power of sin. To illustrate the idea: if the root be allowed to strengthen and expand, and take a deeper and firmer grasp, what more can we expect than that the tree will shoot upward and branch out on either hand? To cut off the outward branches is not the proper method to stay the growth of the tree: the root must be uncovered, and the axe laid to it. Outward sins may be cut off, and even honestly confessed and mourned over, while the concealed principle, the root of the sin, is overlooked, neglected, and suffered to gather strength and expansion.

That the inherent evil of a believer will ever, in his present existence, be entirely eradicated, we do not assert. To expect this would be to expect what God’s Word has not declared; but that it may be greatly subdued and conquered, its power weakened and mortified, this the Word of God leads us to hope for and aim after. How is this to be attained? Faith dealing frequently and closely with Christ—the atoning blood upon the conscience—the “fountain opened” daily resorted to—the believer sitting constantly at the foot of the cross, gazing upon it with an eye of steady, unwavering faith—“looking unto Jesus.” In this posture sin, all sin—the sin of the heart, the sin of the practice—is mourned over, wept over, confessed, mortified, crucified. Let the reader again be reminded that all true crucifixion of sin springs from the cross of Christ.

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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