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Octavius Winslow

Romans 8:21

Romans 8:21
Octavius Winslow November, 27 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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November, 27 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about the glorious liberty of the children of God?

The Bible states that the children of God will be delivered from corruption into their glorious liberty (Romans 8:21).

Romans 8:21 highlights that the creatures will be set free from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God. This liberty is not only about our acceptance before God but also encompasses a future hope where all sin and suffering will be eradicated. The present liberty enjoyed by believers includes the relationship of confidence before God, where they can approach Him as a loving Father, but it anticipates an even greater liberation in glory that is yet to come.

Romans 8:21

Why is the concept of liberty important for Christians?

Liberty is crucial for Christians because it signifies their acceptance by God and freedom from sin (Romans 8:21).

For Christians, the concept of liberty is vital as it encapsulates the essence of their relationship with God. Being liberated means standing accepted in the Beloved and approaching God with the confidence of a cherished child. This liberty is both a present reality and a future hope, promising believers deliverance from the body of sin and the final experience of joy and freedom in eternal life. Therefore, understanding this liberty helps Christians live in gratitude and holiness, reflecting on the grace that enables them to approach God without fear or condemnation.

Romans 8:21

How do we know that we are delivered from the bondage of corruption?

We know we are delivered through the assurance provided in Scripture, particularly Romans 8:21.

The assurance of our deliverance from the bondage of corruption is strongly rooted in the promises of Scripture. Romans 8:21 assures us that the children of God will be liberated into their glorious freedom, a promise that encompasses both our present acceptance and a future hope. This liberation signifies a profound transformation that begins at regeneration and will culminate in our glorification. Furthermore, the believer’s confidence in Christ as their Savior and the indwelling Holy Spirit serve as a testimony to this deliverance, affirming their identity as heirs of the eternal inheritance.

Romans 8:21

“Because the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God.”

— Romans 8:21

THEY are already in possession of a liberty most costly and precious. Is it no true liberty to stand before God accepted in the Beloved? Is it no liberty to draw near to Him with all the confidence of a child reposing in the boundless affection of a loving father? Is it no liberty to travel day by day to Jesus, always finding Him an open door of sympathy the most exquisite, of love the most tender, and of grace the most overflowing? Is it, in a word, no real liberty to be able to lay faith’s hand upon the everlasting covenant, and exclaim, “There is now no condemnation”? Oh, yes! This is the liberty with which Christ has made us free. But the glorious liberty of the children of God is yet to come. Glorious it will be, because more manifest and complete. Including all the elements of our present freedom, it will embrace others not yet enjoyed. We shall be emancipated from the body of sin and of death. Every fetter of corruption will be broken, and every tie of sense will be dissolved. All sadness will be chased from our spirit, all sorrow from our heart, and all cloud from our mind. Delivered from all sin, and freed from all suffering, we shall wander through the many mansions of our Father’s house, and tread the star-paved streets of the celestial city, repose beneath the sylvan bowers of the upper Paradise, and drink of the waters, clear as crystal, that flow from beneath the throne—our pure, and blissful, and eternal home—exulting the in the “glorious liberty of the children of God.” How striking and solemn is the contrast between the present and the future state of the believer and the unbeliever! Yours, too, unregenerate reader, is a state of vanity. But, alas! it is a most willing subjection, and the bondage of corruption which holds you is uncheered by one ray of hope of final deliverance. What a terrible and humiliating bondage—a willing slave to sin and Satan! All is vanity which you so eagerly pursue. “The Lord knows the thoughts of man, that they are vanity.” Were it possible for you to realize all the schemes of wealth and distinction, of pleasure and happiness, which now float in gorgeous visions before your fevered fancy, still would your heart utter its mournful and bitter complaint, “All is vanity and vexation of spirit.” Oh, turn you from these vain shadows to Jesus, the substance of all true wealth, and happiness, and honor. That fluttering heart will never find repose until it rests in Him. That craving soul will never be satisfied until it be satisfied with Christ. At His feet then cast you down, and with the tears of penitence, the reliance of faith, and the expectation of hope, ask to be numbered among the adopted, who shall before long be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God.

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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