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Octavius Winslow

2 Corinthians 1:21, 22

2 Corinthians 1:21, 22
Octavius Winslow December, 23 2016 5 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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December, 23 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 5 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about the sealing of the Spirit?

The Bible indicates that the sealing of the Spirit assures believers of their acceptance in Christ and guarantees their inheritance.

In 2 Corinthians 1:21-22, Paul writes about God establishing and anointing believers, sealing them with the Spirit as a guarantee of their inheritance. This sealing serves to assure Christians of their full acceptance and adoption as children of God. The presence of the Spirit in our hearts acts as an earnest, signifying that we are God’s own, thus alleviating doubts and fears regarding our salvation. The sealing of the Spirit is a sign of God's commitment to His people, offering a deep sense of assurance and confidence in their relationship with Him.

2 Corinthians 1:21-22

How do we know the doctrine of adoption is true?

The doctrine of adoption is affirmed in Scripture, highlighting that believers are made children of God through faith in Christ.

The doctrine of adoption states that all who believe in Jesus are adopted as children of God, a truth rooted in passages such as Ephesians 1:4-5. This adoption signifies not only a change in status but an intimate relationship with God as our Father. Believers receive the Spirit of adoption, which witnesses to their hearts that they are indeed children of God (Romans 8:15). This truth impacts the believer profoundly, affirming their identity and security in Christ, and allowing them to approach God with confidence and assurance of His love.

Ephesians 1:4-5, Romans 8:15

Why is the sealing of the Spirit important for Christians?

The sealing of the Spirit is crucial as it provides believers with assurance of their salvation and strengthens their faith.

The sealing of the Spirit is important for Christians because it marks them as God's own and assures them of their position in Christ. It replaces doubts and fears with confidence and boldness, allowing believers to stand firm in their faith. This sealing gives Christians a foretaste of their future inheritance in heaven and motivates them to pursue spiritual maturity and deeper intimacy with Christ. The lack of this sealing can lead to spiritual weakness and uncertainty, thus emphasizing the need for believers to seek a deeper experience with the Holy Spirit who seals them.

2 Corinthians 1:21-22

“Now he which establishes us with you in Christ, and has anointed us, is God; who has also sealed us, and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts.”

— 2 Corinthians 1:21, 22

IT is, and has long been, the solemn conviction of the writer, that much of the spiritual darkness, the little comfort and consolation, the dwarfish piety, the harassing doubts and fears, the imperfect apprehensions of Jesus, the feeble faith, the sickly, drooping state of the soul, the uncertainty of their full acceptance in Christ, which mark so many of the professing people of God in this our day, may be traced to the absence of a deep sealing of the Spirit. Resting satisfied with the faint impression in conversion, with the dim views they then had of Christ, and the feeble apprehension of their acceptance and adoption, is it any marvel that all their lifetime they should be in bondage through slavish doubts and fears?—that they should never attain to the “stature of perfect men in Christ Jesus”—that they should never rise to the humble boldness, the unwavering confidence, the blest assurance, and the holy dignity of the sons of God? Oh no! They rest short of this blessing. They hang upon the door of the ark—they remain upon the border of the goodly land, and not entering fully in, the effects are as we have described. But, beloved reader, the richest ore lies buried the deepest—the sweetest fruit is on the higher branches—the strongest light is near the sun. In other words, if we desire more knowledge of Christ—of our full pardon, and complete acceptance—if we desire the earnest of our inheritance, and even now would taste the “grapes of Eshcol,” we must be “reaching forth unto those things that are before,” we must “press toward the mark,” and rest not until that is found in a clear, unclouded, immoveable, and holy assurance of our being in Christ; and this is only experienced in the sealing of the Spirit. Again we say, with all the earnestness which a growing sense of the vastness of the blessing inspires, seek to be sealed of the Spirit—seek the “earnest of the Spirit”— seek to be “filled with the Spirit”—seek the “anointing of the Spirit”—seek the “Spirit of adoption.” Say not, it is too immense a blessing, to high an attainment for one so small, so feeble, so obscure, so unworthy as you. Oh, impeach not thus the grace of God. All His blessings are the bestowments of grace; and grace means free favor to the most unworthy. There is not one lowly, weeping eye that falls on this page, but may, under the blessed sealing of the Spirit, look up through Jesus to God as a Father. Low views of self, deep consciousness of vileness, poverty of state or of spirit, are no objections with God, but rather strong arguments that prevail with Him why you should have the blessing. Only ask—only believe—only persevere, and you shall attain unto it. It is in the heart of the Spirit to seal “unto the day of redemption” all that believe in Jesus. May it be in the heart of the reader to desire the blessing, seeing it is so freely and richly offered!

Reader, whose superscription do you bear? It may be your reply is—“I want Christ; I secretly long for Him; I desire Him above all beside.” Is it so? Then take courage, and go to Jesus. Go to Him simply, go to Him unhesitatingly, go to Him immediately. That desire is from Him; let it lead you to Him. That secret longing is the work of the Spirit; and having begotten it there, do you think that He will not honor it, and welcome you when you come? Try Him. Bring Him to the touch-stone of His own truth. “Prove me now herewith,” is His gracious invitation. Take His promise, “Him that comes to me I will in no wise cast out,” and plead it in wrestlings at the mercy-seat, and see if He will not “open the windows of heaven, and pour you out a blessing, that there shall not be room enough to receive it.” Go to Him just as you are; if you cannot take to Him a pure heart, take an impure one; if you cannot take to Him a broken heart, take a whole one; if you cannot take to Him a soft heart, take a hard one—only go to Him. The very act of going will be blessed to you. And oh, such is the strength of His love, such His yearning compassion and melting tenderness of heart for poor sinners, such His ability and willingness to save, that He will no more cast you out than deny His own existence. Precious Jesus! Set us as a seal upon Your heart, and by Your Spirit seal Yourself upon our hearts; and give us, unworthy though we are, a place among “those who are sealed.”

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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