What does the Bible say about winning Christ?
Winning Christ means to embrace Him through faith and experience His love and glory in our hearts.
To win Christ, one must have an enlightened understanding and a taste of His preciousness; seeing Him in His true glory as the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth (John 1:14). This mystical sight leads to overwhelming desires pouring forth from our hearts, yearning to experience His love. When we have seen Christ and felt His beauty, we cannot help but cry out with longing, 'O that I might win Christ!' This desire is innate in every true believer who longs for deeper communion with their Savior.
Philippians 3:8, John 1:14, Jeremiah 15:16
How do we know that embracing Christ's love is essential for Christians?
Embracing Christ's love is essential because it embodies the heart's response to His grace and the transformative power of the gospel.
J.C. Philpot illustrates that when we immerse ourselves in God's word, felt within our souls, it evokes a deep affection and longing for Christ. This longing reflects true belief, where believers find themselves saying, 'Blessed Jesus, I do love you.' This relational dynamic allows Christians to effectively embrace the gospel truths and understand their positional righteousness through the atoning work of Christ, leading to a transforming relationship with Him.
Philippians 3:8, Jeremiah 15:16
Why is seeing Christ’s glory important for salvation?
Seeing Christ's glory is vital for salvation as it illuminates His matchless dignity and draws our hearts towards Him.
The heart melted by the vision of Christ's glory brings a genuine desire to win Him. This connection allows believers to taste His beauty and the depth of His love, evoking a response marked by holy longing. This experience is foundational for embracing Christ fully as Lord and Savior, moving from mere acknowledgment to a profound, loving relationship with the living God. Without this sight, the essence of salvation remains elusive, as the heart longs to respond to the glories of Christ revealed in the gospel.
Philippians 3:8, John 1:14, Romans 8:28-30
"That I may win Christ."
— Philippians 3:8
What is it to "win Christ?" It is to have him sweetly embraced in the arms of our faith. It is to feel him manifesting his heavenly glory in our souls. It is to have the application of his atoning blood, in all its purging efficacy, to our conscience. It is to feel our heart melted and swooning with the sweet ravishments of his dying love, shed abroad even to overpowering. This is winning Christ. Now, before we can thus win Christ, we must have a view of Christ, we must behold his glory, "the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth." We must see the matchless dignity of his glorious Person, the atoning efficacy of his propitiating blood, the length and breadth, the depth and height of his surpassing love. We must have our heart ready to burst with pantings, longings, and ardent desires that this blessed Immanuel would come down from the heaven of heavens in which he dwells beyond the veil, into our heart, and shed abroad his precious dying love there.
Now, is not this your feeling, child of God? It has been mine over and over again. Is it not your feeling as you lie upon your bed, sometimes, with sweet and earnest pantings after the Lord of life and glory? As you walk by the way, as you are engaged in your daily business, as you are secretly musing and meditating, are there not often the goings forth of these longings and breathings into the very bosom of the Lord? But you cannot have this, unless you have seen him by the eye of an enlightened understanding, by the eye of faith, and had a taste of his beauty, a glimpse of his glory, and a discovery of his eternal preciousness. You must have had this gleaming upon your eyes, as the beams of light gleam through the windows. You must have had it dancing into your heart, as the rays of the sun dance upon the waves of the sea. You must have had a sweet incoming of the shinings of eternal light upon your soul, melting it, and breaking it down at his footstool, as the early dawn pierces through the clouds of night. When you have seen and felt this you break forth--'O that I might win Christ!' Like the ardent lover who longs to win his bride, you long to enjoy his love and presence shed abroad in the heart by the Holy Spirit.
"Your words were found, and I ate them; and your word was unto me the joy and rejoicing of my heart; for I am called by your name, O Lord God of hosts." Jeremiah 15:16
There is a sweetness in the promises which captivates the heart; a beauty in Christ which wins the soul; a saving unction and power in the word of God, when applied, which draws forth toward it every secret and sacred affection. Can you not sometimes look up and say, "Blessed Jesus, I do love you?" And when the word of God is opened up, applied, and made sweet and precious, have you not felt sometimes as if you could kiss the sacred page, as conveying such sweetness into your soul? This is embracing a promise in love--throwing our arms round it, drawing it near to our breast, kissing it again and again with kisses of love and affection, and taking that sweet delight in it with which the bridegroom rejoices over the bride, as now all his own--at times almost lost, but now wooed and won, no more to be parted. This is rejoicing in the word of God, delighting in a blessed Jesus and in the promises which testify of, and center in him.
Have you not felt these sweet embracements in your soul of the truth as it is in Jesus as so precious, so suitable, so encouraging, and so adapted to every need and woe? Then you are a believer; then you are a child of God; then there is a work of grace upon your heart; then you know the truth for yourself by divine teaching and divine testimony. You may still not have had that full deliverance, that blessed revelation, that overpowering manifestation whereby all your doubts and fears have been swept away, and your soul settled in a firm enjoyment of the liberty of the gospel. You may have had it or may have had it not. But if you have this character stamped upon you that you have seen the promises afar off and been persuaded of them, and embraced them in faith, hope, and love, you have a mark of being a partaker of the faith of God's elect.
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