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Octavius Winslow

Evening Thoughts — February 8

Octavius Winslow February, 8 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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February, 8 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about the resurrection of Christ?

The resurrection of Christ is central to the believer's spiritual life, as depicted in Romans 6:4.

The resurrection of Christ is a foundational doctrine of Christianity, essential to the spiritual life of believers. Romans 6:4 states that just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we should walk in newness of life. This resurrection is intricately connected to the union between Christ and His people, making their spiritual lives intertwined with His victory over death. Christ, in His resurrection, represented the entire elect, affirming that His rising is a vital act that ensures their justification and sanctification.

Furthermore, the resurrection signifies God's acceptance of Christ's sacrifice, demonstrating that the ransom has been accepted and the debt of sin canceled. The act of the Father raising Christ from the dead revealed divine delight in the Son’s atoning work, thereby authenticating the believers' justification through Christ’s victory over death. This profound truth strengthens the believer’s faith, lifting them above worldly struggles as they realize they have been raised with Christ by faith.
How do we know Christ's resurrection is true?

The resurrection is confirmed by God's acceptance of Christ's sacrifice, as described in Romans 4:25.

The truth of Christ's resurrection is corroborated by the divine act of God raising Him from the dead, which serves as a declaration of acceptance of His atoning sacrifice. Romans 4:25 clearly states that Christ was delivered for our offenses and raised again for our justification. This pivotal moment in salvation history signifies God's approval of what Christ accomplished on the cross, demonstrating that the sacrifice for sin was not just complete but fully satisfying.

Moreover, the resurrection is a validation of God's promises and serves as a cornerstone for the Christian faith, evidencing that all legal claims against His Church have been annulled. The resurrection signifies a decisive victory over death and sin, instilling hope and assurance in the hearts of believers that their sins are forgiven, further solidifying the historical reliability and doctrinal significance of the resurrection.
Why is the resurrection of Christ important for Christians?

It is crucial as it underpins the believer's new spiritual life and justification.

The resurrection of Christ is paramount for Christians as it constitutes the keystone of the faith. It forms the basis of spiritual life, ensuring that believers not only have hope for eternal life but also experience a transformative newness of life. Romans 6:4 indicates that just as Christ is raised from the dead, believers are called to walk in the newness of life, which signifies a radical change in the believer’s state and condition, empowering them to live spiritually.

Additionally, the resurrection assures believers of their justification. The Father’s act of raising Christ was not merely a miraculous event, but an essential declaration that all who trust in Him are free from the guilt and penalty of sin. This assurance fosters a deep sense of security and gratitude in the believer’s heart, motivating them to live in the light of Christ's resurrection. Consequently, understanding the significance of the resurrection is vital for experiencing the fullness of joy and peace in one's spiritual journey.

That like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. Rom. 6:4

THE resurrection of Christ is a vital doctrine of Christianity. It sustains an essential relation to the spiritual life of the believer. Viewing it in connection with the union of Christ and His people, the two facts become identical—standing in the relation of cause and effect. Our Lord, in His great atoning work, acted in a public or representative character. He represented in His person the whole elect of God, who virtually were in Him, each step that he took in working out their redemption. In His resurrection from the grave this was preeminently so. The Head could not be resuscitated apart from the body. Christ could not rise without the Church. Thus, then, the new or the resurrection life of Christ, and the inner or spiritual life of the believer, are one and indivisible. Now, when the resurrection of the Head is spiritually realized, when it is fully received into the heart by faith, it becomes a quickening, energizing, sanctifying truth to each member of His body. It transmits a power to the inmost soul, felt in all the actings and manifestations of the spiritual life. Blessed are they who feel, and who feel daily, that they are indeed "risen with Christ," and who find every new perception of this great truth to act like a mighty lever to their souls—lifting them above this "present evil world"—a world passing away.

Perhaps no circumstance connected with the resurrection of Christ conveys to the mind a clearer idea of its bearings upon the happiness of the Church than the part which the Divine Father is represented as having taken in the illustrious event. His having committed Himself to the fact at once stamps it with all its saving interest. "Whom God has raised." "Like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father." "If the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead." By this act of raising up His Son from the grave, the Father manifested His delight in, and His full acceptance of, the sacrifice of Christ, as a finished and satisfactory expiation for the sins of His people. So long as Jesus remained in the grave, there was wanting the evidence of the acceptance of His death; the great seal of heaven, the signature of God, was needed to authenticate the fact. But when the Father released the Surety from the dominion of death, he annihilated, by that act, all legal claim against His Church, declaring the ransom accepted, and the debt cancelled. "He was taken from prison,"—as the prisoner of justice—the prisoner of death—and the prisoner of the grave; the Father, in the exercise of His glorious power, opens the prison door, and delivers the illustrious Captive—and by the door through which He emerges again to life, enters the full justification of His whole Church; for it is written—"He was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification."

A more important truth—where all are of infinite moment to the happiness of man—is not found in the Word of God. As it forms the keystone to the mighty arch of Christianity, so it constitutes the groundwork of spiritual life, upon the basis of which the Holy Spirit of God quickens the souls of all, who are "the called according to His purpose." It was a knowledge of this truth which awoke the ardent desire of the apostle's soul, "That I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection."

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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