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Octavius Winslow

Hebrews 10:15

Hebrews 10:15
Octavius Winslow April, 14 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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April, 14 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about the sealing of the Holy Spirit?

The Bible teaches that the Holy Spirit seals believers as a guarantee of their redemption, affirming their acceptance in Christ.

In Hebrews 10:15, the writer affirms that the Holy Spirit is a witness to the believer's salvation. This sealing can happen suddenly, where a person experiences a vivid impression of divine grace—such as through a sermon or a promise, leading to a joyous assurance of faith. Particularly, the promise 'him that comes to me I will in no wise cast out' encapsulates the heart of this sealing, assuring the sinner of their welcome and forgiveness without needing any prerequisite qualifications.

However, the sealing of the Spirit may also be a gradual process where a believer's understanding and experience mature over time. Through trials and deep experiences, a believer becomes more aware of their sinfulness and Christ’s sufficiency as Savior. This journey enhances their relationship with God and reshapes their perception of grace. Notably, even if a believer passes away during the early stages of this process, they remain secure in Christ, reflecting the completeness of God's redemptive work.

Hebrews 10:15, Romans 5:6

How do we know the sealing of the Holy Spirit is true?

The truth of the sealing of the Holy Spirit is affirmed through Scripture and the experiential knowledge of believers.

The sealing of the Holy Spirit is backed by biblical evidence, particularly in passages like Ephesians 1:13-14, which states that believers are sealed with the promised Holy Spirit as a pledge of their inheritance. This act is not only a formal indication of acceptance but is also substantiated by personal experiences of faith. Many believers recount times when the Spirit validated their assurance in Christ, as their hearts were comforted by the promises found in Scripture.

Moreover, the transformation in the life of a believer—the deepened understanding of God, self, and grace through trials—serves as experiential confirmation of this sealing. The continual work of the Spirit in a believer's heart, cultivating faith, holiness, and understanding assures us of the Holy Spirit's sealing as an everlasting mark of God’s ownership and promise of salvation.

Ephesians 1:13-14, Romans 8:16

Why is the sealing of the Holy Spirit important for Christians?

The sealing of the Holy Spirit assures Christians of their salvation and God's promises.

The sealing of the Holy Spirit is crucial for Christians as it serves several vital functions in the life of a believer. Firstly, it is a mark of ownership, indicating that an individual belongs to God. This divine seal provides a profound sense of security and assurance that the believer is accepted and will ultimately be saved—nothing can snatch them from the Father’s hand. Scriptures like John 10:28 affirm this security, ensuring that believers can rest in the promise of eternal life through Christ.

Additionally, the sealing signifies the beginning of a transformative process within the believer's life. It includes the internal work of the Holy Spirit that produces faith, conviction of sin, and a desire for holiness. A believer may experience the gradual deepening of their faith as they confront their sin while understanding the grace that covers it. Thus, the sealing of the Holy Spirit is not merely an event but an ongoing reality that shapes the believer’s journey of faith, fostering growth, and leading them towards ultimate redemption.

John 10:28, Ephesians 1:14

“Whereof the Holy Spirit also is a witness to us.”

— Hebrews 10:15

THIS is sometimes a sudden work of the Spirit. A soul may be so deeply sealed in conversion—may receive such a vivid impression of Divine grace—such an enlarged communication of the Divine Spirit, as it never afterwards loses. It is sealed "unto the day of redemption;" and that, too, in the most simple way: in the hearing of a single sermon, the reading of a single chapter of God's word, some promise brought with the power of the Holy Spirit and sealed upon the heart; in a moment the soul is brought into the full assurance of understanding and of faith. Take for example that one precious promise which the Spirit has sealed, never to be effaced, upon many a poor sinner's softened heart—"him that comes to me I will in no wise cast out." Oh, what a sealing is this! God speaking to a poor, distressed, and disconsolate soul, assuring it of a cordial welcome and of a free pardon—that though no tongue can express its vileness and poverty, and no imagination conceive its deep sorrow, yet, coming to Jesus just as it is, it shall in no wise be cast out! Is not this an impression of the seal in the hands of the great Sealer, which is unto the day of redemption?

Sometimes it is as the Holy Spirit unfolds to the anxious soul that great truth, that Christ is the Savior of a sinner. You have been long waiting for some reward, some gift, some price with which to come—long lingering on the margin of the fountain, waiting for some preparation to enter—in other words, for it amounts to this, waiting to feel less vile, less unworthy, in order that you may be more welcome. And now the blessed Spirit opens to your mind that great and precious truth, that "Christ died for the ungodly,"—that He is the mighty and the willing Savior of a sinner—that no gift, no price, is asked—no previous fitness or self-preparation is necessary—that the more vile and unworthy, the more fit and the more welcome. Oh, what an impression of the seal is this upon a wounded heart! When the glorious announcement is brought home to the soul—a full and free pardon for a poor sinner—the blood of Jesus cleansing from all sin—is it any marvel that no change of time or circumstance can ever obliterate the impression or the remembrance of that moment from the mind? It was a sealing of pardon upon a heart which God had made soft, and which was the sure prelude to, yes, the beginning of, eternal glory.

But, in most cases, the sealing of the Spirit is a more gradual work. It is a work of time. The soul is placed in the school of deep experience—is led on step by step, stage by stage. The knowledge of self and of Christ increases—deeper views of indwelling sin are discovered—the heart's treachery is more acutely felt—the devices of Satan are better known—the mystery of God's gracious and providential dealings with His children more clearly unfolded and better understood—and all this, it may be, arrived at through a process of deep and painful, yet sanctified, discipline of the covenant—so that years may elapse before a child of the covenant attains to the full sealing of the Spirit. And yet, blessed be God, the work of regeneration is so perfect in itself—the blotting out of all a believer's sins so complete, and his justification so entire—that a saint of God dying in the first stages of the Divine life is safe forever. May we not refer to the thief upon the cross, as an example illustrating and confirming this?

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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