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Octavius Winslow

Isaiah 45:22

Isaiah 45:22
Octavius Winslow July, 27 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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July, 27 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about looking unto Jesus for salvation?

Isaiah 45:22 calls us to look unto God for salvation, emphasizing that there is no other Savior.

Isaiah 45:22 urges us to look unto God for salvation, reinforcing the principle that salvation is found in Him alone. This perspective highlights the necessity of turning away from self-reliance and works, and instead, placing our faith in Jesus Christ. The act of looking unto Jesus signifies a complete reliance on His righteousness for our redemption, distancing ourselves from any attempts to justify ourselves through personal merit or religious observance. As expressed in Philippians 3:8-9, the apostle Paul states that he considers everything a loss compared to knowing Christ, demonstrating the ultimate value of relying on His righteousness over our own.

Isaiah 45:22, Philippians 3:8-9

Why is it important to look away from self for salvation?

Looking away from self is crucial because it prevents reliance on our own righteousness and turns our focus entirely on Christ's saving grace.

It is vital to look away from self in the pursuit of salvation because human efforts and self-righteousness cannot achieve true justification before God. The focus must shift to Christ, who saves us through His grace and righteousness alone. When individuals concentrate on their own merits or merits from the law, they risk falling into spiritual pride and misunderstanding the true nature of salvation, which comes solely through faith in Jesus Christ. By contrasting our inherent failures with Christ's sufficiency, we realize the depths of His love and the completeness of His redemptive work, as highlighted in Matthew 11:28, where Jesus invites the weary to come to Him for rest.

Matthew 11:28

How do we know that Jesus can save us from our sins?

Jesus can save us from our sins because He fulfilled the role of Savior, taking our sins upon Himself and offering His righteousness to us.

We can trust in Jesus to save us from our sins because He is the promised Savior who fulfilled the law and perfectly atoned for our transgressions. Isaiah 53:5 illustrates how He was wounded for our sins and crushed for our iniquities, thus bearing the penalty we deserve. The assurance of our salvation lies in His blood shed on the cross and the grace offered to all who believe. According to Romans 10:13, "everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved," which underscores the comprehensive nature of His redemptive work. Jesus has never turned away a repentant sinner, making Him the reliable source of salvation for all who seek Him.

Isaiah 53:5, Romans 10:13

Why is it important for Christians to understand the concept of grace?

Understanding grace is essential for Christians as it reveals the unmerited favor of God and the basis of our salvation through faith in Christ.

The concept of grace is pivotal for Christians because it fundamentally shapes our understanding of salvation and the nature of God’s love. Grace is God’s unmerited favor, a gift that cannot be earned through works or personal righteousness. This means that all who are saved can only claim their status as children of God through faith in Christ, not through their achievements or adherence to the law. Ephesians 2:8-9 affirms that we are saved by grace through faith, which emphasizes that salvation is a gift rather than a reward for human effort. Recognizing these truths fosters humility, assurance, and joy in the believer's heart, leading to a deeper relationship with God, who loves us despite our failures.

Ephesians 2:8-9

“Look unto me, and be you saved, all the ends of the earth; for I am God, and there is none else.”

— Isaiah 45:22

A true spiritual beholding of the Lord Jesus, in the great matter of our eternal salvation, requires that we look from every other object that would divide our attention, to Him alone. We must look from ourselves. This is, perhaps, the most common and insidious object that comes between the eye of the soul and Jesus. When God was ejected from the heart of man, self vaulted into the vacant throne, and has ever since maintained a supremacy. It assumed two forms, from both of which we are to look, in looking savingly to Jesus. We must look from righteous self; from all works of righteousness which we can perform—from our almsgivings, from our charities, from our religious observances, our fastings, and prayers, and sacraments—from all the works of the law, by which we are seeking to be justified; from all our efforts to make ourselves better, and thus to do something to commend ourselves to the Divine notice, and to propitiate the Divine regard; from all this we must look, if we rightly look unto Jesus, to be saved by His righteousness, and by His alone. The noble language of the apostle must find an echo in our hearts—" What is more, I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them rubbish, that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ--the righteousness that comes from God and is by faith."

We must equally, too, look unto Jesus from unrighteous self. Our sins, and transgressions, and iniquities—red as crimson, countless as the sands, and towering as the Alps—are not for one moment to intercept or obscure our looking unto Jesus for salvation. Jesus is a Savior, as His precious name signifies. As such, He came to save us from our sins, be those sins never so great for magnitude, or infinite for number. It is impossible that we can look unto Jesus, and feel the joy of His salvation flowing into our hearts, while at the same time we are looking at the number and the turpitude of our sins. We must not look at the sin and at the Savior at the same time; but beholding by faith Him who "bore our sins in His own body on the tree," who was "made a sin-offering for us," who was "wounded for our transgressions, and was bruised for our iniquities," who shed His precious blood that the guiltiest may be cleansed and the vilest saved, and between whom and the penitent sinner, though he were another Manasseh, another Saul of Tarsus, another dying malefactor, no transgression and no crime can interpose an effectual barrier, we shall see the exceeding greatness and sinfulness of sin in a clearer and more searching and solemn light than we possibly could, viewing it apart from the cross. Look unto Jesus, then, from your sins: their magnitude and their number interpose no difficulty, and form no real discouragement to your immediate approach to Christ. No argument based upon your unworthiness can avail to exclude you from an interest in His great salvation. He came into the world to save sinners, even the chief. It is His work, it is His joy, it is His glory to save sinners. For this He exchanged heaven for earth, relinquished the bosom of His Father for the embrace of the cross. He was never known to reject a poor sinner that came to Him; He has never refused to take within His sheltering side, to hide within His bleeding bosom, the penitent that sought its protection, fleeing from the condemnation of the law to the asylum of the cross. "Whoever comes unto me, I will in no wise cast out." With such a declaration as this, flowing from the lips of Jesus, who can refuse to look from the greatness of his own sin and guilt, to the greatness of His love, the greatness of His grace, the greatness of His salvation, "who came into the world to save sinners"?

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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