The sermon titled "Sanctification - The Christian Conflict Evidences Two Classes, Issues, & Results" by Wilbur Elias Best primarily addresses the doctrine of sanctification within the believer's life as articulated in Romans 8:1-13. Best argues that while justification deals with the believer's legal status before God, sanctification refers to the transformative process where the righteousness of God is fulfilled in the believer through the indwelling Holy Spirit. The pastor references key passages, particularly Romans 8:4, which states that the law's demands are fulfilled in believers who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit, emphasizing that genuine sanctification is a work of God in the believer rather than a human achievement. This message holds significant implications for the Reformed understanding of grace and the believer's ongoing conflict between the flesh and the Spirit, promoting the idea that true Christian growth involves a continual reliance on the Holy Spirit amid this internal struggle.
“The law was fulfilled for us... in order that it might be fulfilled in us.”
“Sanctification is not perfectionism, but perseverance.”
“The believer is delivered from the dominion of sin... under the jurisdiction of the law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus.”
“Are we as Christians just existing? Are we just existing? Or are we really living?”
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