I was taught as a child, and I still believe that we are saved by grace through faith. I still cling to the timeless truths that were laid in my foundations as a young believer - that we are saved through faith in the vicarious sacrifice of Christ on the cross where He, once and for all, paid the price of my sin.
What some have noticed is a burden for a return to the preaching of that cross. That awful, horrible place where the Son of Glory was freely sacrificed in payment for our sinfulness and a place where I am to lay down and abandon my sinful lifestyle in favor of a lifestyle that emulates that of Christ. I am sickened by the message, "God loves you just like you are." The great truth that "while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us" has been twisted and perverted into a gospel that convinces men they can come to know Christ without being changed by Christ. The real truth is that God is sickened by what we are in our sin, and so He provided a way that we could be transformed into something that is pleasing and acceptable to Him. The message of the cross is that we are twisted and deformed and wasted by sin - but we don't have to stay that way - we can be transformed into something new, something pleasing to God; to the "image of His Son." A message that does not demand transformation, a radical change in life style and in thought life - is not the message of the cross. It is a lie from the pit of hell.
What some have noticed is a renewed burden for men to understand that grace sets us free from the chains of our sin, not just the penalty. Grace does not give us permission to walk in worldliness, but it does give us the power to walk in holiness; and, we are called --no, commanded -- to be holy. 'Be holy, even as I am holy." To be holy is to be different, to be other than the world. It is not "legalism" to say that holiness demands a change in our necklines, hemlines, the way we wear our hair, mark and mutilate our bodies, and what goes in our ears and out of our mouths. Our clothes and hairstyles, our language, and choice in activities to not make us holy - but it does reveal our holiness.
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