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Righteousness by Faith
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Articles by A.T Jones
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Published in the Advent Review and
Sabbath Herold
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(Article titles supplied by Allen
A. Benosn)
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"All Things Work Together for Good
to Them That Love God."
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September 26, 1896
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From the list that the Lord has drawn in 2 Cor. 6:1-10,
it is plain that there is nothing that can ever come into the life of the
believer in Christ but that the grace of God will take it and turn it to
the good of the believer and make it serve only to his advancement toward
perfection in Christ Jesus. This the grace of God will do always and nothing
but this if only the believer will allow the Lord to have His own way in
his life; if only he will allow grace to reign. Thus it is that "all things
are for your sakes" and this is how "all things work together for good
to them that love God." This is grand. It is indeed glorious. It is salvation
itself. This is how the believer is enabled "always" to "triumph in Christ."
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This however is but half the story. The Lord proposes
not only to save him who now believes, but he will use him in ministering
to all others the knowledge of God, that they also may believe. We are
not to think that the Lord's grace and gifts to us are only for us. They
are for us first, that is true. But they are for us first in order that
not only we ourselves shall be saved but that we may be enabled to benefit
all others in communicating to them the knowledge of God. We ourselves
must be partakers of salvation before we can lead others to it. Therefore
it is written, "As every man hath received the gift, even so minister the
same one to another, as good stewards of the manifold grace of God." And
"all things are of God, who hath reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ
and hath given to us the ministry of reconciliation."
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Thus every man who receives the grace of God at the same
time receives with it the ministry of that grace to all others. Every one
who finds himself reconciled to God receives with that reconciliation the
ministry of reconciliation to all others. Here also the exhortation applies,
"We . . . beseech you also that ye receive not the grace of God in vain."
Are you a partaker of grace? Then "minister the same" to others; do not
receive it in vain. Are you reconciled to God? Then know that He has given
to you also the ministry of reconciliation. Have you received this ministry
in vain?
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If we do not receive the grace of God in vain, if only
we will allow grace to reign, the Lord will cause it to be that "in all
things" we shall approve "ourselves as the ministers of God." This is the
truth. The Lord says it, and it is so. "In all things approving ourselves
as the ministers of God." That is, in all things we shall be conveying
to others the knowledge of God. And thus the Lord proposes not only to
cause us always "to triumph in Christ" on our own part, but also to make
"manifest the savour of his knowledge by us in every place." That is, he
proposes to make known to others by us and in every place the knowledge
of himself.
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We cannot do this of ourselves. He is to do it by us.
We are to co-operate with Him. We are to be workers together with Him.
And when we do thus co-operate with Him, then as certainly as we do so,
so certainly will He cause us always to triumph in Christ and will also
make manifest the knowledge of Himself by us in every place. He can do
it; thank the Lord. Do not say, do not even think, that He cannot do this
by you. He can do it by you. He will, too, if only you will not receive
His grace in vain. If you will only let grace reign; if you will be a worker
together with Him.
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It is true that there is a mystery about how this can
be. It is a mystery how God can make manifest the knowledge of Himself
by such persons as you and I are, in any place, much less in every place.
Yet mystery though it be, it is the very truth. But do we not believe the
mystery of God? Assuredly we do believe it. Then never forget that the
mystery of God is God manifest in the flesh. And you and I are flesh. Then
the mystery of God is God manifest in you and me who believe. Believe it.
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Do not forget, either, that the mystery of God is not
God manifest in sinless flesh, but God manifest in sinful flesh. There
could never be any mystery about God's manifesting Himself in sinless flesh--in
one who had no connection whatever with sin. That would be plain enough.
But that He can manifest Himself in flesh laden with sin and with all the
tendencies to sin, such as ours is--that is a mystery. Yea, it is the mystery
of God. And it is a glorious fact, thank the Lord! Believe it. And before
all the world, and for the joy of every person in the world, in Jesus Christ
He has demonstrated that this great mystery is indeed a fact in human experience.
For "as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself
likewise took part of the same." "In all things it behoved him to be made
like unto his brethren." And therefore God "made him to be sin for us."
"He hath laid on him the iniquity of us all." Thus, in our flesh, having
our nature laden with iniquity and Himself made to be sin, Christ Jesus
lived in this world, tempted in all points like as we are and yet God always
caused Him to triumph in Him and made manifest the savour of His knowledge
by Him in every place. Thus God was manifest in the flesh--in our flesh,
in human flesh laden with sin--and made to be sin in itself, weak and tempted
as ours is. And thus the mystery of God was made known to all nations for
the obedience of the faith. O, believe it.!
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And this is the mystery of God today and forever--God
manifest in the flesh, in human flesh, in flesh, laden with sin, tempted
and tried. In this flesh God will make manifest the knowledge of Himself
in every place where the believer is found. Believe it and praise His holy
name!
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This is the mystery which today in the third angel's message
is again to be made known to all nations for the obedience of the faith.
This is the mystery of God, which in this time is to be "finished,"--not
only finished in the sense of being ended to the world, but finished in
the sense of being brought to completion in its grand work in the believer.
This is the time when the mystery of God is to be finished in the sense
that God is to be manifest in the flesh in every true believer, in every
place where that believer shall be found. This is, in deed and in truth,
the keeping of the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus.
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"Be of good cheer; I have overcome the world," I have
revealed God in the flesh. Our faith is the victory that has overcome the
world. Therefore, and now, "Thanks be unto God, which always causeth us
to triumph in Christ and maketh manifest the savour of his knowledge by
us in every place."
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