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The Perseverance of Saints 1.
THE saints are those whom God has accepted in Christ the Beloved,
and effectually called and sanctified by His Spirit. To them He has
given the precious faith that pertains to all His elect. The persons to
whom such blessings have been imparted can neither totally nor finally
fall from the state of grace, but they shall certainly persevere in grace
to the end and be eternally saved, for God will never repent of having
called them and made gifts to them. Consequently He continues to
beget and to nourish in them faith, repentance, love, joy, hope, and all
the graces of the Spirit that issue in immortality. Many storms and
floods may arise and beat upon them, yet they can never be moved from the
foundation and rock on which by faith they are firmly established.
Even if unbelief and Satan's temptations cause them for a time to lose the
sight and comfort of the light and love of God, yet the unchanging God
remains their God, and He will certainly keep and save them by His power
until they come to the enjoyment of their purchased possession; for they
are engraven on the palms of His hands, and their names have been written
in the book of life from all eternity. 2.
It is on no free will of their own that the saints' perseverance
depends, but on the immutability of the decree of election, which in its
turn depends upon the free and unchangeable love of God the Father, the
efficacious merit and intercession of Jesus Christ and the saints' union
with Him, the oath of God, the abiding character of the Spirit's
indwelling of the saints, the divine nature of which they are partakers
and, lastly, the terms of the covenant of grace. All these factors
guarantee the certainty and infallibility of the saints' perseverance. 2 Sam. 12:14; Ps. 32:3,4; 51:10,12; Isa. 64:5,9; Matt. 26:70,72,74; Luke 22:32,61,62; Eph. 4:30. [Previous Chapter] [Next Chapter]
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