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Question: In the New Testament, Paul
says that we should work out our salvation with fear and trembling. Could
you explain what he meant?
Answer: God’s purpose in salvation does not merely comprise
freedom from the guilt and penalty of sin. To be sure, God forgives and
rescues sinners from Hell, and He does this on account of what Jesus
Christ did on their behalf and not because of any merit on their part.
Yet, God’s purpose in salvation is broader than that. He also saves
people from the power of sin in their lives that they may live righteously
for his glory. Thus Christ “gave himself for us, that he might redeem us
from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of
good works” (Titus 2:14).
So, salvation includes both “justification” (God declaring the
believer righteous on account of Christ) and “sanctification” (God
empowering the believer to live righteously). The apostle Paul has the
latter aspect of salvation in mind when he commands us, “work out your
own salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God which worketh in you
both to will and to do of his good pleasure” (Philippians 2:12,13). The
context makes it clear that Paul is here speaking about sanctification and
not about justification. He exhorts the believers to be united together,
humbly serving one another, and living blameless and innocent lives in the
midst of an evil world. He is not telling them how to become right with
God, but how to fulfill God’s good pleasure.
Certainly the apostle Paul is not teaching that we are to attempt to
deserve salvation on the ground of our merit. That is out of the question;
for what can man do that shall be an equivalent for eternal happiness in
heaven? Nor does he mean that we are to endeavour to make atonement for
past sins. That would be equally impossible. Besides, it is unnecessary.
That work has been done by our almighty Redeemer.
Elsewhere in his letter, the apostle Paul discusses justification
(Chapter 3:1-9). There, Paul emphasizes that nothing that he ever did
could earn him a right standing before God. Since his conversion, he had
ceased to depend on his personal obedience to the Law for righteousness.
He was now trusting in Christ for justification. His desire was to “be
found in him (Christ), not having mine own righteousness, which is of the
law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness
which is of God by faith” (Philippians 3:9).
We must be careful to distinguish between these two aspects of
salvation. In justification, God accepts the believer on account of
Christ, and not because of anything that man does to merit God’s favour.
As Paul would say, he stands before God “not having mine own
righteousness” but on “the righteousness which is of God by faith.”
In sanctification, God enables the believer to live righteously: “it is
God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure.”
He gives the believer both the desire and the energy to obey God. Yet, the
believer himself is the one who must “work out his salvation with fear
and trembling.” Justification is something done by God for man. Man does
nothing to merit justification. In contrast, sanctification is something
done by God in man and is manifest in the obedience and good works done by
man.
To apply these truths, if you are depending on your works and obedience
to the law to become right with God, please stop doing so. Do not let your
works become a barrier between you and God. Cast away all confidence in
your deeds and instead trust in Jesus Christ alone to make you right with
God. On the other hand, if you already trust in Christ, remember that God
did not only save you from guilt. He has also saved you from the power of
sin. He enables you to fulfill his good pleasure. Work out your salvation
with fear and trembling. He saved you to do good works. Do them!
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