Chapter #43
Acts 15:11
Peter was an apostle of Christ. The words he spoke at the Jerusalem
conference, like those which he wrote in his epistles, were inspired by
God the Holy Spirit (v. 28). The words of this eleventh verse, being
inspired of God, are recorded for our learning and admonition. The
apostle stood and said, "We believe." He spoke with bold, unbending,
unyielding, uncompromising dogmatism. Speaking as an apostle of Christ,
Peter was not speaking for himself alone, but for all the apostles, all
the church of God, all true gospel preachers, and all true christians.
When he said, "We believe," he was saying, "This is the truth of God. It
must be believed by all. Anything contrary to this is heresy, damnable
and destructive to men's souls. This is what all true christians
believe. Those who do not believe and teach this are not christians."
This then is the doctrine of God - "We believe that through the grace of
the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved, even as they." With regard to
this gospel doctrine of salvation by grace alone we must be perfectly
clear in our understanding, unhesitating in our witness, and intolerant
of any deviation from the message of God's pure, free, sovereign,
effectual grace in Christ.
THIS IS AN APOSTOLIC CONFESSION OF FAITH. Concerning less important
issues God's saints may and do differ and yet remain in essential
harmony and fellowship. No one has a perfect knowledge of divine truth.
But the gospel doctrine of salvation by grace alone is vital. With
regard to this vital issue the doctrine of the church is stated plainly.
"We believe that we shall be saved by the grace of the Lord Jesus
Christ, even as they." All who deviate from this deviate from the
doctrine of the apostles and deviate from Christ himself!
THE APOSTLES OF CHRIST OBVIOUSLY DID NOT BELIEVE MUCH OF WHAT IS
TAUGHT TODAY ABOUT THE WAY OF SALVATION. Peter's statement is complete.
It includes all that is vital to the souls of men. But some things are
obviously and deliberately omitted.
There is no mention of any religious ritual or ceremony. The two
ordinances which Christ left us, baptism and the Lord's Supper, are
important aspects of worship and obedience. Believer's baptism is the
believer's public confession of faith in and allegiance to Christ (Rom.
6:4-6). The Lord's Supper is the church's celebration of redemption by
Christ, a symbolic picture of the gospel, and a visible reminder of our
Savior's glorious person and work (I Cor. 11:24-26). No mention is made
of personal obedience to the law of God. That was the issue at the
Jerusalem conference. Surely, if obedience to the law had any bearing
upon salvation, sanctification, or our relationship to God, Peter would
have mentioned it here. But we are not under the law and must never
attempt to put any believer under the yoke of bondage (v. 10). There is
no mention of personal righteousness. The creed of the world is, "Do the
best you can and God will accept you." To deny that creed is treason
against human pride. Every child of Adam is born a Pharisee.
Self-righteousness is bred in us. It will manifest itself in time. But
those who promote self-righteousness are treasonous toward God.
"Perish all thoughts of human pride, let God alone be magnified!"
And no mention is made of man's freewill. It is true that all believers
choose Christ, trust Christ, and come to Christ. But it is heretical to
assert that man's freewill is the cause of God's saving grace (John
1:11-13; Rom. 9:15-18; II Tim. 1:9).
PETER'S DOCTRINE IS THE DOCTRINE OF GRACE. He tells us that
salvation is from beginning to end, all of grace. This is the doctrine
of Christ and his apostles. This is the doctrine of the Bible. Any
denial of the doctrine of salvation by grace alone is a denial of the
gospel of Christ. All attempts to mix grace and works is antichrist.
Seven things are implied and taught in Peter's words. 1. THE SOVEREIGNTY OF GOD'S GRACE - He tells us that saving grace
belongs to the Lord Jesus Christ. He gives it to whom he will (John
5:21; 17:2).
2. THE TOTAL DEPRAVITY OF MAN- When Peter speaks of people being
"saved", the implication is that they do not have the ability to save
themselves (Rom. 5:12; Eph. 2:1-3).
3. GOD'S UNCONDITIONAL ELECTION - It is true, Peter does not mention the
word election in this passage. But it must be remembered that his mind
had not been corrupted by freewill, works religion. To Peter and the
rest of the apostles the word "grace" always included election. They
understood that the grace of God is eternal, unmerited, and immutable (I
Pet. 1:2-5).
4. CHRIST'S LIMITED ATONEMENT - When Peter speaks of "grace", he is
referring to that grace which comes flowing to sinners from the wounds
of the crucified Christ, that grace which was effectually obtained for
God's elect when Christ died as their Substitute and obtained eternal
salvation for them (Heb. 9:12; I Pet. 1:18-21; 2:24). There are two
points about the redemptive work of Christ upon which we must be clear.
First, redemption was obtained for a particular people (Isa. 53:8; John
10:11, 15, 26). Second, it was effectually accomplished when Christ died
(Heb. 9:10; Isa. 53:10-12). Anyone who fails to see the fulness and
efficacy of Christ's redemptive work cannot see any other gospel truth
clearly.
5. GOD'S IRRESISTIBLE GRACE - Peter said, "We shall be saved." He does
not speak of God's saving grace as a possibility, but as a matter of
certainty. Salvation is not something God hopes to do. It is something
God does (Psa. 65:4; 110:3).
6. THE FINAL PERSEVERANCE OF THE SAINTS - Peter was not in a fog about
what he believed. He knew that salvation is God's work. He knew that it
was forever (Eccles. 3:14). He knew that God's promise (John 10:27-29),
his power (I Pet. 1:5), and his immutability (Mal. 3:6) demand the
absolute, infallible, eternal security of his elect.
7. THE EQUALITY OF ALL BELIEVERS - When Peter said, "We shall be saved
by the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, even as they," he seems to imply
that the Jewish believers have no preference over the Gentile believers.
In Christ all are one! All are saved by grace alone (Col. 3:11).
THIS IS THE CONFESSION OF EVERY TRUE BELIEVER. All who are saved
are saved by grace alone and gladly acknowledge it (I Cor. 15:10).
Self-righteous moralists, religious ritualists, and profligate sinners
must all be saved the same way. Grace is unconditional! It is not
attracted by good works, and it is not repelled by the lack of good
works. Grace washes all believers in the blood of Christ, robes all in
the righteousness of Christ, and makes all accepted in Christ. Some are
more gifted than others, but none are more accepted. Some are more
faithful than others, but none are more favored. Some are more confident
than others, but none are more beloved, and none are more secure. This
is our doctrine - "WE BELIEVE THAT THROUGH THE GRACE OF THE LORD JESUS
CHRIST WE SHALL BE SAVED, EVEN AS THEY."
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