L
ltwin
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Wish I could help, but I don’t know what he meant. Hollis Gause, a Wesleyan-Pentecostal theologian, writes in Living in the Spirit: The Way of Salvation the following about justification:Thanks for joining in, and thanks for the response.
Any chance you would be able to help me clarify the original question on the 3 different meanings of Justification?
Thanks again
Justification is a judicial act of God; that is, it occurs in an act of divine judgment. It is an act of God’s grace in which God remits the sins of the believer and declares him/her to be righteous before God. The sole basis for this declaration of forgiveness and transmission of righteousness is the obedience of Christ, the active obedience in which He fulfilled all righteousness and the passive righteousness in which He was crucified for us, shedding His blood for a covering (i.e. an atonement) for us. This righteousness is transferred to the believer, giving her/him a standing before God clothed in righteousness. This declaration frees the believer from judgment and gives the benefits of Christ’s full merit.
This act, on God’s part, is judicial in nature. By justification God pardons the believer even though the past life is one of sinfulness. God further transforms the believer so that he/she becomes a partaker of the divine nature (2 Pet. 1.4), and the love of God is shed abroad in the heart by the Holy Spirit (Rom. 5.5).
The only instrument for receiving this gift of divine grace is faith in Jesus Christ. Its Agents are the word and Spirit of God.
Gause, R. Hollis (2010). Living in the Spirit: The Way of Salvation (Kindle Locations 251-260). CPT Press. Kindle Edition.
On sanctification, Gause writes:
Sanctification is an act of divine grace, the agents of which are the Word and Spirit of God. The basis for this provision and experience is the blood of Christ’s atonement whereby the body of sin is crucified and all unrighteousness is purged from the heart of the regenerate, making her/him free from the law of sin and death. By this experience the graces which are implanted in the prior experience of regeneration are released to more fruitful growth in and by the Holy Spirit.
Such a definition of the experience of sanctification is incomplete unless it also addresses itself to the pursuit of holiness. The pursuit of holiness is the normal manner of life for the believer; that is, this life is characterized by freedom from sinning, by the denial of lust of the flesh, lust of the eye and pride of life and by a cultivation of the fruit of the Spirit.
(Kindle Locations 279-285)
Justification and sanctification are part of a “way of salvation” or an “order of salvation.” This order includes repentance, justification, adoption, regeneration, sanctification, and glorification. The first 4 can be classed as “initial experiences” of salvation and the last 2 can be described as “subsequent” aspects of salvation.