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265 pages, Paperback
Published July 9, 2016
Often those who preach next to us say that it is enough for a person to only come to believe in Christ for salvation. But they are under delusion, not understanding the Scripture--although they boast of its knowledge.
"And they are Christ's" says Apostle Paul, "have crucified the flesh with its passions and lusts" (Gal 5.24). If the salvation of the entire human race was accomplished by the Cross of Christ, then it is necessary for everyone, for his salvation, to crucify himself in a way similar to Christ--to erect a cross in one's soul, on which to crucify his old sinful man with his passions and lusts.
Through this, the saving power of the Cross of Christ is absorbed by a Christian, and within his soul Christ is formed (cf Gal 4.19). This kind of man can say along with the Apostle Paul about himself: "I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me"(Gal 2.20); and this kind of man indeed inherits eternal life and salvation.
But aside from this "inner" cross, a Christian also has external crosses, which are sent by Christ for each one of us. These are sorrows, troubles, misfortunes, sickness, loss of those who are close to us, failures, offenses, etc. Who does not have them? Neither wealth nor nobility save anyone from them.
Why does the Lord give these crosses? Some of you know how grain is extracted from the harvested ear--it is knocked out with chains, threshed out. You have also heard that gold is purified from foreign impurities with fire. So our soul is purified through sorrows and becomes enlightened, elevated, and produces from within itself a pure grain of goodness.
A Christian also knows that here he is only a wanderer and stranger, that his motherland is in heaven (cf Phil 3.20). And a wanderer, as long as he remains out of his house, endures various deprivations and discomforts along the way....