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Whether or not an individual is practicing Biblical separation, as Scripture defines it, is a key indicator of whether or not an individual is a Christian - a key indicator of whether or not an individual possesses the love of God.
Hebrews chapter 11 provides multiple illustrations of what is possible for the children of God in this present life because of Christ.
Moses saw many visible, physical demonstrations of the power of God. But the life of Moses demonstrates that the secret of the Christian life is not seeing, but believing.
Dr. Lloyd-Jones brings together passages from Genesis 12 and 15, John 1, and Hebrews 11 to demonstrate from the life of Abraham that the proof of saving faith is obedience toward God and the desire to please Him; to set forth the blessings of the assurance of salvation; and to encourage Christians in the fact that the promises of God, even those that are long in being fulfilled, are entirely true.
In First John 2:15 Christians are told, literally, "Stop loving the world." What is the "world" that Christians are to stop loving? What is the nature of the love we are to stop practicing?
The greatest problem for the Christian is how to face an unknown future.
In this passage the writer to the Hebrews demonstrates that Christianity in not merely theoretical by showing how God has bound Himself to His people in Christ.
The truth of Scripture is that man, in all times, is justified by faith. What choice does this place before all of mankind? What, then, is the first principle of the Christian life?
Many people think that Biblically separated living is an un-loving thing. But what does Scripture say?
In I John 2:15, Christians are told, "Do not love the world." In the Gospel of John chapter 3 Jesus declares that "God so loved the world" that He gave His only begotten Son for its redemption. How are both things true, without paradox or contradiction? For the answer we must look at the original language.