For John Wesley, Salvation Was As Much About Healing Sin-Sickness As It Was About Forgiving It

WLO_healcomfortOne of the under-explored and under-appreciated discipleship treasures of the Wesleyan theological heritage is John Wesley’s understanding of salvation, which unites the Western church tradition of salvation as forensic (i.e., the forgiveness of sins) with the Eastern church tradition of salvation as therapeutic (i.e., healing from the sickness of sin). James Pedlar offers a helpful and succinct summary of Wesley’s views on the matter, so no need for me to repeat it here–please click through to read his piece–but I can’t resist including these two illustrative quotes from Wesley’s sermons that Pedlar uses to summarize Wesley’s views:

Forensic: Sermon 43, “The Scripture Way of Salvation,” §I.3

Justification is another word for pardon. It is the forgiveness of all our sins; and , what is necessarily implied therein, our acceptance with God. The price whereby this hath been procured for us (commonly termed “the meritorious cause of our justification”), is the blood and righteousness of Christ; or, to express it a little more clearly, all that Christ hath done and suffered for us, till He “poured out His soul for the transgressors.” The immediate effects of justification are, the peace of God, a “peace that passeth all understanding,” and a “rejoicing in hope of the glory of God” “with joy unspeakable and full of glory.”

Therapeutic: Sermon 57, “On the Fall of Man,” §II.8

Hath he not then, seeing he alone is able, provided a remedy for all these evils? Yea, verily he hath! And a sufficient remedy; every way adequate to the disease… Here is a remedy provided for all our guilt: He “bore all our sins in his body on the tree.” And “if any one have sinned, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous.” And here is a remedy for all our disease, all the corruption of our nature. For God hath also, through the intercession of his Son, given us his Holy Spirit, to renew us both “in knowledge,” in his natural image; — opening the eyes of our understanding, and enlightening us with all such knowledge as is requisite to our pleasing God; — and also in his moral image, namely, “righteousness and true holiness.”

Pedlar follows these excerpts from Wesley with a helpful “therefore” that outlines the impact all this ought to have on how we think about discipleship:

The point of what I’m trying to say is that salvation, for Wesley, is  not found simply in being “declared” righteous (justification), but in being healed of all the corruption of sin, and conformed to the likeness of Christ.   Therefore, the salvation that God has prepared for us is something which begins now, but extends to the resurrection.  People sometimes speak of receiving forgiveness of salvation as “being saved,” but this is not the whole story. Justification is one aspect of salvation, but properly speaking, salvation includes regeneration, justification, sanctification, and glorification.  These terms are ways of describing the initial, ongoing, and final deliverance from sin.

If salvation is purely forensic, discipleship is relegated to a “post-salvation” process, and its purpose and urgency are unclear. But if salvation is also therapeutic, then discipleship becomes central to the salvation process, i.e., one does not become a disciple after one has been saved but as part of being saved. One learns, over and over again, anew and ever more deeply and fully, how to be saved and what it means and looks like to be saved in every dimension and stage of one’s life and spiritual growth.

It’s surprising how much this rich, Scriptural understanding of salvation has been neglected in practice by evangelical Wesleyans; too often we embrace the therapeutic language but lack a concrete discipleship method and mindset to actively see it through in cooperation with the Holy Spirit. In contrast, liberal Wesleyans are only too happy to jettison the forensic view of salvation altogether in favor of a modified therapeutic approach, as if the two strands were somehow opposed to each other (and, worst case, as if the forensic view was holding the therapeutic view back). But once the strands unravel, social holiness has a way of devolving into social justice and salvation becomes more about recycling paper and plastic than it does the healing of sin-sick souls.

The beauty of the Wesleyan conception is that when you combine forensic and therapeutic you get more than you had with either separately, and you don’t have to (and don’t get to) pick and choose what you want salvation to mean (and not mean). Best of all, your understanding will serve you well across the vast theological territory of both Old and New Testaments, which is precisely what Wesley had in mind.

The best long-form read on Wesley’s uniting of forensic and therapeutic dimensions of salvation is still Theodore Runyan’s 1998 work, The New Creation: John Wesley’s Theology Today. It’s not perfect, but it arguably does the best job of portraying Wesley’s equal embrace of both dimensions of salvation while waiting until the final chapter to bust out the material on paper and plastic recycling, which, I expect, is how Wesley would have organized the book had he written it himself.

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Video – Don’t Read The Bible This Way!

Pastor Foley says that a fear of not getting into heaven is a typical motivation that many Christians have when reading the Bible.  Therefore, many of us often read the Bible trying to find out what we need to do to “stay in.”  Pastor Foley points out that the Bible is not an instruction manual for living and it was never intended to be one!  When we read the Scripture in this fashion, it leads to the most “rank kind of judgmentalism that typifies the Christian experience.”

For all of the latest podcasts on Healing and Comforting and on past Works of Mercy visit our Seoul USA Podcast Page!

 

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A Simple Prayer of Healing

WLO_healcomfortPost by Pastor Tim – I laid in my parents arms, with blood streaming out of my eyes, ears and nose, and I wasn’t breathing.  My father held my lifeless body in his arms and prayed this simple prayer . . .

This is one of the most profound instances of healing in my life, and yet one in which doesn’t seem that unique at all.  Let me continue by telling you the rest of the story.

My three siblings and I had been piled into the car to visit my grandparents.  I was in the middle of the front seat, and was left there while my parents ran back into the house to grab something.  I was only two years old at the time, and not knowing any better, I fiddled with the gear shift and in so doing I fell out of the car.  My oldest brother jumped out of the back seat and stopped the car by applying the brakes, but the car’s tire had already rolled over my head.

When my parents found me, I was lifeless and not breathing.  My parents were fairly new Christians, and my father prayed this simple prayer, “Jesus, please heal my son.”  At that exact moment, I gasped for breath, and my parents rushed me to the hospital that was a little over 15 minutes away.

After the hospital’s examination, the doctor said there was absolutely nothing wrong and they wondered if there might be some rational explanation or even if my parents might be exaggerating.  It wasn’t until the next day that my head revealed the black and blue tire marks, and the doctors were convinced as to what really happened that day.

At the beginning of this post, I said that this instance of healing doesn’t seem that unique at all.  This is not to take away from what happened, but to point to the prayer that my father prayed.  There was no shouting, pleading, ritualistic dances or altar calls.  My father was a new Christian, and he prayed a simple prayer of faith for my healing.  He knew that God could heal and he prayed that God would do that for his son.  Although my father’s prayer doesn’t encompass all the aspects of James 5:13-16, it does resemble the same simplicity of healing that James expresses.

I wonder if we have somehow made healing more complex than it needs to be.  We rely too much on the person who is doing the healing and what methods they are using instead of relying on the God who actually does the healing.  Peter reminded the crowd of this after God used Peter and John to heal a crippled man.  Peter said, “Men of Israel, why does this surprise you?  Why do you stare at us as if by our own power or godliness we had made this man walk? (Acts 3:12)

I suppose that simplicity could now be turned into a magical formula for healing prayers though.  So the emphasis is not on the simplicity as much as the simplicity is birthed from a God who already has expressed his willingness to heal.  Pastor Foley said, “For the Christian, healing is always about simple trust in God and heartfelt petition rooted in the knowledge that God wants to heal.”

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