Sunday, October 12, 2014

Saved Or Improved

There is a difference between being saved and being improved. There is a saying to the effect that people can only be saved, not improved. It depends how it is meant, but I think that in the most important sense it is absolutely true. It is the foundation of good preaching, and effective counselling, and sound spirituality in the Church. One cannot begin with people where they are, but only from the level of (Spirit-given) abnegation. Otherwise one's input is likely wasted.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

abegnation - what a fantastic word!

:)

We're into the whole 'prevenient' thing in Methodism - it inserts a fairly grey area this side of saved on the way to sanctified.

But I really only commented because of the word 'abegnation'.

Thomas O. Scarborough said...

Abnegation -- that's a word you could drop into a sermon. You could even try it as a sermon TITLE. I read about a minister who preached on "the teleologically prescribed utopia inherent in the eschaton". Whether that's a joke or not, I'm not sure. My own sermons are aimed at the lowest common denominator, although a congregation will survive a few abstruse terms.