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title: "Unit 11: How Does Christ Save Us?"
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# Unit 11: How Does Christ Save Us?

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Question: How does Christ save us?

Answer: The Father saves us by grace, joining us to the crucified and risen Christ through the Holy Spirit, so we are forgiven, made alive, adopted, formed in holiness, and brought into communion with God.

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## Read

- John 3:3--8 (NIV): the Spirit gives new birth.
- John 14:6 (NIV) and John 15:1--6 (NIV): Christ is the way to the Father and the vine in whom his people live.
- Acts 2:37--42 (NIV): the gospel calls for repentance, baptism, reception of the Spirit, and life with the apostolic Church.
- Romans 3:21--5:1 (NIV): God justifies the ungodly through faith in Christ apart from works.
- Ephesians 2:1--10, 18 (NIV): salvation is God's gift in Christ, through the Spirit, to the Father, for a life of good works.
- Titus 3:3--7 (NIV): God saves by mercy through rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit.

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## What the Answer Means

Christ does not save by giving us a better pattern to copy from a distance. He saves by bringing us into his own life.

Every creature already depends on the Word through whom all things were made. But created dependence is not the same as saving communion. A person can use real gifts---reason, courage, kindness, beauty, discipline, or public virtue---while refusing the Giver. Moral resemblance is not a second road to the Father. Jesus does not only point toward the way. He is the Way. Life is in the Son.

Salvation is therefore grace before it is achievement. The Father sends the Son. The Son assumes our humanity, lives faithfully, dies for our sins, rises bodily, and brings human life through death into incorruption. The Spirit joins us to Christ, gives new birth, dwells in us, teaches us to cry to the Father, and forms Christ's life in his people. We do not manufacture this communion. We receive it.

Scripture gives several words for the one saving work because the ruin is larger than one image. We need forgiveness because we are guilty, justification because we stand under judgment, reconciliation because we are alienated, new birth because we need life, adoption because we are brought to the Father, deliverance because sin and the powers enslave, and sanctification because corrupted desire and practice must be made holy. These are not rival gospels. They describe the grace of the Father, through the Son, in the Spirit, restoring the whole person to communion.

Justification names God's forensic verdict: he pardons the ungodly and grants righteous standing in Christ through faith apart from works. This verdict and living union with Christ are distinct but inseparable gifts. Union is the sphere in which the verdict is received; new birth, holiness, and good works are living fruits of salvation, never the ground of the justifying verdict.

Faith receives Christ. Repentance turns from idols, hiding, and self-rule toward the living God. Baptism names and embodies incorporation into Christ and his visible people. Abiding, obedience, love, and good works are the living fruit of union with Christ. They do not purchase the union. The branch bears fruit because it remains in the vine; fruit does not build a vine underneath itself.

This keeps assurance and repentance together. Assurance rests in Christ, not in our ability to inspect ourselves into certainty. Repentance remains necessary because grace does not bless hiding or leave corruption untouched. The person joined to Christ can come into the light, receive mercy, make repair, and learn obedience without treating every failure as proof that Christ has disappeared.

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## A Parallel Life Is Not Union

Micah had spent months reading the Gospels with a friend. He admired Jesus. He had started giving more carefully, speaking less harshly, and showing up for his mother when her health became difficult. Then he asked the question he had been carrying quietly.

"If I live the way Jesus taught, why do I need to belong to Jesus?"

His friend did not dismiss the changes. Kindness was good. Truthful speech was good. Care for his mother was good. None of those goods became false because Micah's understanding was incomplete. But the friend opened John 15 and drew a vine with one branch on the back of an envelope.

"A branch can be placed beside a vine and point in the same direction," he said. "It can even look like part of the plant from far away. But it does not live because it resembles the vine. It lives by sharing the vine's life."

Micah looked at the drawing. "So Christianity is not only agreeing with Jesus?"

"No. It includes believing what is true about him, but it is deeper. The Father brings us to share life in the Son by the Spirit. Jesus does not only teach communion. He gives communion."

The distinction made the gospel more personal and more demanding at the same time. Micah could no longer make Jesus the highest adviser inside a life that still belonged to Micah alone. He also did not have to build a perfect moral record before coming. The invitation was to receive Christ, turn from self-rule, be baptized, and learn life in his body.

Two weeks later Micah's first prayer was not impressive:

> Jesus Christ, I do not want to stand beside your life and admire it. Join me to you, forgive me, and bring me to the Father by your Spirit.

The good actions that came before were real created goods. They could not become an independent source of eternal life. The good actions that followed did not buy Christ. They began to become fruit of received life.

This is why Christians confess that salvation is in Christ alone without claiming to know every hidden case. Christ is the only saving source. The Judge alone knows the light a person received, the injuries or limits that shaped reception, the truth of the response, and the whole Godward relation. The Church proclaims Christ to everyone; it does not pretend to see every soul as Christ sees it.

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## The One Gift and Its Living Fruit

- Gift in Christ | What God does | Fruit that follows
- Grace | God gives what sinners cannot generate or deserve. | Gratitude replaces boasting.
- Forgiveness and justification | God pardons the ungodly and grants righteous standing in Christ through faith apart from works. | Confession becomes possible without despair.
- Reconciliation | Christ brings enemies near to God. | Peace with God begins to reshape life with neighbors.
- New birth and adoption | The Spirit gives life and brings believers into the Son's relation to the Father. | Prayer, trust, belonging, and family likeness grow.
- Deliverance | Christ breaks the rule of sin, death, and hostile powers. | Believers resist old masters and seek help in the light.
- Sanctification | The Spirit makes the whole person holy over time. | Love, obedience, endurance, truth, and repair take embodied form.

Do not turn the fruit column into an entrance examination. The fruit is evidence of living relation, not payment for it. Weak fruit calls for truth, help, repentance, patience, and renewed abiding in Christ. It does not create permission for leaders to pronounce on hidden salvation by appearance, productivity, personality, or usefulness.

Watch for this.

Salvation is not moral self-improvement. Justification is God's real verdict, not a fiction: he pardons the ungodly and grants righteous standing in Christ through faith apart from works. That verdict is distinct from but inseparable from living union with Christ. Regeneration, holiness, and good works are the fruit of salvation, never the ground of the verdict.

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## Questions for Conversation

- Why is imitating Jesus from a distance different from sharing life in Christ?
- How do faith, repentance, baptism, abiding, obedience, and love belong to one grace-given participation rather than a checklist for earning salvation?
- Which gift of salvation---forgiveness, justification, reconciliation, new birth, adoption, deliverance, or sanctification---helps you see the gospel more fully?

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## Practice

Pray through the movement of salvation:

> Father, I receive your mercy. Lord Jesus, keep me in your life. Holy Spirit, make Christ's life bear fruit in me.

Then name one fruit that grace is calling into practice: confession, trust, truth, protection, patience, generosity, repair, or hope.
