This study teaches that involvement in the work of God is not optional but required to maintain salvation. It explains that believers who refuse to engage in good works deny God by their actions and are described in Scripture as disobedient, reprobate, and detestable in God’s eyes. The study shows that good works are the works God commands, preaching the Gospel, serving the body, giving, supporting ministry, and bearing fruit. It confronts excuses, rejects passive Christianity, and calls believers to active participation as proof of living faith.
This study explains sanctification as a progressive process carried out by the Holy Spirit through obedience to the Word of God. It distinguishes sanctification from justification and righteousness, showing that sanctification is purification and consecration for holy living. The study teaches that sanctification does not occur automatically, but requires submission, study, obedience, and endurance. It explains why God allows sanctification to take time, showing that gradual holiness humbles believers, strengthens dependence on God, produces testimony, and prepares the soul for eternal glory.
This study defines justification as being rendered innocent and cleared of guilt before God. It rejects the idea that justification comes by belief or faith alone and demonstrates from Scripture that justification involves Christ’s sacrifice, belief, faith, grace, and obedience expressed through good works. The study emphasizes that justification is ongoing, conditional, and must be maintained, warning that believers must qualify through obedience rather than assume justification automatically.
This study explains that righteousness and holiness are closely related but distinct from justification. It teaches that righteousness is living in obedience to God’s commandments and that Scripture repeatedly identifies righteous people by what they do. The study confronts false teachings that claim righteousness is automatic or imputed without obedience and shows that disciples are commanded to pursue righteousness actively. It emphasizes that righteousness comes through obedience, study, correction, and separation from unrighteousness.
Copyright © 2011 through 2026 Zion's Roar Holy Spirit Ministry - All Rights Reserved.