The Believer's Continual Warfare with Sin and the Sufficiency of Christ
The Necessity of Understanding the Flesh-Spirit Conflict
There is scarcely any doctrine more necessary for the church than rightly understanding the perpetual conflict which remains between the flesh and the Spirit in those who have been regenerated by the grace of God. For unless this warfare is rightly understood, either the believer will despair when he discovers the corruption that still dwells within him, or he will imagine himself to have attained a holiness which the Scriptures nowhere attribute to the saints during their earthly pilgrimage. The wisdom of God has therefore so ordered our salvation that we should continually learn both the depth of our misery in ourselves and the immeasurable riches of His mercy in Christ.
The Spirit’s Work: Stripping Self-Confidence
The first work of the Holy Spirit is not to persuade us that we possess strength sufficient for our own recovery, but to strip away every confidence which we have placed in ourselves. Fallen man naturally supposes that if only he were more disciplined, more determined, or more diligent, he would at length obtain that righteousness which God requires. Thus the heart secretly labors to establish its own peace before God, even while professing that salvation is by grace alone. Yet the law accomplishes the very opposite of what fallen man imagines. Instead of producing righteousness, it exposes the poverty of the soul. Instead of curing the disease, it reveals its extent. As the Apostle teaches, "through the law comes knowledge of sin" (Romans 3:20).
The Reality of Ongoing Warfare in the Regenerate
Accordingly, when believers discover within themselves besetting sins that stubbornly resist every effort of the flesh, they ought not immediately conclude that the grace of regeneration has been absent. Scripture itself presents the Christian life as a continual warfare. The Apostle Paul confesses that he delights in the law of God according to the inward man while simultaneously discovering another law within his members warring against the law of his mind (Romans 7:22–23). Such language would be unintelligible if regeneration immediately removed every struggle with sin. Rather, the Spirit produces a new principle of life which continually opposes remaining corruption until the day of resurrection.
Distinguishing Presence from Dominion of Sin
Therefore, believers must distinguish carefully between the presence of sin and the dominion of sin. Sin remains; its tyranny has been broken. The conflict itself often bears witness to the Spirit's work, for the unrenewed heart does not wage war against its corruption but gladly serves it. The regenerate, however, mourn over that which they once embraced, and their grief itself becomes evidence that God has implanted new affections within them. Thus sorrow over sin, when joined with faith in Christ, ought not to drive the conscience toward despair but toward the throne of grace.
Satan’s Subtle Device: Shifting Focus from Christ
Here lies one of Satan's most subtle devices. Since he cannot destroy the foundation of justification, he endeavors to obscure it. Having failed to prevent the believer from coming to Christ, he labors to persuade him that Christ alone is no longer sufficient. He therefore turns the believer's attention away from the Savior and back upon himself. The conscience begins once more to measure its standing before God by the degree of its own success, by the intensity of its repentance, by the constancy of its obedience, or by the strength of its religious affections. Yet this merely reconstructs under another form the same bondage from which Christ has delivered His people.
The True Remedy: Looking to Christ Alone
For the remedy for sin is never found by looking more intently at sin itself. The mirror of the law exposes our corruption, but it cannot cleanse it. We behold our deformity only that we might flee more earnestly unto Him in whom alone righteousness dwells. The gospel therefore directs weary consciences away from themselves and fixes their eyes upon Christ, whose obedience is perfect, whose sacrifice is complete, whose intercession is continual, and whose righteousness is freely imputed to all who believe.
Sanctification Rooted in Justification
This does not diminish the necessity of holiness. Rather, it establishes its true foundation. The believer does not pursue sanctification in order to obtain God's favor but because he has already received it in Christ. Gratitude succeeds where fear cannot. Love accomplishes what servile labor never could. The Holy Spirit writes the law upon the heart so that obedience gradually becomes the fruit of communion rather than the purchase of acceptance.
Common Pitfalls: False Sources of Peace
Many believers nevertheless return, almost imperceptibly, to those patterns by which they formerly sought peace. One attempts to master sin through severe discipline. Another seeks assurance through fluctuating emotions. Another measures spiritual health by visible usefulness. Another places confidence in public reputation or religious activity. These methods differ in appearance but share a common defect: each seeks rest somewhere short of Christ Himself.
Christ as the Believer’s Daily Rest
Yet our Lord continually recalls His people to Himself. "Come unto me," He says, "all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." The invitation is directed not merely to the unconverted but to all who continue to labor beneath the burden of remaining corruption. Christ Himself remains the believer's rest every day of the Christian life. As faith first receives Him, so faith continually lives upon Him.
The Church’s Fellowship: Honesty and Mercy
The church likewise ought to reflect this same grace in her fellowship. Believers should neither conceal their remaining corruption through hypocrisy nor parade it carelessly, but confess their need with humility, remembering that every Christian stands solely by mercy. Such honesty does not magnify sin; it magnifies the patience of God. When the light of the gospel shines upon hidden corruption, the believer discovers that the grace of Christ is greater than the guilt he feared to expose. Thus confession becomes not the ground of forgiveness but the joyful acknowledgment that forgiveness has already been secured by the blood of the Mediator.
The Means of Grace and Communion with Christ
Indeed, every attempt to heal the conscience apart from Christ inevitably fails. Rules, resolutions, disciplines, and even lawful spiritual exercises possess no power in themselves unless the Holy Spirit employs them as instruments for drawing the soul nearer unto the Savior. The means of grace derive all their efficacy from the living Christ who ministers through them. Therefore believers are not called merely to perform religious duties but to seek continual communion with the One who has promised never to leave nor forsake His people.
Humility, Dependence, and Final Victory
The entire Christian life thus consists in a continual departure from self and a continual return unto Christ. The more deeply believers perceive the corruption of their own hearts, the more precious becomes the righteousness of their Redeemer. The more they experience their weakness, the more they learn the sufficiency of divine grace. The more they mourn over remaining sin, the more earnestly they rejoice in the certainty that "there is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus" (Romans 8:1).Such knowledge produces genuine humility. The believer no longer boasts in religious attainments, for he recognizes that every grace has descended from above. Whatever holiness appears within him has been wrought by the Spirit. Whatever perseverance he possesses has been preserved by the Son. Whatever confidence he enjoys rests wholly upon the Father's immutable promise. Thus all glory returns to the Triune God, while the believer, emptied of confidence in himself, finds increasing joy in the inexhaustible fullness of Christ.The Christian's identity is therefore no longer determined by the strength of his temptations nor by the frequency of his failures, but by his union with the crucified and risen Lord. Though sin continues to humble him, it no longer defines him. Though weakness remains, grace reigns. Though the battle continues, the victory has already been secured by Him who loved His people and gave Himself for them. Accordingly, the believer presses forward with hope, not because he trusts his own progress, but because he trusts the unchangeable faithfulness of the Savior, who will perfect the work He has begun and present His redeemed at last without spot or blemish before the throne of His glory.
There is scarcely any doctrine more necessary for the church than rightly understanding the perpetual conflict which remains between the flesh and the Spirit in those who have been regenerated by the grace of God. For unless this warfare is rightly understood, either the believer will despair when he discovers the corruption that still dwells within him, or he will imagine himself to have attained a holiness which the Scriptures nowhere attribute to the saints during their earthly pilgrimage. The wisdom of God has therefore so ordered our salvation that we should continually learn both the depth of our misery in ourselves and the immeasurable riches of His mercy in Christ.
The Spirit’s Work: Stripping Self-Confidence
The first work of the Holy Spirit is not to persuade us that we possess strength sufficient for our own recovery, but to strip away every confidence which we have placed in ourselves. Fallen man naturally supposes that if only he were more disciplined, more determined, or more diligent, he would at length obtain that righteousness which God requires. Thus the heart secretly labors to establish its own peace before God, even while professing that salvation is by grace alone. Yet the law accomplishes the very opposite of what fallen man imagines. Instead of producing righteousness, it exposes the poverty of the soul. Instead of curing the disease, it reveals its extent. As the Apostle teaches, "through the law comes knowledge of sin" (Romans 3:20).
The Reality of Ongoing Warfare in the Regenerate
Accordingly, when believers discover within themselves besetting sins that stubbornly resist every effort of the flesh, they ought not immediately conclude that the grace of regeneration has been absent. Scripture itself presents the Christian life as a continual warfare. The Apostle Paul confesses that he delights in the law of God according to the inward man while simultaneously discovering another law within his members warring against the law of his mind (Romans 7:22–23). Such language would be unintelligible if regeneration immediately removed every struggle with sin. Rather, the Spirit produces a new principle of life which continually opposes remaining corruption until the day of resurrection.
Distinguishing Presence from Dominion of Sin
Therefore, believers must distinguish carefully between the presence of sin and the dominion of sin. Sin remains; its tyranny has been broken. The conflict itself often bears witness to the Spirit's work, for the unrenewed heart does not wage war against its corruption but gladly serves it. The regenerate, however, mourn over that which they once embraced, and their grief itself becomes evidence that God has implanted new affections within them. Thus sorrow over sin, when joined with faith in Christ, ought not to drive the conscience toward despair but toward the throne of grace.
Satan’s Subtle Device: Shifting Focus from Christ
Here lies one of Satan's most subtle devices. Since he cannot destroy the foundation of justification, he endeavors to obscure it. Having failed to prevent the believer from coming to Christ, he labors to persuade him that Christ alone is no longer sufficient. He therefore turns the believer's attention away from the Savior and back upon himself. The conscience begins once more to measure its standing before God by the degree of its own success, by the intensity of its repentance, by the constancy of its obedience, or by the strength of its religious affections. Yet this merely reconstructs under another form the same bondage from which Christ has delivered His people.
The True Remedy: Looking to Christ Alone
For the remedy for sin is never found by looking more intently at sin itself. The mirror of the law exposes our corruption, but it cannot cleanse it. We behold our deformity only that we might flee more earnestly unto Him in whom alone righteousness dwells. The gospel therefore directs weary consciences away from themselves and fixes their eyes upon Christ, whose obedience is perfect, whose sacrifice is complete, whose intercession is continual, and whose righteousness is freely imputed to all who believe.
Sanctification Rooted in Justification
This does not diminish the necessity of holiness. Rather, it establishes its true foundation. The believer does not pursue sanctification in order to obtain God's favor but because he has already received it in Christ. Gratitude succeeds where fear cannot. Love accomplishes what servile labor never could. The Holy Spirit writes the law upon the heart so that obedience gradually becomes the fruit of communion rather than the purchase of acceptance.
Common Pitfalls: False Sources of Peace
Many believers nevertheless return, almost imperceptibly, to those patterns by which they formerly sought peace. One attempts to master sin through severe discipline. Another seeks assurance through fluctuating emotions. Another measures spiritual health by visible usefulness. Another places confidence in public reputation or religious activity. These methods differ in appearance but share a common defect: each seeks rest somewhere short of Christ Himself.
Christ as the Believer’s Daily Rest
Yet our Lord continually recalls His people to Himself. "Come unto me," He says, "all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." The invitation is directed not merely to the unconverted but to all who continue to labor beneath the burden of remaining corruption. Christ Himself remains the believer's rest every day of the Christian life. As faith first receives Him, so faith continually lives upon Him.
The Church’s Fellowship: Honesty and Mercy
The church likewise ought to reflect this same grace in her fellowship. Believers should neither conceal their remaining corruption through hypocrisy nor parade it carelessly, but confess their need with humility, remembering that every Christian stands solely by mercy. Such honesty does not magnify sin; it magnifies the patience of God. When the light of the gospel shines upon hidden corruption, the believer discovers that the grace of Christ is greater than the guilt he feared to expose. Thus confession becomes not the ground of forgiveness but the joyful acknowledgment that forgiveness has already been secured by the blood of the Mediator.
The Means of Grace and Communion with Christ
Indeed, every attempt to heal the conscience apart from Christ inevitably fails. Rules, resolutions, disciplines, and even lawful spiritual exercises possess no power in themselves unless the Holy Spirit employs them as instruments for drawing the soul nearer unto the Savior. The means of grace derive all their efficacy from the living Christ who ministers through them. Therefore believers are not called merely to perform religious duties but to seek continual communion with the One who has promised never to leave nor forsake His people.
Humility, Dependence, and Final Victory
The entire Christian life thus consists in a continual departure from self and a continual return unto Christ. The more deeply believers perceive the corruption of their own hearts, the more precious becomes the righteousness of their Redeemer. The more they experience their weakness, the more they learn the sufficiency of divine grace. The more they mourn over remaining sin, the more earnestly they rejoice in the certainty that "there is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus" (Romans 8:1).Such knowledge produces genuine humility. The believer no longer boasts in religious attainments, for he recognizes that every grace has descended from above. Whatever holiness appears within him has been wrought by the Spirit. Whatever perseverance he possesses has been preserved by the Son. Whatever confidence he enjoys rests wholly upon the Father's immutable promise. Thus all glory returns to the Triune God, while the believer, emptied of confidence in himself, finds increasing joy in the inexhaustible fullness of Christ.The Christian's identity is therefore no longer determined by the strength of his temptations nor by the frequency of his failures, but by his union with the crucified and risen Lord. Though sin continues to humble him, it no longer defines him. Though weakness remains, grace reigns. Though the battle continues, the victory has already been secured by Him who loved His people and gave Himself for them. Accordingly, the believer presses forward with hope, not because he trusts his own progress, but because he trusts the unchangeable faithfulness of the Savior, who will perfect the work He has begun and present His redeemed at last without spot or blemish before the throne of His glory.