Tag Archives | purification

The Abomination of Degradation

There are seasons in the Christian life when warmth fades, and clarity dims, and it becomes necessary to ask a searching question: Is this a purifying dryness permitted by God, or the early stages of spiritual decline? The distinction is not academic, for the remedy differs according to the condition. One calls for patient endurance and renewed trust in God’s promises; the other demands honest repentance and a decisive return. To discern rightly is an act of spiritual sobriety. To respond rightly is an act of obedience.

The church at Ephesus stood outwardly strong—tested in doctrine, patient in endurance, intolerant of error—yet Christ exposed a deeper problem: their love for Him had cooled (Rev. 2:1–7). The issue was not heresy nor scandalous immorality, but the quiet diminishment of affection that once propelled their obedience. What had begun in fervent devotion was settling into disciplined duty. Their works remained; their warmth did not. And in that cooling lay a danger more serious than visible failure—the loss of that love which alone gives life to faith and meaning to labor.

4 But I have this against you, that you have abandoned the love you had at first. 5 Remember therefore from where you have fallen; repent, and do the works you did at first. If not, I will come to you and remove your lampstand from its place, unless you repent. — Revelation 2:4–5 (ESV)

Spiritual Desolation

Biblically considered, spiritual desolation or dryness is not the forfeiture of grace but the felt withdrawal of its consolations. Scripture distinguishes between God’s covenantal nearness and the believer’s experiential awareness of that nearness. The psalmists frequently cry out from seasons in which God seems hidden—“Why do You hide Your face?” (Psalm 44:24; cf. 13:1–2)—yet even in lament, they continue to trust, pray, and cling. Such conditions are not depicted as apostasy but as trial: faith stretched without emotional reinforcement, obedience sustained without sweetness. The believer walks in darkness yet “trusts in the name of the Lord” (Isaiah 50:10). In these seasons, delight may diminish, clarity may cloud, and prayer may feel barren; yet the will remains oriented toward God, and longing for Him intensifies rather than evaporates (Psalm 63:1). Thus, spiritual dryness is a divinely permitted state in which sensible comfort is withheld for the refinement of faith, so that reliance shifts from felt experience to the steadfast promises of God.

Regression: The Nature of Spiritual Desolation

The concept of “first love” connects to a foundational biblical theme. The greatest commandment requires loving God with complete intensity—heart, soul, and mind—making this the supreme obligation of faith. (Deut 6:5; Matt 22:37–38). God himself recalls Israel’s early devotion, remembering their passionate following during their wilderness journey as a bride’s love (Jer 2:2). This pattern suggests that authentic faith begins with earnest affection, and when that affection cools, the entire spiritual life becomes hollow, regardless of external performance.

The Ephesian situation illustrates this danger acutely. The church demonstrated impressive spiritual discipline—they labored tirelessly, exposed false apostles, and maintained patient endurance for Christ’s name (Rev 2:1–7). Yet Christ calls them to remember their former state, repent, and return to their original works, warning that without repentance he will remove their lampstand—effectively ending their witness (Rev 2:1–7). The severity of this consequence suggests that loveless orthodoxy, however rigorous, cannot sustain a living church.

Recognition: The Critical Moment of Awareness

An individual Christian can excel in good works while lacking the tender affection for Jesus that matters most to God. The Ephesian church’s failure becomes a personal mirror: you may be doctrinally sound, morally upright, and actively serving—yet spiritually hollow if your relationship with Christ has become merely dutiful rather than devotional.

First love describes the moment when your soul is captivated by Christ’s beauty and fullness, when you lay your sins at the cross and embrace His righteousness through faith.1 This condition makes prayer effortless; you cannot wait to enter a quiet place to speak with God as a beloved friend.1 But when warmth for Christ cools, you begin performing good works from habit rather than love, and what was once a love relationship deteriorates into mere religion.2

The danger runs deeper than mere emotional decline. Infidelity to divine love represents the most serious sin people can commit—unbelievers fail to respond to God’s love, while believers who become apathetic toward their Savior’s love face judgment.3 You fail to appreciate God’s love because you fail to recognize the gravity of your sin; those most aware of their own sinfulness grasp most deeply the magnitude of God’s love.3

Personal revival requires returning to your foundational experience with Christ—remembering the excitement, love, and dedication you felt when friendship with Jesus first began. The Holy Spirit convinces you that you are the object of God’s love and calls forth your love toward God, revealing His love to you.4 Without this rekindling, you risk becoming spiritually successful yet spiritually distant from the One you serve.

Recovery: The Means of Restoration

Christ prescribes three concrete actions to restore what has been lost. The remedy consists of three parts: remembering where you have fallen, repenting, and doing your first works.5

A. Remember your spiritual descent

You must be jolted into awareness of what is happening and come to a true reckoning about yourself. The consolations and evasions with which you’ve clothed your drift from God need to be broken apart, and you must measure your present inconstancy against your past resolution.6 This isn’t mere nostalgia—it’s honest self-examination that exposes the gap between who you were and who you’ve become.

To recognize spiritual change, you must return mentally to when you first encountered the Lord, recalling the commitments you made and the intimacy you experienced.1 God charges those who have forgotten their early devotion with provoking His anger through their failure to reflect on what they once possessed (Ezek 16:43). The danger intensifies when material comfort and success cause you to neglect the Lord who sustained you (Deut 8:11–14). Supporting passages include Jeremiah’s lament that God’s people have forgotten Him “days without number” (Jer 2:32) and the prophet’s description of Israel weeping over their perverted ways and forgotten God (Jer 3:21–22).

B. Repent with genuine transformation

Repentance means changing one’s thinking, clearly connected to changed behavior.7 True repentance enables you to turn away from the realm of unrighteousness, vacillation, and compromise, and back toward Christ.6 This is not mere regret but a decisive reorientation of your will toward God.

True repentance involves turning to God and performing deeds consistent with that turning (Acts 26:20). The Lord calls people to return with their whole heart, accompanied by fasting, weeping, and mourning—a tearing of the heart rather than a mere outward gesture (Joel 2:12–13). You must turn from all transgressions and fashion a new heart and spirit within yourself (Ezek 18:30–32). When God’s people humble themselves, pray, seek His face, and abandon wickedness, He hears, forgives, and heals (2 Chron 7:14). Key passages include the promise that confession of sin brings forgiveness and cleansing (1 John 1:9) and the assurance that those who confess and abandon their transgressions obtain mercy (Prov 28:13).

C. Resume your original works

You must regain the lifestyle you had before departing from your first love.7 Repentance involves a renewal of active obedience—a practical consent to God’s will, not merely internal intention.6 The works you did at first—prayer, service, sacrifice, witness—must be rekindled with the passion that once animated them.

Repentance must produce fruit consistent with its profession (Luke 3:8). Through baptism into Christ’s death, you are raised to walk in newness of life (Rom 6:4). You must discard your former self with its deceptive desires, be renewed in your mind’s spirit, and clothe yourself with the new self created in God’s righteousness and holiness (Eph 4:22–24). David’s prayer models this recovery: “Create in me a clean heart” and “Restore to me the joy of your salvation” (Ps 51:10–12). Drawing near to God prompts His approach to you, and humbling yourself before Him results in His exaltation of you (James 4:8–10).

Genuine love necessarily involves separation from the world, because love is exclusive, and divided love is no love at all.6 Many things compete for your attention, easily diverting you from the primary business of life—seeking the Lord and honoring Him in every facet of your life. You must ensure He holds the first place in your affections.8

Spiritual Degradation

Spiritual degradation is the willful decline of the heart through tolerated sin, neglected communion, and divided affection, resulting in progressive hardening against God. Unlike desolation—where longing remains intact—degradation is marked by drift and dullness: conscience becomes less responsive (Heb. 3:12–13), spiritual discernment weakens through disuse (Heb. 5:14), and former zeal cools into settled complacency (Rev. 2:4–5). The prophets describe this decay as forsaking the fountain of living waters to hew out broken cisterns (Jer. 2:13), a movement not of passive obscurity but of active misdirection. It proceeds gradually: prayer diminishes, love of the world increases (1 John 2:15), and truth once embraced is resisted or reinterpreted to accommodate desire (2 Tim. 4:3–4). Degradation is therefore covenantal unfaithfulness—a regression of love and loyalty that, if unrepented, invites divine discipline and the loss of spiritual vitality. It is not the trembling cry of the thirsty soul, but the quiet settling of the heart into lesser things.

Regression: The Nature of Spiritual Decline

Backsliding represents a regressive spiritual process encompassing broken fellowship with God, sin, a defiled conscience, spiritual indifference, hardness of heart, and unbelief.9 This deterioration occurs gradually rather than catastrophically. Believers experience a general, gradual decay involving the loss of initial faith, love, and works, the weakening of the internal principle of spiritual life, and the diminishment of delight, joy, and consolation.10 As spiritual vitality erodes, gifts begin to deteriorate, judgment rusts from disuse, zeal trembles as though paralyzed, and faith withers as if blasted.11 The process intensifies progressively: when the good spirit departs, blindness and error follow, leading gradually into heresy, then despair, until the person loses the capacity to learn, understand, remember, or pray effectively.11

Abandoning God produces degeneration in character—evidenced by reduced prayer, growing distance from godly fellowship, and diminished spiritual fruitfulness15. When believers neglect to exercise their spiritual senses habitually, their capacity to discern truth deteriorates, and spiritual ignorance produces apathetic dullness16. Israel’s idolatry in the wilderness serves as a stern warning of the dangers believers face when they fall away17. The Galatian believers who had begun well were rapidly deceived and abandoned the gospel, failing to obey the truth17. Some of Timothy’s converts turned aside after Satan, with love of money and philosophical speculation precipitating their downfall17.

References: Jeremiah 2:2115; 1 Corinthians 10:1–1117

Recognition: The Critical Moment of Awareness

A crucial difference exists between sincere believers and those who believe temporarily: sincere believers become restless when they perceive spiritual sickness and decay, whereas temporary believers either fail to notice their condition or remain unconcerned, seeking only continued slumber.12 Few believers remain consistently flourishing from conversion onward without falling under sloth, neglect, or temptation; those who do must maintain exact and diligent mortification of sin.13 This recognition produces profound distress—deliverance from backsliding affects believers’ hearts more deeply than any other grace, giving them transport of joy and thankfulness.13

A backslider reaches the final stage of degeneration when he begins justifying himself, entering a painless state of spiritual mortification15. God reminds His people of their former devotion and charges them with forgetting His care during their poverty and affliction18. When material prosperity increases, it becomes terrible that believers forget God—the more He provides, the less they acknowledge Him18. The most guilty people are often the most self-righteous; many claim innocence while God’s law condemns them, and self-righteousness is utterly abhorrent to God18.

References: Jeremiah 2:2215; Jeremiah 2:3515

Recovery: The Means of Restoration

A steady spiritual view of Christ’s glory through faith provides gracious revival from inward decay and fresh springs of grace.10 Recovery from spiritual decay is an act of sovereign grace; because believers are liable to such declensions, God has provided great and precious promises of recovery if they apply themselves to the means.12 Restoration involves returning the believer to their former condition—like mending fishing nets or setting a dislocated limb—bringing them back to wholeness and usefulness.14 Spiritually mature believers must pursue this restoration with gentleness and humility, confronting sin’s reality while seeking the wayward believer’s welfare.14

Recovering believers from spiritual decay is an act of sovereign grace; because believers are liable to such descent, God has provided great and precious promises of recovery if they apply themselves to the means19. God dwells with those who possess a contrite and humble spirit, reviving both the humble and the contrite in heart20. God sees the backslider’s ways and will heal him, leading him and restoring comfort20. Those who are spiritual should gently restore a fallen believer, watching themselves lest they also be tempted21.

References: Hosea 14:1–815; Isaiah 57:15, 1816; 1 John 1:919; Galatians 6:118

Distinction & Difference

Spiritual desolation and spiritual degradation differ not in the absence of felt comfort alone, but in the orientation of the heart. Desolation is a season in which consolation is withdrawn while faith still clings, longing intensifies, and obedience continues despite inward obscurity; the soul grieves God’s felt distance yet seeks Him still. Degradation, by contrast, is a gradual moral and spiritual decline in which affection cools, vigilance relaxes, sin is tolerated, and the will drifts toward lesser loves. In desolation, the believer cries and holds fast; in degradation, the cry weakens, resistance fades, and the heart begins to settle away from God.

Spiritual Desolation: Passive Purification

By contrast, spiritual dryness represents a divinely permitted condition of spiritual growth. In a “dark night” permitted by God, we are not able to find consolation in things less than God; even in the dryness of our prayer, our yearning for Him increases.23 The critical distinction lies in the soul’s orientation: there is a notable difference between dryness and lukewarmness—the lukewarm are very lax and remiss in their will and spirit with no concern about serving God, whereas those suffering from purgative dryness are ordinarily solicitous, concerned, and pained about not serving God. 23

Since God puts a soul in the dark night to dry up and purge its sensory appetite, He does not allow it to find sweetness or delight in anything. Through this sign, it can be inferred that this dryness is not the outcome of newly committed sins and imperfections.1 Even though in purgative dryness the sensory part of the soul is very cast down, slack, and feeble in its actions because of little satisfaction it finds, the spirit is ready and strong.23

The third sign of genuine purgation is powerlessness, despite efforts, to meditate and use imagination as before—God begins communicating through pure spirit by simple contemplation. Prayer that was predominantly meditative becomes contemplative, and efforts to continue meditating when God is communicating directly will not succeed; in the midst of dryness, the soul is being invited to a new dimension of prayer, a “being still” and simply knowing that He is God. 23

Spiritual Degradation: Active Unfaithfulness

Spiritual degradation involves deliberate departure from God through sin, negligence, and divided affections. When dryness results from our own lukewarmness, carelessness, or unfaithfulness, consolations may be found in things other than God, indulging the flesh in worldly comforts, entertainments, and pleasures that further deaden our taste for spiritual things.23 The degraded believer actively chooses alternatives to God; their spiritual decline stems from willful choices and broken commitments.

Citations

1. Joel R. Beeke, Revelation, ed. Joel R. Beeke and Jon D. Payne, The Lectio Continua Expository Commentary on the New Testament (Grand Rapids, MI: Reformation Heritage Books, 2016), 64.
2. Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered (Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2002–2013). 
3. Tom Constable, Tom Constable’s Expository Notes on the Bible (Galaxie Software, 2003). 
4. Charles Hodge, Systematic Theology (Oak Harbor, WA: Logos Research Systems, Inc., 1997), 3:103.
5. William Perkins, ed. J. Stephen Yuille, Joel R. Beeke, and Derek W. H. Thomas, The Works of William Perkins (Grand Rapids, MI: Reformation Heritage Books, 2017), 4:437.
6. John Webster, Confronted by Grace: Meditations of a Theologian, ed. Daniel Bush and Brannon Ellis (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2014), 195–196.
7. Earl D. Radmacher, Ronald Barclay Allen, and H. Wayne House, The Nelson Study Bible: New King James Version (Nashville: T. Nelson Publishers, 1997). 
8. William Wilberforce and Kevin Belmonte, 365 Days with Wilberforce (Leominster, UK: Day One Publications, 2006), 11.
9. George Thomas Kurian, in Nelson’s New Christian Dictionary: The Authoritative Resource on the Christian World (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 2001). 
10. John Owen, The Works of John Owen, ed. William H. Goold (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, n.d.), 1:432–433, 1:443.
11. James Comper Gray, Biblical Encyclopedia and Museum (Hartford, CT: The S. S. Scranton Co., 1900), 15:65–66.
12. John Owen, Meditations and Discourses Concerning the Glory of Christ Applyed unto Unconverted Sinners, and Saints under Spiritual Decayes: In Two Chapters, from John XVII, Xxiv / by the Late Reverend John Owen, Early English Books Online (London: J.A. for William Marshall .., 1691), 44, 68.
13. John Owen, Glory of Christ (Scotland, UK: Christian Focus, 2015). 
14. Matthew S. Harmon, Galatians, ed. T. Desmond Alexander, Thomas R. Schreiner, and Andreas J. Köstenberger, Evangelical Biblical Theology Commentary (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Academic, 2021), 337–338.
15. James Smith and Robert Lee, Handfuls on Purpose for Christian Workers and Bible Students, Series I–XIII (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1971), 199–200.
16. Arthur Walkington Pink, An Exposition of Hebrews (Swengel, PA: Bible Truth Depot, 1954), 276.17.
17. Walter A. Elwell and Barry J. Beitzel, “Backsliding,” in Baker Encyclopedia of the Bible (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1988), 1:251.
18. Spurgeon, The Spurgeon Study Bible: Notes (Nashville, TN: Holman Bible Publishers, 2017), 983, 986.
19. John Owen, The Works of John Owen, ed. William H. Goold (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, n.d.), 1:454–455.
20. The New King James Version (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1982).
21. Martin Manser, ed., Christian Quotations (Martin Manser, 2016). 
22. Paul S. Karleen, The Handbook to Bible Study: With a Guide to the Scofield Study System (New York: Oxford University Press, 1987), 312.
23. Ralph Martin, The Fulfillment of All Desire: A Guidebook for the Journey to God Based on the Wisdom of the Saints (Steubenville, OH: Emmaus Road Publishing, 2006), 172–173.

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The Key of Perfection

To better grasp the subject matter among the chapters in my reading this week, I went through the textbook material and watched Jobes’ companion video lectures about Hebrews scripture. I did this to get the structure and organization of the textbook and to understand the author’s views and methods. Jobes’ presentation of the subject matter in the book of Hebrews is a high-level topical survey about the core message in our reading. Meaning, she sets up a linear sequence of the more relevant Hebrews text, specifically, about the divine revelation of God the Father through Christ, the Christology of Hebrews, and salvation through Christ (soteriology). Each successive point is predicated upon another as necessary to set up and build further interest, comprehension, and acceptance. 

Jobes delivers her written and verbal material by categorical thought. She tracks the Hebrews subject matter in a way that matches what the Hebrews author intends to say to his/her readers. Jobes’ views are a walkthrough of how the surface of the English text reads.

Divine Revelation in Hebrews

What three contrasts does Hebrews make as it presents Jesus as the final revelation of God?

  • Contrast of Times – When
  • Contrast of Audience – Who
  • Contrast of Mode – How

Not concerning “what” or “why” until later in the text. Specifically about verses 1-3,

“God, after He spoke long ago to the fathers in the prophets in many portions and in many ways, in these last days has spoken to us in His Son, whom He appointed heir of all things, through whom also He made the world.” – Heb 1:3

Contrasts in Hebrews

Contrast of Times:long agoin these last days
Contrast of Audience:to the fathersto us
Contrast of Mode of Revelation:in the prophets in many portions and in many waysin His Son

The Christology of Hebrews (Ch.3)

Which two distinctive roles of Jesus do Hebrews present, and how are they related?

  1. Jesus as Son of God
  2. The Son as Priest of God

These roles are related by how they function. Namely, as Jobes writes, Jesus’ identity as Son of God and Great High Priest bears the most significance. As a type of priest of the Old Testament tabernacle who would enter the Holy of Holies, Jesus, the Son, appeared before God the Father by His ascension (i.e., a physical movement “up” through space-time into the presence of God as God is Spirit). After His crucifixion and resurrection, Jesus as Son of God ascended to appear before the Father to offer His sacrifice as acceptable and pleasing for the satisfactory atonement and redemption of humanity. While reconciliation to God is an act of restorative creation, the Son honors the Father as He returns to His seat of power with God and as God (“right hand of God” Heb 1:3c, anthropomorphically speaking). In contrast to Jobes’ view that the coronation occurred by ascension (Jobes, 110), other research papers offer a different perspective where the Kingly accession of Christ on Earth involves His coronation before resurrection and ascension. See Brettler,1 Marcus,2 and Shelton.3

The Soteriology of Hebrews

On what basic concept is soteriology in Hebrews grounded?

Without separate reference to the ordo solutis, Jobes adheres to the method of redemption as the purification of sins written about in the Hebrews text (Heb 1:3b). The purification of sins among people redeemed is the saving work of Christ (Jobes, 118). This is the soteriology of Hebrews as Jesus is the Son of God who serves as Messianic and Kingly Priest who purifies the sins of those across covenants which are of Christ and given to the Father. More specifically, those who were “to the fathers and to us” (Heb 1:1-2).

Jobes makes reference to a paper entitled “Perfection and Eschatology in Hebrews” as it is about Christ’s role as Mediator (Heb 8:6, 9:15, 12:24). As the Son of God (Heb 1:5), Jesus became the perfect author of salvation for bringing “sons to glory” (Heb 2:10) as High Priest through His suffering. What Jesus obtained for His people (justification) is what the Spirit applies to them (sanctification). This is what Jobes meant by “pioneer” and “perfector” in reference to the Silva paper linked above. In the paper, F.F. Bruce defines “perfection” as access to God. As made possible through Christ, the perfect Mediator, but it intuitively seems that F.F. Bruce could have said “perfection” correlates to access (not defines it). My assumption was this: to make perfect means to render without blemish. However, Jesus, already perfect morally, became the perfect Mediator by role and function.

Jesus as Perfect Mediator

The purpose of Mediator is Prophet, Priest, and King. All of them together constitute Jesus as Mediator. See Galatians 3:19 as Moses was a type of mediator. After Jesus’ accession as coronated King, Jesus’ emergent status as Priest (Heb 5:6) rendered Him the perfect Mediator. The role of coronated King is subordinate to Jesus’ recognized and perfected status as Mediator (Heb 5:6) who became begotten (to become an agent or Son). So, best I can tell, while He was God with divine attributes, He became King by accession, then became High Priest through crucifixion, and thereafter became perfected Mediator by His suffering and appearance before God the Father. As Jesus was before the Father in Heaven, He functions as Mediator (High Priest, King of Kings, and Prophet). 

Where I’m puzzled by what Jobes wrote is the difference between an earthly coronation and heavenly exaltation. I’ve understood that Jesus was coronated as King (royalty over subjects) to attain rulership of the Kingdom of God (“by way of the sea”; Isa 9:1, Matt 4:15, and “repent the kingdom of Heaven is at hand”; Matt 4:17). I’m beginning to suspect that Jesus’ ascension as King of the Kingdom of God (on Earth) is a copy and shadow of His better ascension as King of the Kingdom of Heaven. 

Jesus was anointed King at John’s baptism. He then was led into the wilderness by the Holy Spirit to overcome a foe (temptation of Satan). After that, He was coronated as King and so named several times (by mockery and parody) to become ruler of the Kingdom of God on Earth (copy and shadow of Kingdom of Heaven). Remember, “my kingdom is not of this world” during the trial before Pilate. The Kingdom of God was where His people would go during the second Exodus as they were born again of the Spirit after Pentecost. These stages were the ancient Israelite tripartite pattern of accession followed by Saul, David, Solomon, and others before Christ. Through this pattern of accession, and His Priesthood, Jesus would lead His people back to the Father as Mediator, where His kingship was of integral necessity. 

Since the human status of King is inferior or subordinate to His role as Messiah, the chief office He held was as the perfect Mediator between God and humanity. He functions as Priest between God the Father and humanity as an exalted Mediator in Heaven. Jesus was coronated King of the Kingdom of God on Earth, just as He is coronated King of the Kingdom of Heaven. 

________________
Marc Zvi Brettler – God Is King: Understanding an Israelite Metaphor, vol. 76, Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Supplement Series (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1989), 51.
2 Joel Marcus, “Crucifixion as Parodic Exaltation” Journal of Biblical Literature, vol. 125, no. 1, 2006, pp. 73–87.
W. Brian Shelton, “An Ancient Israelite Pattern of Kingly Accession in the Life of Christ,” Trinity Journal 25, no. 1 (2004): 72.


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