THE HOUSE OF OUR SALVATION
A CONSTRUCTION ANALOGY ABOUT THE MIRACLE OF SALVATION
by
Book Details
About the Book
“Salvation”,
“getting saved”, “being saved” and “born again” are all key descriptive terms
that believers use to describe what has happened to them regarding their
relationship with the God of creation.
What does salvation mean to you?
How do you define what happened?
Is it really as simple as John
This
book is written to focus on these questions and inspire each reader contemplate
the depth and beauty of the miraculous gift of salvation. Salvation is
miraculous with regards to who receives it, to how it is accomplished and to
what is done with it by each recipient.
This construction analogy is presented to help give the reader a clearer
picture of what God has accomplished when He saves anyone from their sin.
About the Author
For
those who are author credential checkers, you may find this short description
somewhat unusual. Here’s why. Readers of a book such as this, about a
theological topic, will most always check the author’s credentials and, in so
doing, will usually make a pre-judgment about what they anticipate the author’s
bias will be on the book’s subject matter.
Also, it is common for authors, who expound in the realm of theology, to
be engaged professionally in some way to the field, as a pastor or professor,
and therefore to have a resume list of theological degrees and positions held
to show their readers. I have none of
these to offer you, but I think that this fact will serve a beneficial purpose. That purpose is the avoidance of any
pre-judging or pre-bias formation on your part, prior to reading this
book. It is my hope that, based on what
I do tell you about myself, that you decide the merits of this book based on it’s content alone.
Everyone has a bias and my mine will emerge from what I write. Let the
degree to which you agree or disagree with this construction analogy, and the
conclusions that are drawn, come from what you read.
What
I will tell you about myself is that, I have been a born again believer for 26
years and in that time I listened to and have sat under many teachers of the
Word. Some of these have been very sound
in their theology, while others have been ......well,
less than sound. Of course anyone using
the term “sound” in this context understands that it is a relevant usage. Your definition of this term may likely be
different from mine. I am not a pastor
or a seminary graduate. I have college degrees, but not in theology. I have been a church elder for about 13
years. God has given me a particular
interest in the doctrine of salvation and how varied the understanding of it is
within Christ‘s church. In the fall of
2001, I felt led of the Holy Spirit to sit down and, drawing upon my vocational
background in construction, to try and create the salvation building analogy
that follows. I am a first time author,
so forgive any of my writing form that you may find distracting.
While
I tried to rely upon God’s leading throughout the process, I know full well
about my own fallibility. This work is
not exempt from it. I have tried to support
every step of this analogy with Scripture and avoid personal preferences in my
conclusions. It says in 2 Peter 1:
20-21, that the initial prophecy of scripture is not a matter of private
interpretation, but was spoken by men who were moved by the Holy Spirit. But, when it comes to the study of the
completed Word of God, every believer has his or her own theology. The accuracy of each person’s theology is the
product of their personal degree of belief in the inerrancy of God’s Word and
their reliance upon the leading of the Holy Spirit to guide them into
truth. My point is that the writing of
the Bible was inerrant, but since it’s completion, the
study and understanding of it, by others, is, in a real sense, a matter of
personal interpretation. Every
believer’s growth in understanding the many messages within the Bible and of
any teaching about it, depends on their reading and hearing with a “Berean” attitude of “searching the Scriptures to see if
these things (what they read and hear) are so”.
This principle certainly applies to this book.
For
the reasons above, I have not used my own name as the author of this book
because I desire that your focus will be on any merit the book may have and not
on me. The author’s name that I have
chosen to use tells you all you need to know about me. If you desire to comment positively or
negatively about this book, you can do so through the publisher. Whether you agree or disagree with what I
write, it is my hope that your thinking about your own salvation will be
spurred and that your appreciation of it will be enhanced. To God be the glory.
Sincerely,
In Christ,
Justas
Iam