The sum of my beliefs. Do God’s will, or wanting to do God’s will. That is my core belief. I believe that God is just, righteous, merciful, and loving.
My religion isn’t ‘all inclusive’ in that anyone can believe what they want or all paths lead to God. But it isn’t formulaic either, where you must believe this, speak this and do this and you are saved. I would wager if you are attempting to follow a formula, you might not be saved. When you follow a formula or a recipe, it is because you are wanting an end result. If I can do this and this, I get this.
Christians know to well, and harp far too much (in my opinion) on how works cannot save us (to which I emphatically agree). However my issue is when they instead say, Jesus is what saves us, you must believe in the death and resurrection of Jesus, ask Him to forgive of your sins (and hopefully some add, and ask Jesus to be your King). I think the last is really the only ‘requirement’ (for lack of better term) but unfortunately too many use it as empty words spoken, or lack the knowledge/wisdom of what those words actually mean. And some might ( I would wager many that I do know and can clearly see the Spirit of God in them, possibly more than myself) be ‘saved. But I believe what saves them is different then what they proclaim is what saves them.
I don’t want to go off on too many tangents, but the word “saved” is such an ambiguous term and almost cliché. Saved from what? I again, believe many Christian know the true answer, but unfortunately that is not what many of them will speak. It would take many questions and prodding to reveal that they doctrine they claim to cling to, isn’t what they believe.
Some say we are saved from hell, which they don’t believe, because that would belittle God to just being a fire blanket. Merely preventing us from eternal harm.
Some say we are saved from the wrath of God. That isn’t true, we are enemies of Him (we refuse to acknowledge His rightful status as ultimate dependence on accomplishing anything and all credit for accomplishments), He is not our enemy, and there is not a SINGLE verse in the Bible that shows God has any malice towards anyone ever!
They some argue the “wrath of God is righteous” or “God has to punish sin”. Which is probably one of things I probably disagree with the most. God is not bound by rules, His hand is not forced to do anything. Or “holiness demands sin be punished”. What?
It appears to me that the OT is catering to the flesh. That is what man wanted and God was showing us that no matter what you do, you cannot win in the flesh.
We are mixing the flesh and the spirit like old wine in a new wineskin, it doesn’t work. Our flesh believed that power was Jesus taking Jerusalem back in force, power was having ultimate influence through direct force of man. Jesus showed us that great power is love, and love comes from God, love is the most powerful force as God is the most powerful force, and humility and servitude is power. Because humility and servitude shows love, which shows God, which is true power.
Another word of the flesh is “life”. How it is a blessing of God, but we can do with it what we want, but be careful, you can get punished if you do the wrong thing. Like the wages of sin is death, like God punishes us with death because of a sin. If you are not living to glorify God with full dependence on God for achieving that, that you are living. That is to say that if you reject God’s help, don’t think you need it, or take any credit for anything, or if you do something God told you not to do, you are no longer glorifying Him. If you aren’t glorify Him, you are dead. That is the wages of sin. It is a truth. Life itself IS glorifying God, and if one is not to glorify Him, one is not living, if one is not living, one is dead. This is like all righteous deeds are like filthy rags. A filthy rag is pointless, it is purposeless, it isn’t a rag, a rag is something that can be cleaned with. If you can’t clean with it, it is not a rag. If you cannot glorify God, then you are not a life, a life is something to glorify God with, it is a blessing from God to be able to glorify Him. This is why all deeds (apart from doing Gods glory) are filthy, they are pointless. Giving to the needy, helping the poor, helping the widow, upholding justice….if you don’t give God the glory for them, they are pointless. We exist, everything happens for His glory, and if it doesn’t, it has no purpose for happening. Though God can and does use bad people for His glory. If a selfish man gives for man’s glory, but the one who receives knows that the gift they received was from God (whether the bad man wants to admit it or not, it is the truth), then God received glory from it. But it wasn’t the deed that was good, but God that was good. Just as when a good person does a good deed, and gives God glory for it, they give God glory because it wasn’t the deed that was good, nor did the good deed come from them, rather from God.
Another word of the flesh is “justice”. In the OT, God tells man to seek and to uphold justice. David writes about it frequently in the Psalms “Break the teeth of the wicked”, “Declare them guilty”, “Banish them for their many sins” ect. I get it, David was a man after God’s own heart with his heart of flesh, that is what you got. That is kind of like when Jesus says, there is no man on earth greater than John the Baptist, BUT, the least in the kingdom is greater than he. Basically saying, the flesh is never good enough, if you are in the Spirit, you are always ahead of the flesh. So we can’t use OT quotes and claim that God wants us (as members of His heavenly/Spiritual kingdom, to abide by that.
Example of is when the Jews were instructed by the law of God, the very words/commands of God, to stone an adulterer. This OT command has the same bearing as “man seeking justice for the aflicted”. And Jesus reveals to us the Spirit, the truth, and shows mercy. Also, there are times when a man is wronged, and they could seek justice, but instead chose to forgive, to show mercy. Surely man is not more merciful than God, the author of mercy? Who is to say that mercy isn’t Justice, mercy isn’t the right thing to do? Maybe Jesus followed all laws and imparted justice that day He said “Go, and sin no more”.
The flesh has this sick twisted view on power, justice, and punishment. The Spiritual definition of punishment is not a requirement for one to suffer (as it appears the flesh is). Rather the intent is to correct or to fix the wrong doing. Once one stops the doing of wrong, truly stops, not just pauses or hides the wrongdoing so as to avoid punishment. But truly repents, is able to see the err of their ways, is in deep mourning over having done those things and never wants to do those things again. THIS is repentance, and really only God knows when true repentance occurs, though we have a few hints that could help is probably guess the truth or not, only God really knows.
Its like someone on a diet, they fail often, the can’t resist the smell, and they fail. BUT, they really hate it, they want to diet with all their might, and they might never reach the goal they hoped for, but you do see improvements. Just as a college graduate cannot or should not be little a 6 year old for not understanding algebra. That 5 year old knows his numbers now! That is great, they used to not even know them. Do you think God would like to see you look down on a 5 year old of his because you are a college graduate now? Who gave you the skills, resources, and experiences to learn what you learned? Or many you don’t even know anything about numbers, but you know enough about another field to know that a 5year old is not a master mathematician, so you belittle them for not being where they might one day be.
Back to punishement. People quote Prov 11:21 and say, the wicked will not go unpunished. Yet what does God Himself not do to the Ninevites? Jonah relays the message of God to them, to REPENT, or I will punish. They do repent and God spares them. Is God violating His “holy law”? I thought he HAD to punish them though? Once the bad/wrong/incorrect thing is no longer being done, there is no need to punish or fix or correct as there is nothing to correct of. It is absolutely true that (active) sin must be punished, no that person sinning must not suffer for their past deeds, rather that active sinning needs to be stopped. Many times in the OT, God seems to wipe that person from the earth. That is one way to stop those deeds from occurring. The heart that did those deeds wasn’t fixed, but the deeds can no longer be done on earth. Then it seems in the NT, that Gods plan is to reconcile, to transform the heart, and THAT is how He stops those bad deeds from occurring. We don’t know what happened to the Ninivites later on. Did they repent because they were in avoidance of punishment? And when it seemed the punishment when away, they went back to sin? Or did they truly want the will of God done?
Speaking of punishment, that reminds me of another word of the flesh, forgiveness. The flesh finds it so difficult to forgive? Why? Because the great deceiver has a hold on them, he has them convinced to hold on to that hate, to grudge, to have a negative bias towards someone based on their past. The Spirit doesn’t even have forgiveness in that it is a difficult thing to do, it is truth. God holds no negative bias towards anyone, His future decisions are not based on the actions of our past. In the flesh we call this forgiving, but to the Spirit, this is life, it is love, it is God! Some are so amazed at how God could forgive, only because they are looking through the eyes of flesh were forgiveness is somehow a challenge or a difficult thing for God to overcome, it isn’t. God doesn’t need to dig deep, to try hard to forgive, it is automatic. BUT, forgiveness is a two-way street. If the one side cannot or will not repent, then the forgiveness can be offered, but it won’t be accepted. Just like I can give you a gift, but if you don’t take it, it is not received. God not only ‘just’ forgives us from His side, but even THAT isn’t enough, He wants us so bad to receive that forgiveness, to repent and live, that He orchestrates our entire human history around the cross showing His love and desire for us to repent so that we can accept His forgiveness!
Somehow, Christians treat forgiveness from God, as if it requires a formula. This is probably from the OT, where God did basically put a formula in place, called a covenant (but rememeber, old win should not be put in new wineskins). The covenant basically said, don’t sin and He will bless you, but if you sin, His blessing will be removed, He will even punish you. Again, why punish? To make them suffer for their actions of the past? By no means! This is only a belief/idea/characteristic of the flesh. Rather to fix what was being done, that is why a punishment is necessary that is why a good Father punishes those He loves (which is all of humanity). God has always been the one that forgives and He forgives instantly and effortlessly, but for a small amount of time and for a specific small group, to a covenant that the Israelites agreed upon (they could have said no) God decided to forgive them through this ‘formula’ of animal sacrifice. But it was NEVER the blood of the animal that was magical or special, it never provided forgiveness, GOD provided forgiveness through the MEANS of a sacrifice! This is who Jesus was, God’s perfect and final means of forgiveness through the loving sacrifice of His only Son. But it is God that is forgiving us, not some ‘magical blood’! God is the one that provides food for us and shelter, though He decided to use the means of money/currency as a way to directly provide for us. Should we worship the money, as the money is providing for us? Of course not! God provides for us. Should we worship the animals that died for our forgiveness? Should we worship Jesus for His blood? I guess it gets a little tricky on that last one, I am not saying not to worship Jesus by any means. In heaven the angels sing worthy is the lamb that was slain. But we should not worship the act of it, rather the provider behind it. Glorify God for the amazing means He went through to maneuver all of time and history to come to the culmination on the cross, that demonstrates for all to see of the unmeasurable lengths that God will go to, to redeem His people, to demonstrate His love!
I would understand if a non-Christian heard the Gospel and was amazed by forgiveness of God, but of a Christian to be amazed by it baffles me. Only the flesh would think it that forgiveness is a difficult task or a burden. This is how/why Jesus frees us from our burdens. When we live in the Spirit and the Spirit lives in us, forgiveness is not something we need help from God to give, it becomes as normal as taking a breath, it is automatic. God is sovereign, why would allowing a negative bias towards someone based on their past actions benefit us, how would it glorify God? We exist to glorify Him, ask the Spirit to help you let it go, and not through some overcoming/possessive strength, rather through truth, real strength, through God, Jesus, Truth, that forgiveness is automatic!
I was reading Exodus 22 the other day and I was a bit lost on some of it (as I was looking at it through the Spirit and not the flesh). Why is God demanding if a man steals an ox, repay 5 oxen for and ox? I think like much of OT, the heart of God is difficult (possibly impossible) to understand fully without the Spirit. But I think God is getting at restoration. Sure when the man realizes the err of his ways, he repents, no longer to steal, but is repentance enough? That man is also commanded to restore. Not just 1 for 1, but a man of true repentance will gladly give 4 time, or whatever it takes to restore, like Zacchaeus giving back 4 fold of what he stole. The heart of a truly repentant man wants to go above and beyond to restore.
But some things can’t be restored. What if you kill a man? Can you bring him back? You can repent, but nothing you can do can bring him back. But a truly repentant and mournful man will offer to serve that man with their life. Giving the life for another, the greatest act of love. At first when I read that, I would think that dying for a man is what that meant (and it slightly does). But I think more so that it means living for that man, devoting all actions of your life to benefit or help that man, and if it comes to giving your life, you will gladly do as you have already devoted your life and waking moments for that person, dying for them is not an isolated act, rather a continuance of what you have already been doing. Yes Jesus did die for us, but He also lived for us, in showing us how to live (true life in His kingdom), what our purpose is, and was willing to and continued this process on the cross. The cross is not an isolated event, Jesus was not merely born to die, or else he would have as a baby or a kid. But more than just live for us, secondary to that was He lived for God. He gave/devoted His life to the will of the Father, which was in agreeance of His love for us, because They have the same will.
The wages of sin is death. That ambiguous verse drives me crazy how people use that to mean spiritual death, or death in hell and at the same time a physical death interchangeably. Before “the fall” we were supposed to live forever or did somehow. But there was a fruit that gave us eternal life. Why does a person who can live forever need to have eternal life? Like that we sinned, that wage is death spiritually, but it also means that we lost our eternal life and that we will physically die someday. But now it is spiritual again, because now when we die physically, or spirit goes to hell eternally (we have eternal life again somehow?) and that wage of sin was death, so it sounds like all we have to do is die physically and that wage is paid? Or no, that is a spiritual death, so that spirit must die. But would dying spiritually make that debt right? I don’t want to digress too far, but the logical inconstancies of many Christians confuse and turn off the outside atheist looking in. It becomes this game of formulas and who can interpret what right and it because way more difficult and not helpful that what it could or should be.
So back to restoration. I believe that we were always meant to be physically mortal and die, and life is the Spirit. When God breathed the breath of life in Adam, he was given a living spirit. The living spirit can only live when it is doing the will of God, for it you attempt to do anything apart from that will, or take credit for anything He helped you do, your spirit dies, it is rejecting God, it is rejecting life, the wages of sin is spiritual death. So lets say we repent from that sin, truly. Even though God was the one wronged on this deal, He still wants restoration, He wants our dead Spirits to be brought back to life/restored. And with the same utmost fervencies that a truly repentant man has, the same unwavering focus and mission to do whatever it takes to restore, kind of mind set, to give back five or much greater than what was taken, God sends Himself, best part of Himself, in the form of His Son. He reveals the truth to man, the heart of all the laws, He lives the heart of all the laws, shows us the actual spiritual meaning of power, justice, mercy, and gives/devotes His life to us to God, for us, to glorify God. He has also been developing this through history, when He redeemed and restored the Israelites, gave them the laws and mentioned sacrifices, priests and atonement, and guilt riddance. The blood symbolized cleansing, the scape goat symbolized no more guilt from the past, the priest symbolized union, joining of God and man, God being willing to meet with man, that man could not get to God of themselves (of course man can do nothing of themselves) but how God provides a mediator so man can come to God as flawed. That was because He wanted His Son to atone, to cleanse us, to mediate for us.
God could have snapped His finger and brought our spirits back to life, restored us that way. But chances are we would not repent then, and He wants repentance and restoration. And in the way He chose to restore us, He brings about the greatest repentance. It is God’s kindness that lead us to repentance. We basically saw God give man a way to restore with the killing of an animal sacrifice and man abused and perverted it to the point where God even says “I have no pleasure in the blood of lambs”. God always wanted our repentance, but we could not be brought to eternal repentance without the kindness of how He decided to restore us. And showing He has the power to raise from the dead when He raises Jesus from the dead, He also shows He has to power to restore our dead spirits and brings them to life. In that process, He brought about repentance, and restoration.
That is a bit long winded and basically agrees with what most Christians agree on, but I hesitate to focus too much, least you attempt to repent or ask God to restore again in a formulaic way of trying to attain something.
Want the will of God. Know that He is the creator of everything, and as such, all glory belongs to Him. Know we were created to glorify Him, but we cannot do that of our own, but must depend on Him to help us glorify Him. In those simple beliefs, that will lead you to understanding that anything apart from those things is a sin, sin killed our spirit, God restored our spirit through the life, death, and resurrection of His son. In wanting to honor God in all you do, in asking Him to help you to do that, He gives you the Holy Spirit to help you. But what does that mean? Does God posses you? Do you just lie back and He does things for you, you don’t have to try? You trying for Him to be glorified and giving Him credit for helping you is how He helps you. I know that sounds like circular logic so I will provide a analogy.
Lets just say you won the best baseball (insert favorite sport here) player ever award, you have the highest batting stats, fielding stats and pitching stats of all time, twice as good as the best in those individual fields bests. You were the ones that hit the homeruns, YOU were the one that threw all those strikeouts right? Who was your coach? Who taught you how to throw a ball or swing a bat? It was all because of your coach, and if you didn’t have that coach, you would have never even been good enough for the JV team. You were trying your best, because you wanted everyone to know how good your COACH made you. But it doesn’t matter how great of a coach you had if you never tried and laid on your couch all day. You must do you best, but speak with your coach daily, asking for tips, realizing you could always be better, and thank your coach and give them credit when you succeed and know you would be nothing without your coach. But know no amount of your trying would amount to anything had you not had that coach. Your coach saved you, not your effort, but thanks to that coach, you do provide a fantastic thing for others to see, and you can give your coach all that glory, so they may see and ask your coach if He can help them too. But you want them not to ask the coach to make them the best or better player than you, rather to let them be fantastic so they coach can receive more glory and more flock to that coach.
Back to forgiveness and why I can’t fathom why most Christians believe in narrative that Jesus took the wrath of God on the cross. Now I do believe Jesus would have been willing to, as He was willing to do whatever the Fathers will was. But making humans suffer for their past actions is not what God does, He does the opposite! He only looks towards our future, and wants it to be the most optimum. That is why Jesus came, to give us life to the fullest, not to make people suffer for the past mistakes. But I will bring up a Matthew 8:3, where Jesus touched a leper on purpose. A Jew could not touch a leper, least he become unclean and then must cleanse before entering into the temple. So a Priest would avoid touching one at all costs. But Jesus our great High Priest, touched him on purpose. But when touching this man, did Jesus become defiled? No, the leper actually became clean. Some say that Jesus ‘absorbed’ this man’s leprosy, like He ‘absorbed’ our sins on the cross. If this was a foreshadow, the defiled state never occurred to Jesus from the leper, so why would the sins of man have defiled Jesus? Jesus had to be defiled from the sins, because God poured His wrath on Jesus for those sins He bore (according to the common narrative as I understand it). But Jesus would not have ‘held’ onto the sin, just as Jesus never ‘held on’ to the leprosy, so now God was pouring our wrath on Jesus even though Jesus had no sin on Him? Or some say that “my God, how has though forsaken me”. This is known from Jesus’ saying on the cross, and some think that God forsaken Jesus in pouring His wrath on Him, or they say “God turned His face away” from Jesus. But an interesting thing is that is scripture Jesus is quoting, from Psalms 22, the first verse. I have heard that at times Jews would say the first of a Psalm to ‘point/allude to’ (like saying “Luke, I am your Father” reminds you of Star Wars, the Empire Strikes Back) the entire Psalm. In that very Psalm that Jesus refers to, there is references to the prophesy of this very crucifixion moment. Also, further down if verse 24, it says the exact opposite of the above narrative. It says “He has NOT hidden His face from Him”. “But has listed to His cry for help”. That is what Jesus is doing, as His entire life was an example to us, even here, Jesus was saying, when He needed help, He asked God for help. The one who healed sick, opened the eyes of the blind, cast our demons, calmed the winds, He did rely on ‘His’ powers to save Him or give Him strength, but GOD! Jesus was saying, this is really hard, God please help me, and thank you for never turning your face from me. “declaring to a people yet unborn, HE HAS DONE IT!” After Jesus prayed for God to help Him finish, Jesus cried out, that It is finished! It is oozing psalms 22 and it has nothing to do with God pouring wrath on Jesus nor God turning His face on Jesus.
So what about the verses that say “He bore our sins”, if I say Jesus never ‘held onto’ our sins? I don’t think Jesus ‘magically absorbed’ our sins, just like He didn’t absorb leprosy, nor did the scape goats literally carry the sin and guilt of those who confessed away, that was symbolism. Jesus did bear our sins, in the sense that I think it is possible that He had awareness of our sins. Satan was tempting Him, saying, you see the sin this man did to you, how they reject you and your Father, they aren’t worth it. This sin, that sin, this sin ect. Bearing the weight, having the knowledge of all of our sins, yet STILL deciding to die for us, for the will of the Father. That is a weight none could handle, especially without the help of God like Jesus received when praying for help. For if Jesus was not aware of our sins, the horrendous ways in how we perverted Gods perfect world, then dying for us might be easier. But knowing what we did, bearing the full weight of our sins, and making that choice, THAT is would have been hard.
What about verses like how God became sin for us so we could become His righteousness? This could be saying Jesus became flesh like us, and He did it so we could become righteousness like Him, that His kindness would lead us to repentance, which would restore us and cleanse us. Maybe I am wrong on that? I don’t have all the answers, I don’t know why scripture says what it says, I could not even begin to explain many books or chapters or even verses. I do read and hope to understand God better, but my faith is not built on my understanding of the perfect or the right formula, it is much more simple. There is no single verse that says what I say, probably because verses can be interpreted differently, but if you look at the overall logical scriptures and words of God, all I see is a God that loves us, ad God that does not hold our past against us, a God that wants us to live most abundantly, a life that can only be lived abundantly with His Spirit inside us, with the Truth inside us, a life that can only understand that Truth through repentance, repentance that only comes through His love and kindness, because of course all things return back to Him, and He deserved all the glory for all things! That is my core ‘religious’ belief, to do and want to do the will of God. As you see I can expand from there, but that is the core, and it greatly disturbs/saddens me to see any “denomination” within the church. You have seen my logic as to why I don’t believe in the “God turning His face on Jesus” but you probably have other verses that support that narrative. I will gladly serve others with you, if you do and want to do the will of the Father. I don’t care if you want to baptize with sprinkles or by immersion, if you want to dance in church, or remain still, serve our Father with me please, glorify Him, and it is all good! I don’t want to start a ‘new religion’, but I almost want to so that I can start one with no denominations, why do we have such division? Pride that your interpretation of a verse or passage is more correct than theirs? I don’t care if in ‘my church’ if you want to explain to others your logic, and why you think something should be someway, and if you convince them of such, even if it is opposite of mine. If you can serve with me, I will still gladly serve with you! And what do I call this ‘new religion’? I believe that I am a follower of Christ, but Christian is already taken. I don’t care what it is called, I just want to see Christianity turned to it, I want to see the children of God glorifying Him together in unity!
I am not trying to gain anything, I don’t want any result whether it is from doing good deeds or letting someone else do it for me. All I want to gain is for glory to be given to God, perhaps for others to see that so they will too desire for God to receive all glory. I don’t want to be saved and going to heaven, I don’t want to convert you or have you saved and going to heaven. Not saved from hell, saved from the wrath of God or saved from dying. I am already in my eternity, and in that eternal life I have is to honor God with all my strength, mind, and heart, while in this flesh and when my flesh expires. That is to be saved from despair, for the lies of the deceiver, and yes I want that more than anything for everyone too.
To clarify as it may seem that I am minimizing what Jesus did if you are to assume I am saying that was unnecessary, and that ‘salvation’ comes through good deeds (if that is what you interpret as God’s will) and that couldn’t be further from the truth. I do believe it was God’s will for Jesus to die for us “It was God’s will to crush Him”. But my faith is not in this act of Jesus, rather in God who provided a way of salvation for us through this act.
If I saw a man hitting a hole in 1 on every hole in golf ever time he hit the ball, I would know without a doubt, that man is the greatest golfer that ever lived. Though until that man actually plays on the professional course and wins awards and trophies, no one else would know how good he was. I might look the fool if I try to convince you of how great at golf this man is even though he never played on a professional tournament, but I have seen what he did, so I believe. But forgive me if I don’t often point to the trophies when proclaiming how great this man was, rather I just point to the relationship I had with him, the truths that I already knew of how good he was prior to any professional demonstration. It might even seem like I am belittling those trophies or his professional performance (which I am not). However the reason I do find is troublesome that there are those that insist on those trophies as the only way we can know this person what the greatest golfer ever and use those trophies as bragging rights of ownership (as a kid, the whole “my dad can beat up your dad” type of pride).
That is like faith of those prior to Jesus. People like Cornelius of Acts, a non-Jew Itialian Regiment soldier, who was God-fearing prior to Jesus’ death. They knew God would provide, they knew He was loving, they knew their acceptance by God was only because of who God was and nothing they could do. It was as if only they have known that individually (as if God revealed this to them in their humility), their was no proof of it. Until Jesus came from heaven, born of a virgin, lived the perfect example, explained the Truth to us, and then died for us and in obedience to the Father, and in accordance with the prophesies, rose from the dead. Now we have a public proof of the goodness of God, we can point to Christ as the love of God, the provisions of God, the acceptance of God that had nothing to do with our works. THIS is who Jesus is, this is how we should refer to Him as, the Lamb of God that takes away the sin of the world, IS the Lamb of God who proves the already known Truths of God that God takes away or provides a way for sins to be taken from us. Speaking of Jesus should be speaking of God. This is why I also don’t believe that Jesus saved us from the wrath of God, as Jesus didn’t need to save us from God, Jesus is the goodness of God How can the goodness of God exist to save us from the wrath of God?
When I stand in front of the judgement seat of God and God asks why should I let you in, what shall I say? Because I followed the formula you gave us, the formula is Jesus blood forgives our sin and clothes us in righteousness. Almost as an “aha” like we pulled one over on God or “beat the system”. As if we forced Him to let us in now? I think those will hear “depart from me, I never knew you”.
Rather I will say, you shouldn’t let me in (that is to say that I deserve to not be let in and no formula I can say or belief I had or anything I could do or believe in should merit my admittance), but I see you have already let me in, and I am thankful for that. Because it is nothing I could ever do to get in, but you provided a way for me in, you loved me so much that you sent your son to die for me and atone for my sins as you decreed, but not just to “let me in” or cleanse my past and future sins, but to reveal the Truths of God to me, to show me the way, to give me your Spirit and reveal the Truth to me. The Truth that you are God, and I am not, that I exist to glorify you, and that all glory and credit belong to you. That I am a sinful man and need you to glorify you and nothing of my own doing (if i was to take credit for the actions) could bring you any glory, but everything I try to do if I succeed must have glory brought to you as you have blessed us with this gift of life to bring you glory in the gifts you gave us. You gave me life, you gave me purpose, and I am honored to be able to honor you for eternity knowing these Truths.
This is why I don’t like formulas. You shouldn’t want a result/achievement and you shouldn’t appeal to others to want that either. Rather you should want all glory to go to God, and should inspire others to want glory to go to God as well. THAT to me is salvation. That is life, that is TRUTH, that is JESUS! It begins the second this truth is revealed to you by the Spirit and continues on this earth until our flesh wastes away.