From What?
What "saved" actually means
From what?
Simple answer, sin, guilt, spiritual death, and eternal separation from God. The bible tells us we're born under the power of sin and headed for judgment (Romans 3:23, 6:23). "Saved" means that sin penalty has been paid and that relationship with God has been restored, now and forever.
Restored to what?
The bible tells us we are alive again, a new life, of forgiveness, and adoption as God’s child, with the help of the indwelling Holy Spirit, and the promise of the resurrection to come.
How does the change happen?
The Bible teaches that no one saves themselves. It is always God’s initiative. God's prevenient grace draws first. The Holy Spirit convicts a person of sin, righteousness, and judgment (John 16:8). It's a divine tug at the things we allow to rein us in. People often describe this as a growing restlessness, an awareness of their own brokenness, or hearing the gospel in a way that suddenly feels personal.
If this divine tug never happened NO ONE would be saved. No one would even want to be saved. And in truth, most people aren't going around wanting to be saved.
So God initiates the process. And the person responds. They might continue in their rebellious ways, or they submit. The submissive response is usually described in three overlapping movements.
Saving Faith / Trust:
Believing that Jesus’ death on the cross was payment for their sins and that His resurrection proves He can give new life. Not simply a mere intellectual agreement, it’s fully trusting Him with your eternal destiny.
Saving Repentance:
You stop justifying your sin and agree with God that it’s wrong. This is the beginning of submission, it's a deliberate turning away from the old self.
Saving Surrender / Submission:
Many Christians will tell you this was the exact moment the lights came on, when they finally said, "Not my will, but Yours." I would say the same, only for me the exact words were "I don't want to be you anymore Lord, I'm done trying."
You yield your will to God’s. Jesus is no longer just "Savior"; He becomes "Lord" (Romans 6:13). This submission is not a side effect issue; it is the human side of the transaction. The Bible calls it "receiving Christ" (John 1:12), "believing," "repenting," and "yielding."
Different groups emphasize different words, but they all point to the same heart posture.
So God initiates it, drawing us into His grace, and we respond in submission if we've received Christ. And then God seals it. At that moment of genuine faith + repentance + submission, the Bible says several instantaneous things occur.
You are "born again"/regenerated (John 3:3-7).
Your sins are forgiven and forgotten (Colossians 2:13-14).
The Holy Spirit comes to live inside you (Romans 8:9).
And you are adopted into God’s family, sealed forever in heaven (Ephesians 1:13-14).
Is it a one-time event or a process?
Yes to both.
The initial surrender is like signing the contract; the rest of your life is learning to live it out, becoming the light of Christ, working out the salvation he intends for you, emptying yourself and being filled with His Spirit. It's an active mission and becomes the ministry He creates in you.
His purpose, His Grace, His plan; your submission, your obedience, your love and devotion for Him.
He chose the plan and was willing to die for it. It’s not a formula; it’s a breaking and a yielding that echoes through out Scripture.
That’s the gospel in miniature. The cross wasn’t Plan B after we failed; it was the eternal decree of His love.
Think about what the apostle Paul said:
Essentially "I’m done trying"
Philippians 3:4-9
"though I could have confidence in my own effort if anyone could...For his sake I have discarded everything else, counting it all as garbage, so that I could gain Christ"
"counting it all as garbage"
It's ALL garbage (skubalon).
Religion is like dog poop...avoid stepping in it, it stinks and we're walking around stinking up everything because we can't see that we stepped in it. We track it into every room; conversations turn judgmental, relationships get burdened by unspoken score-keeping, worship feels like a duty checklist, and even our prayers can reek of it, "Look how hard I’m trying, God."
And sometimes you gotta scrape it off, wash it clean, and maybe even hang your shoes out to dry. Let the sunlight and a fresh breeze free those shoes from the pervasive stink. That’s the daily reality of grace at work. It’s not a one-time power-washing; it’s ongoing maintenance because the old flesh keeps producing more "poop".
Now here's the tricky (sticky) part.
We don’t scrape it off in our own strength to earn cleanliness. Christ already did the ultimate cleansing on the cross; He took the full stench of our sin and filth upon Himself.
That initial surrender ("I’m done trying" ) hands over those filthy shoes to Him. And He (who is worthy) doesn’t just hose them down; He replaces them entirely with HIS OWN righteousness (Philippians 3:9).
And when the stink (self-effort) starts creeping back in, disguised as zeal, what pulls you back? When the dogs start whispering, "You’re not doing enough," "Prove your gratitude," "Add this layer to stay secure." Before long, the shoes feel heavy again, caked in performance poop, and the fragrance shifts from Christ’s righteousness to our own sweaty striving.
So what pulls you back?
Maybe a verse?
Maybe time alone in prayer and meditation on God's word?
For me, it's daily meditation and commentary on His word, then being a doer of that word in prison ministry. Going and sharing the good news behind those prison walls. That's where I go to avoid the dog poop.
And yes they have dog's in prison. But you don't make eye contact with them. You avoid them altogether. You just go and listen listen love love. Just being tangible transcendence. No manufacturing transcendence, just showing up yielded, letting the Spirit do the heavy lifting. Realizing that without Him I'm nobody. Oh sure, as far as God is concerned, I'm His precious jewel, but in the grand scheme of His things, without Him I'm nobody.
Amen?