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Ep. 4 | The Fight Within, the Fight Without

June 19, 2026
00:00

Be Holy: How does God motivate Christians to greater holiness? Why is daily repentance so important? How can we totally surrender our lives to God?

Guest (Male): Welcome to the John Ankerberg Show Classics edition. For decades, we've been privileged to host esteemed scholars discussing a wide range of topics from apologetics and science to biblical prophecy and beyond. Join us as we revisit these timeless conversations and make them accessible to you wherever you are.

Dr. John Ankerberg: Are you a Christian who has placed your faith in Jesus Christ, but still struggle privately in your personal life with many different problems? Have you been surprised at how easy it is to still fall into sin? How does the Christian life work?

Have you discovered that as a Christian, you can know in your mind what God wants you to do, but your bodily desires can still lead you to give into sin in a moment's time? Why do Christians feel such strong temptations to sin after they have believed in Christ? Doesn't the Bible say that God will change a person who believes in Christ?

When and how does God give a Christian power to live victorious over his sinful desires, habits, and circumstances? If you have despaired of ever living a victorious Christian life, we invite you to listen to today's program. Our series is entitled "The Fight Within and the Fight Without."

God very plainly tells us in the Bible how every Christian can experience victory over the problems and sins of his or her life. He wants this for you. We invite you to stay tuned to find out how.

Welcome. We've been examining in the last few weeks God's solutions to the battles that Christians fight within, that is their own sinful desires and habits, and the fight without, circumstances, other people, the world, and temptation. This week, I want to talk to you about three of the most important questions any Christian could ask.

First, how does God lovingly motivate every Christian to progress in holiness? Second, why is daily repentance so important for all of us in living the Christian life? And third, why is totally surrendering our lives to God the only way to really experience life?

Now you don't hear a lot from preachers today concerning holiness, repentance, and total surrender to God. And it's not because you don't find a lot of information about these in Scripture. The Bible is loaded with information about these topics.

Most likely, the reason you don't hear anything about these topics is that it's not very popular to speak on holiness, repentance, and surrender to God. Sadly, the Christian church today seems to prefer hearing about success and positive feelings, getting health, getting wealth, freedom from care, good sex, and happy families.

In fact, let's take a test right now. Let me ask you this: How long has it been since you heard a sermon on holiness, repentance, or total surrender to God? Shall I guess? Well, stick with me today and listen. Take heart that if the God of the Bible calls us to holiness, true repentance, and totally surrendering ourselves to him, it must be for our good.

If you belong to him, then out of love and respect to God, at least listen to what he has to say. It may change your life. Well, let's begin with holiness. What is it? This summer, we spent two weeks away on a family vacation. My two sisters and their families, my mother, my wife, Darlene, my daughter, Michelle, and I all got together.

Well, every day for devotions, we told our five children, who ranged in age from 11 to 19, that they could pick any topic or question they wanted to talk about one day, and the next day it would be the adults' turn to pick a topic and so on through the two weeks.

Well, one day the question came up: "What is holiness?" Well, here's how old Uncle John answered this one. I put three glasses of water before them, just like this. And I said, if you had been outside playing volleyball, and you were hot and sweaty, and you came in, which of these three glasses of water would you choose to drink from?

Well, in one glass, I put some water that I had taken from a lagoon. It was slimy, green, and dirty. It looked and smelled terrible. In the second glass, I put some grape juice and milk and then mustard, ketchup, black pepper, oregano, and castor oil. And in the third glass, I put crystal clear water. Which do you think they picked? Well, obviously they all picked the glass with the pure water in it.

So I took that glass and I moved it over to the side and I said, "Okay, if you were choosing, you would take this glass with the clear pure water in it. So let's take it and make it holy. Let's separate it from the two glasses with the dirty contaminated water in it. This is what the word holy means. It means to separate something or someone from sin unto God. You're actually set aside for God's use."

Now, the doctrine of holiness is made up of three specific truths. First, our positional holiness. Second, our experiential holiness. And third, our ultimate holiness. Well, what does Scripture teach about our positional holiness?

The moment we put our faith in Jesus Christ and ask him to forgive our sins, according to Romans chapter four, God makes a wonderful legal declaration about us, declaring that we are justified, that is, free from the penalty of all of our sins for all eternity.

He will never hold those sins against us and punish us in hell because of what we have done. He gives us total forgiveness as a gift. Now, God can give us this gift because Jesus paid for it when he died on the cross. At that time, he took our sins upon himself and paid the penalty that we deserved.

The Bible says in 2 Corinthians 5:21, "Christ became sin for us, who knew no sin, that we might be made the righteousness of God in him." So God forgave us our sins and declared us justified. But at the same time God justified us, he also gave us a new identity, a new status, a new standing before him in holiness and righteousness.

Now, this holy standing before him was also a gift. It means we don't have to perform good deeds to gain God's love and acceptance. But here is a question for you: How righteous are we in God's sight as we stand before him?

Well, we all know that while Jesus lived here on earth, he lived a perfect life. He never sinned once. According to the Bible, the track record of Jesus Christ, his perfect life, was imputed or credited from Jesus' account to ours when we put our faith in Christ.

God gave us this position, this standing before him as a gift. So we stand before him each day as absolutely holy and pure and righteousness in our new position. How do I know this? Look at Hebrews 10:10. It tells us that all who have put their faith in Jesus have been made holy once for all.

Here's our position before God. The Bible says we have already been made completely holy by God once for all. He has separated us unto himself when he saved us. We are his. We belong to him. He has made it an unchanging fact that we will forever stand before him as perfect, holy, and righteous.

But in the very same chapter, we see the second part of holiness: our experiential holiness. Hebrews 10:14 says, "By one sacrifice, he has made perfect forever those," that's us, "who are being made holy." So in the same Bible verse, we who are already holy, that's our position, are also in the process of being made holy.

In brief, because God has graciously given us our new identity and status as a gift, he then asks us to start living out and enjoying our new identity and status that he has given to us. 1 Peter 1:15 tells us, "But just as God who called you is holy, so be holy in all you do, for it is written, be holy because I am holy."

Paul says something similar in 2 Timothy 1:9. Paul writes, "God has saved us and called us to a holy life, not because of anything we have done, but because of his own purpose and grace." Now always remember this: Holiness starts with God's calling us to himself and saving us.

Before you put your faith in Jesus Christ, you were convicted of your sins. That was God lovingly drawing you to himself. And as a result, you decided to put your faith in Christ and enter into a relationship with God in which he immediately forgave you of all your sins forever. He also gave you your new status of perfect holiness before him.

But then because he has done all of this for us, and because we belong to him and are fellowshipping with him, he asks us to live like him in relationship with him in every part of our life. So first, God makes us holy, and then he says, "Separate yourself unto me."

Just like this glass of water, you are to purify yourselves, set yourselves apart for God's use. And as you do, you will come to know God in an even more intimate way, and you will be a Christian that God will use to represent him to the world.

Now, by the way, has anyone ever called you a saint? Well, according to Scripture, if you put your faith in Jesus Christ, you are a saint positionally. God made you one. The word saint in Scripture means a holy one, a person who is set apart for God's use. And that's what God did for you.

Now, sainthood is not attained by you or me by doing great works. That's the world's definition. Biblically, sainthood is a state into which God in grace places every believer. But then God asks each of his saints to cooperate with him to sanctify—it's the same word as to make holy—or separate themselves, to make themselves pure for his use. He asks them to live up to the status he has given them.

Now, before you get off the track and start telling me how hard it is for you to live holy, let me tell you a secret. When you placed your faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, God did something wonderful to you. Look at Ezekiel 36:26 where God says, "I will give you a new spirit. And in addition, I will put my Spirit in you and move you to follow my decrees and be careful to keep my laws."

Well, according to this verse, when we believed on Christ, God gave us a new spirit, that is, a new spiritual nature. In addition, he gave us the Holy Spirit who took up residence in our life. Further, God says in Jeremiah 31:33, "I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts."

Now, here's the secret. When you placed your faith in Christ, God gave you a new spiritual nature which inherently desires to love and obey God. As the Bible says, your new heart is careful to keep God's laws. The Holy Spirit who takes up residence in your life also moves you to live purely, righteously, and to love God. You'll never be the same again because you have been given a new nature that loves God and wants to obey him.

Now, that doesn't mean you'll never sin again. No, according to Romans 6 and 7, because of your old nature still being present, even though it has lost its legal position of mastery over you when you became a Christian, you will still be tempted by it to sin. But if you sin now, your new spiritual nature and the Holy Spirit will bother you, will convict you, and will make you feel miserable.

This struggle is described by the apostle Paul in Romans 7 and Galatians 5. But in 2 Corinthians 5:17, he says, "Therefore, if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature. Old things are passed away and behold all things are become new." That is your true self, your new spiritual nature will always want to obey God when all is said and done. Now that doesn't mean you will, but you will be drawn that way by your new heart that God has given you.

Now, Romans 7 and Romans 8 shows that even Christians who have a new heart, a new spiritual nature, will be defeated if they try to live the Christian life in their own strength, their own self-effort. Victory to live holy, to be separated unto God, comes when we turn to and depend on the Holy Spirit to live the way that we should.

The third biblical truth concerning holiness is our ultimate holiness. While living on this earth, none of us will experience total experiential holiness in our life. The apostle Paul, at the end of his life, denied that he had arrived or was totally holy or perfect in his walk with the Lord.

In Philippians 3:12 and 13, he said, "Not that I have already obtained all this or have already been made perfect, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me. Brothers, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it."

You know, only when we die and go into Christ's presence will we experience total, complete holiness in our moment-by-moment existence. But today, God asks us to live as holy as we can so that we can draw closer to him, to know him better, to be more like him, to walk with him in everyday life.

Isn't it exciting that God wants us to have a deep relationship with him? But remember, we cannot walk with God in our own self-effort. God makes even our walk with him possible by giving us the Holy Spirit to enable us, to help us conquer the sinful desires in our life, to help us meet the temptations and to face the tough situations.

Well, this brings us to the next question: What is true repentance? And why is repentance so important for us in living the Christian life? Did you know that the word repentance comes from the Greek word *metanoia*? *Metanoia* emphasizes a change of mind and attitude. That is, to repent is to make a decision that changes the total direction of one's life.

When Jesus preached, he issued a call to repentance, which was a call to people to change their mind about him. Repentance is an abandonment of those courses of action in which we once defied God and embrace those things which God dislikes and forbids.

The Hebrew word for repent signifies a turning away from sin to God or a returning to God. The New Testament Greek word for repentance carries the sense of changing one's mind so that one changes one's ways. Full repentance means altering one's habits of thought, one's attitudes, one's outlook, one's policy, direction, and behavior, just as fully as is needed to get one's life out of the wrong shape and into the right one.

But changing in this way is only possible for Christians, believers who have been set free from sin's dominion and made alive to God. That is, repentance comes as a result of putting one's faith in Jesus Christ. Repentance flows out of true faith. It is the fruit of faith and as such is a gift of God according to Acts 11:18.

Repentance is not that which saves, but it's the opposite side of the same coin as faith. On one side, you cannot have true faith unless on the other side one turns away from believing in himself and turns to believe in Christ alone to save, forgive, and empower him to change.

Once again, true repentance is only possible for Christians because it's only the Christian who, in relationship with God, starts to have God pull off the blinders of his life. The Bible tells us we do not even know how self-deceived we are about our sins. This is according to James 1:22 and 1 John 1:8.

So once we place our faith in Christ, bit by bit, God starts to show us that our deeds, our lifestyle, our thinking, our acts, have offended him. This awareness that we have offended a holy God is the basis or the seedbed from which repentance grows all during our life.

True repentance includes a contrite heart, sorrow and remorse in having dishonored God's goodness and love to us. The kind of repentance that is a false repentance is that which shows only regret for sin prompted by fear for oneself, not love for God.

Repentance brings on our reverent request of God's pardon, cleansing of conscience, and help not to lapse into the same sin again. In his book, *Rediscovering Holiness*, J.I. Packer says repentance is, number one, a person discerning the perversity, the folly, and guilt of the sin he or she has been doing. Number two, the desire to find forgiveness and the willingness to abandon the sin and live a God-pleasing life from now on.

And three, deciding to ask God for forgiveness and power to change and then actually talking to God. Four, demonstrating whether by testimony, confession, or by changed behavior that one has left one's sins behind. You know, Martin Luther taught all of life was to be repentance before God.

That is, as we walk with God, he will reveal to us things about ourselves that we didn't know, and he'll do it day by day. There'll be sins and habits which need to be abandoned. Such reoccurring repentance is the life of the adult Christian.

Keep in mind that when you put your faith in Jesus Christ, he gave you a new heart that desires to obey God. You will only be truly happy and joyful when those things that offend God are turned away from and you've asked God to forgive you and to cleanse you. It's paradoxical that such actions bring more joy because God draws closer to you and you experience more of him.

Now you can refuse to repent. You can disobey. But you should know that as a Christian, you will run the risk of being disciplined by God himself. Read Hebrews 11. God disciplines his children because he loves us, and he won't stand by and allow us to ruin our lives.

Well, this leads us then to our third important question: Why is totally surrendering our lives to God the only way to really live and experience life to the fullest? I'm sure you know Proverbs 3:5 and 6, which says, "Trust in the Lord with all thine heart and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge him and he shall direct thy paths."

Well, you and I both know we have a lot of decisions to make about our future. We have a lot of decisions that we must make even today to get through this day. God says he wants to lead us and to direct us moment by moment.

Now, of course, you can always depend just on your own intellect and experience. But if I were to ask you this question: Who is smarter, you or God? Who knows more about the future, you or God? Well, when you put it that way, we would all say, "Of course, God is smarter than I am. He knows everything, even the future." Well then, why don't you allow him to lead you in the decisions that you need to make concerning the future, concerning the decision you need to make today?

Can you trust him? You know, that question is almost blasphemous to ask. If you need proof that you can trust God with your life, and that he loves you dearly more than anybody you know, just draw a picture in your mind and see Jesus dying on the cross, shedding his blood. And ask yourself: Why was he there? What was he doing? The answer will come back: "God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son."

God loved you and made your salvation possible before you even knew him. He didn't have to do it. He gave it to you as a gift, his gift. If he went that far to show you that he loves you, don't you think you can trust him and surrender your life to him so that he can love you even more by guiding you with his great wisdom and care?

Let's summarize what we've seen today. God has called us to himself by convicting us of sin. And one day, we responded and placed our faith in Jesus Christ, and God gave us his gift of salvation. God's gift included complete forgiveness of our sin and the status of being righteous and holy before him.

And then from that moment on, we positionally stood before God just like this pure glass of water. We have no sin and are clothed in Christ's righteousness. But we've also seen that experientially, in our everyday life, God calls us to live holy, to purify ourselves. In brief, we are asked by God to separate ourselves unto his personal use.

We also saw that ultimate experiential holiness will not be achieved in this life. It'll only be achieved when we go to glory. And then we saw that true repentance is daily for the Christian. It includes being open to God, allowing his Spirit to show us anything that might please him.

We are to bring that to him, confess it as sin, and to leave it, abandon it. As we do so, God will draw even closer to us and bring us great joy and contentment. We will experience God's dynamic living presence moment by moment through the day.

And finally, why should we totally surrender our lives to God? Well, it's because he is the one who knows what's best for us. He's the one who loves us more than anyone else. All the real blessings of life are in his hand. He gave us our bodies and our talents and our abilities, and he knows just how to use them if we will surrender them to him.

To the extent that we're lazy and undisciplined and keep God from certain parts of our life, we will do this to our own detriment. But God gives us that choice. It's part of the learning process as Christians. Remember, he gave us a new spirit, a new heart that loves to obey him, wants to be with him. And so when we sin, we are really going against our true nature, what our heart really desires.

So right now, in light of all of these things that God has done for you, would you say, "Lord, help me to live a holy life. Lord, the sins of my life that I know about, that you've already shown me, in which I've offended you, please forgive me and cleanse me." He will.

Then tell him, "Lord, I totally surrender my life to you. I don't know how to do this. I look to you for help. I love you. Use me as you see fit. Let me not miss out on any part of the adventure that you have for me." He'll do that.

Now next week, we're going to start a new topic: What does the Bible say are the characteristics of the religion of the last days? And then we're going to ask the question: Are we living in those days now? I hope that you'll join me then.

Guest (Male): Now stay tuned as we revisit these timeless discussions and join us in celebrating the wealth of knowledge that continues to encourage and educate. To learn more, please visit JAshow.org. That's JAshow.org. Or subscribe to us on YouTube.

This transcript is provided as a written companion to the original message and may contain inaccuracies or transcription errors. For complete context and clarity, please refer to the original audio recording. Time-sensitive references or promotional details may be outdated. This material is intended for personal use and informational purposes only.

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About Ankerberg Show

The John Ankerberg Show is a daily half-hour radio program and a weekly half-hour internationally syndicated television program using informal debates between representatives of differing belief systems, and documentary-styled presentations on major issues in society to which the historic Christian faith has something of consequence to say. The programs are designed to appeal to a thinking audience of Christians and non-Christians alike.

About Dr. John Ankerberg

Dr. John Ankerberg is host and moderator of the nationally broadcast John Ankerberg Show television and radio program. Dr. Ankerberg is an internationally known author, evangelist and apologist. He and his wife, Darlene, have one daughter, Michelle.

Dr. John F. Ankerberg in his writings and on his television program presents contemporary spiritual issues and defends biblical Christian answers. He believes that Christianity can not only stand its ground in the arena of the world's ideas but that Christianity alone is fully true. He has spoken to audiences on more than 78 American college and university campuses as well as in crusades in major cities of Africa, Asia, South America, and the Islands of the Caribbean. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the National Religious Broadcasters.

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