R05: REDEMPTION COMPLETE
Justification and Sanctification
Ring 2 — Canonical Grounding
Ring 3 — Framework Connections
METADATA
paper_id: R05
title: "Redemption: Positional and Progressive"
axioms: [173, 174, 175]
axiom_ids: [R4.1, R4.2, R4.3]
tier: 6
case_file: CF06
defendants: [Purgatory, Works-Progression, Perfectionism]
priority: MEDIUM
status: IN_PROGRESSTHE CLAIM
Redemption is both instant (justification) and progressive (sanctification). Position secured at once; practice grows over time. Both are grace-enabled—justification by grace alone, sanctification by grace-powered effort.
The believer’s salvation has two dimensions: positional (what you ARE before God—justified) and progressive (what you’re BECOMING—sanctified). Confusing these leads to either despair (thinking you must achieve perfect status) or complacency (thinking growth doesn’t matter).
AXIOMS COVERED
| # | ID | Statement | Mathematical Form |
|---|---|---|---|
| 173 | R4.1 | Justification is instant and complete | σ: -1 → +1 (instantaneous) |
| 174 | R4.2 | Sanctification is progressive | C(t) → C_max (gradual) |
| 175 | R4.3 | Both are grace-enabled | Ĝ enables both J and S |
THE PROSECUTION
Against Purgatory
CHARGE: Purgatory claims “even believers must be purified after death before entering heaven—sanctification is completed post-mortem through suffering.”
CROSS-EXAMINATION:
| Q | A | Trap |
|---|---|---|
| ”If Christ’s work is complete, what does purgatory add?" | "It removes remaining impurity…” | But “It is finished” means finished. Adding purgatory says it wasn’t actually finished. |
| ”Who suffers in purgatory?" | "The believer…” | But Christ suffered for all sin. Your suffering adds to His? That’s either redundant or insufficient sacrifice. |
| ”What’s the basis for release from purgatory?" | "Sufficient purification…” | Sufficient by what standard? If measurable, show the metric. If not, how do you know when it’s done? |
THE FINISHED WORK TRAP:
Purgatory: Further purification needed after death
But: Jesus said "It is finished" (τετέλεσται)
"Finished" means completed, not "to be continued"
Purgatory implies the work wasn't finished
∴ Purgatory contradicts Christ's declaration
∴ Purgatory denies the sufficiency of the Cross
VERDICT: GUILTY of diminishing Christ’s finished work.
Against Works-Progression
CHARGE: Works-Progression claims “sanctification depends on human effort—grow or lose salvation.”
CROSS-EXAMINATION:
| Q | A | Trap |
|---|---|---|
| ”Can you lose your σ = +1 status?" | "If you stop growing…” | But σ was flipped by grace, not earned by works. If grace gave it, can works lose it? |
| ”Is your salvation secure?" | "As long as you maintain…” | Then salvation depends on you, not Christ. But “He who began a good work will complete it” (Phil 1:6). |
| ”What if you fail tomorrow?" | "Then you must repent again…” | Is your salvation on/off based on daily performance? That’s not peace—that’s exhaustion. |
THE SECURITY TRAP:
Works-Progression: Growth maintains salvation
But: Salvation depends on Christ's work, not ours
Christ's work is complete and unchanging
Our performance varies, but His doesn't
∴ Salvation security is in Christ, not in growth
∴ Works-progression puts security in wrong location
VERDICT: GUILTY of misplacing the basis of salvation.
Against Perfectionism
CHARGE: Perfectionism claims “you can achieve sinless perfection in this life—complete sanctification now.”
CROSS-EXAMINATION:
| Q | A | Trap |
|---|---|---|
| ”Have you achieved it?" | "I’m very close…” | Close isn’t there. Are you completely sinless or not? |
| ”Do you ever have an impure thought?" | "I’ve mastered my mind…” | Really? Never a prideful thought about your mastery? That’s a prideful thought right now. |
| ”Why does 1 John 1:8 say ‘If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves’?" | "That’s for others…” | The verse is addressed to believers. “We” includes you. |
THE SELF-DECEPTION TRAP:
Perfectionism: Sinless perfection achievable now
But: 1 John 1:8: "If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves"
Scripture declares perfectionism is self-deception
The claim itself (perfect) is evidence of sin (pride)
∴ Perfectionism is biblically self-refuting
VERDICT: GUILTY of self-deception about sin.
KEY ARGUMENTS
1. Justification Is Instant and Complete (R4.1)
At the moment of faith, your legal status before God changes completely.
| Before Justification | After Justification |
|---|---|
| σ = -1 | σ = +1 |
| Guilty | Not guilty |
| Condemned | Acquitted |
| Under wrath | Under grace |
Justification: σ: -1 → +1 (instantaneous)
This is:
- Legal declaration (forensic)
- Instant (not gradual)
- Complete (not partial)
- Irreversible (once declared, always declared)
Justification answers: What is your STATUS before God?
Answer: Righteous (Christ's righteousness credited)
What justification accomplishes:
- Forgiveness of all sins (past, present, future)
- Imputation of Christ’s righteousness
- Adoption into God’s family
- Removal from condemnation
- Secure standing before God
2. Sanctification Is Progressive (R4.2)
After justification, actual holiness grows over time.
| Justification | Sanctification |
|---|---|
| Instant | Progressive |
| Legal standing | Actual condition |
| Position | Practice |
| What you ARE | What you’re BECOMING |
Sanctification: C(t) → C_max (gradual)
Where:
- C(t) = coherence at time t
- C_max = maximum coherence (at glorification)
- dC/dt > 0 (increasing over time)
Sanctification answers: How HOLY is your actual life?
Answer: Growing (from glory to glory)
Sanctification dynamics:
- Begins at justification
- Progresses through life
- Involves effort (Philippians 2:12)
- Empowered by grace (Philippians 2:13)
- Completed at glorification
3. Both Are Grace-Enabled (R4.3)
Neither justification nor sanctification is accomplished by human effort alone.
| Grace in Justification | Grace in Sanctification |
|---|---|
| Ĝ flips σ | Ĝ empowers growth |
| Entirely God’s work | God works through you |
| You contribute nothing | You cooperate actively |
| Monergistic | Synergistic (but grace-primary) |
Ĝ enables both:
Ĝ_justification: σ flip (external, complete)
Ĝ_sanctification: C growth (internal, ongoing)
Even sanctification is grace:
"Work out your salvation" (Phil 2:12) - your effort
"For it is God who works in you" (Phil 2:13) - God's grace
Grace initiates, grace empowers, grace completes
Human effort is real but grace-enabled
The balance:
- Not quietism (just wait for God)
- Not activism (just try harder)
- But grace-powered effort
- “I worked… yet not I, but grace” (1 Cor 15:10)
4. Position vs. Practice
The distinction between what you ARE and what you DO.
| Position (Justification) | Practice (Sanctification) |
|---|---|
| Perfect in Christ | Imperfect in self |
| Complete | Incomplete |
| Secure | Growing |
| Basis for assurance | Area for growth |
Position: σ = +1 (fixed)
Practice: C(t) (variable)
Position doesn't change with practice
Bad day doesn't un-justify you
Good day doesn't add to justification
Position is secure; practice is growing
Why the distinction matters:
- Assurance comes from position (Christ’s work)
- Growth comes in practice (our response)
- Don’t confuse the two
- Position grounds practice; practice doesn’t determine position
5. Already and Not Yet
The classic “already/not yet” tension of New Testament eschatology.
| Already | Not Yet |
|---|---|
| Justified | Not yet glorified |
| Saved from penalty | Not yet saved from presence of sin |
| New creation in Christ | Not yet fully transformed |
| σ = +1 | Not yet C = C_max |
Already: Positional completion
- You ARE righteous (justified)
- You ARE a child of God (adopted)
- You ARE secure (sealed)
Not Yet: Practical completion
- Not yet sinless (still struggling)
- Not yet glorified (still mortal)
- Not yet home (still on journey)
Living in the tension:
- Assurance from the “already”
- Humility from the “not yet”
- Hope for the completion
- Effort in the meantime
6. The Timeline of Redemption
Past, present, future aspects of salvation.
| Aspect | Timing | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Justification | Past (at conversion) | σ flip |
| Sanctification | Present (ongoing) | C growth |
| Glorification | Future (at resurrection) | C → C_max |
Timeline:
t₀ (conversion): Justification (σ: -1 → +1)
t₀ < t < t_final: Sanctification (dC/dt > 0)
t_final (glorification): Completion (C → C_max)
All three are certain for the believer
Justification guarantees glorification
Sanctification is the journey between
DEFEAT CONDITIONS
This axiom set fails if:
-
Justification is progressive
- But Scripture declares it instant: “Therefore, since we have been justified” (Rom 5:1, past tense)
- Legal declarations are not gradual
- You’re either guilty or not guilty
- Justification is verdict, not process
-
Sanctification is instant
- But Scripture commands growth: “Grow in grace” (2 Pet 3:18)
- Experience confirms ongoing struggle
- No one achieves perfection instantly
- Process is evident
-
Human effort accomplishes either
- But both are grace-enabled
- “It is God who works in you” (Phil 2:13)
- Self-effort produces σ = -1 works
- Grace is necessary for both
-
Position can be lost
- But “whom He justified, He also glorified” (Rom 8:30)
- The chain is unbroken
- Security is in Christ, not performance
- Position is secure
Status: All defeat conditions fail against the two-aspect model.
DEFENSE GRID
| Attack Vector | Response | Status |
|---|---|---|
| ”This leads to complacency” | No—understanding position doesn’t eliminate responsibility. Gratitude motivates growth. | ✅ Blocked |
| ”How can God declare sinners righteous?” | Imputation—Christ’s righteousness is credited. Not fiction; legal transfer. | ✅ Addressed |
| ”Doesn’t James say faith without works is dead?” | Yes—dead faith (g = 0) produces no works. Living faith (g > 0) produces works. Works evidence faith. | ✅ Blocked |
| ”What about verses on falling away?” | Those describe apostasy (never truly saved) or loss of reward, not loss of justification. | ✅ Addressed |
| ”Isn’t this cheap grace?” | No—grace that transforms is not cheap. Free to receive, costly to give (the Cross). | ✅ Blocked |
EQUATIONS / FORMALISM
Justification (Instant)
At t = t₀ (moment of faith):
σ: -1 → +1 (instantaneous flip)
Properties:
- Δt = 0 (no time delay)
- Complete: σ = +1 (fully righteous)
- Permanent: ∀t > t₀, σ = +1
Sanctification (Progressive)
For t > t₀:
C(t) = C(t₀) + ∫[t₀ to t] (Ĝ + effort) dt
Where:
- C(t₀) = initial coherence at conversion
- dC/dt > 0 (always increasing, on average)
- lim[t→t_final] C(t) = C_max
Grace in Both
Justification: Ĝ → σ flip (entirely grace)
Sanctification: Ĝ × effort → C growth (grace-powered effort)
Ĝ is necessary for both
Without Ĝ: no justification, no sanctification
With Ĝ: justification certain, sanctification enabled
Security Theorem
Justified(t₀) → Glorified(t_final)
"Whom He justified, He also glorified" (Rom 8:30)
The chain is unbroken
No justified person fails to be glorified
Security is logical consequence of grace
Position-Practice Distinction
Position: P = constant (σ = +1)
Practice: Q(t) = variable (C growing)
P does not depend on Q
Q grows toward alignment with P
Eventually: Q → P (at glorification)
CONNECTION TO PHYSICS
| Physical Concept | Redemption Parallel |
|---|---|
| Phase transition | Justification as sudden state change |
| Continuous evolution | Sanctification as gradual change |
| Conservation | Justified status is conserved |
| Approach to equilibrium | Sanctification approaching C_max |
| Irreversibility | Justification is irreversible |
Key insight: Justification is like a phase transition—sudden, complete, qualitative change (water to ice). Sanctification is like temperature change—gradual, continuous, quantitative change. Both are real; both are necessary; both have different dynamics.
SCRIPTURE
“Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.” — Romans 5:1
“Have been justified”—past tense, completed action.
“And those whom he predestined he also called, and those whom he called he also justified, and those whom he justified he also glorified.” — Romans 8:30
The unbroken chain: justified → glorified. Security.
“And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another.” — 2 Corinthians 3:18
“Being transformed”—present progressive. Sanctification.
“Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure.” — Philippians 2:12-13
You work—God works in you. Grace-powered effort.
“He who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ.” — Philippians 1:6
God completes what He starts. Glorification guaranteed.
“If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.” — 1 John 1:8
Perfectionism is self-deception.
THE VERDICT
GUILTY
Purgatory, Works-Progression, and Perfectionism are found GUILTY of misunderstanding the two aspects of redemption.
- Purgatory denies the completeness of Christ’s work
- Works-Progression misplaces the basis of security
- Perfectionism denies the reality of ongoing sin
Redemption is both instant (justification) and progressive (sanctification). Position is secured at once by grace alone; practice grows over time by grace-powered effort. The distinction is crucial: position gives assurance; practice gives direction.
THE CHAIN HOLDS.
THE LOVE (What You Gain)
L7.7 — Your Position Is Secure
Because justification is complete:
- You don’t have to earn your standing
- Bad days don’t un-save you
- Your performance doesn’t determine your position
- Rest in Christ’s finished work
“There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” — Romans 8:1
No condemnation. Now. Settled.
L7.8 — Growth Is Possible
Because sanctification is progressive:
- You can grow
- You will grow
- Progress is real
- Tomorrow can be better than today
“Grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.” — 2 Peter 3:18
L7.9 — Completion Is Guaranteed
Because glorification follows justification:
- The end is certain
- God finishes what He starts
- Your ultimate transformation is secured
- Hope is not wishful thinking
“He who began a good work in you will bring it to completion.” — Philippians 1:6
This is the thirty-first good news: Your salvation has two dimensions, and both are good news. Your position is secure—you are justified, declared righteous, and nothing can change that. Your practice is growing—you are being sanctified, becoming what you already are. And your future is guaranteed—glorification awaits. Already saved. Being transformed. Will be completed. Rest in your position. Grow in your practice. Hope in your future.
SOURCES / REFERENCES
- 173_R4.1_Justification
- 174_R4.2_Sanctification
- 175_R4.3_Both-Grace
- Murray, J. “Redemption Accomplished and Applied” — on the ordo salutis
- Berkhof, L. “Systematic Theology” — on justification and sanctification
- Horton, M. “Covenant and Salvation” — on the already/not yet
STATUS CHECKLIST
- Axiom content complete
- Cross-examination written
- Equations verified
- Scripture integrated
- LOVE layer added
- Defense grid complete
- Ready for review
- PUBLISHED
Canonical Hub: CANONICAL_INDEX