Week 4 fits perfectly here—it guards the study from drifting into moralism or vague spirituality and anchors everything firmly in the gospel. Below is a fully expanded Week 4 that follows the same theological rhythm as the earlier weeks: introduction → biblical context → interaction → discernment → life application.
Week 4 — Saved and Spiritual
One Is the Gateway to the Other
Introduction: Why Spirituality Cannot Begin Where Salvation Has Not
In every generation, there are people who want spiritual benefits without spiritual birth.
They may:
- admire Jesus
- agree with Christian ideas
- adopt Christian language
- participate in Christian community
Yet Scripture insists on a hard truth:
No one becomes spiritual by effort, education, or exposure.
Spiritual life begins only where salvation begins.
This week clarifies an essential order in Biblical Spirituality:
- Saved — made alive by God
- Spiritual — living from that new life
Reversing this order leads to:
- performance-based faith
- false assurance
- frustration and burnout
Understanding this order leads to freedom, clarity, and assurance.
The Core Claim of the Week
Spirituality is not the path to salvation;
salvation is the doorway to spirituality.
Until a person is made alive by the Spirit:
- growth is impossible
- obedience is unsustainable
- holiness is unnatural
Key Scripture 1: Romans 8:1–11 (ESV)
“Those who are in the flesh cannot please God.”
Context and Insight
Romans 8 follows Paul’s description of the struggle of the unredeemed self (Romans 7). The contrast is stark:
- flesh vs. Spirit
- death vs. life
- hostility vs. peace
Key theological insights:
- “Flesh” is not merely sinful behavior—it is an entire mode of existence
- The mind set on the flesh lacks the capacity to submit to God
- The Spirit does not assist the flesh; He replaces its rule
Paul’s conclusion is unmistakable:
If the Spirit does not dwell in you, you do not belong to Christ (v.9).
Biblical spirituality begins not with trying but with transfer of realms.
Discussion Questions
- How does Paul define the inability of the flesh?
- Why is “trying harder” an inadequate solution according to this passage?
- How does identity (“in Christ”) precede behavior here?
Key Scripture 2: Ephesians 1:13 (ESV)
“When you believed… you were sealed with the promised Holy Spirit.”
Context and Insight
Paul describes salvation as a completed divine act:
- hearing the gospel
- believing
- being sealed
Important observations:
- The Spirit is given at belief, not after progress
- The Spirit’s sealing signifies ownership, security, and permanence
- This is not experiential language—it is covenant language
Spiritual identity does not emerge gradually—it is granted instantly at salvation.
You do not grow into being spiritual;
you grow because you are spiritual.
Discussion Questions
- Why does Paul emphasize sealing rather than feeling?
- How does this protect believers from insecurity?
- What errors arise when sealing is confused with maturity?
Key Scripture 3: Titus 3:5 (ESV)
“He saved us… by the washing of regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit.”
Context and Insight
Paul contrasts two realities:
- what we once were
- what God has done
Key theological movements:
- Salvation is not moral improvement
- Regeneration is a creative act, not a cooperative one
- Renewal is ongoing, but regeneration is decisive
This verse destroys the idea of:
- self-made spirituality
- gradual self-transformation into life
The Spirit does not rehabilitate the old self; He creates a new one.
Discussion Questions
- Why is regeneration essential for true change?
- How does this verse protect the gospel from becoming moralism?
- What does it mean to be “washed” rather than “assisted”?
Teaching Emphases (Expanded)
- The natural person cannot become spiritual through effort
- The Spirit creates life; He does not enhance deadness
- Belonging to Christ and possessing the Spirit are inseparable
- Salvation establishes spiritual identity
- Growth expresses life—it does not produce it
Discernment Case Study
Scenario:
Someone says, “I believe in Jesus,” but shows no hunger for holiness, Scripture, or obedience.
Biblical Evaluation
Romans 8 teaches:
- The mind set on the flesh is hostile to God
- Those indwelt by the Spirit develop new desires
Titus 3 teaches:
- Regeneration produces renewal
- New life manifests over time, not instantly, but genuinely
This does not mean:
- instant maturity
- perfection
- uniform growth pace
It does mean:
- new direction
- new affections
- growing responsiveness to God
Absence of perfection does not negate new life,
but absence of desire calls it into question.
Group Discussion
- How do we avoid both false assurance and harsh judgment?
- What signs of life should we look for over time?
- How can we walk with someone who professes belief but shows no fruit?
Belief vs. Belonging
Key Distinction
- Belief can be intellectual agreement
- Belonging involves relational union and indwelling
Scripture consistently ties:
- belonging → Spirit
- Spirit → life
- life → fruit
Discussion Questions
- Why is belief alone an insufficient category?
- How does Scripture define belonging?
- What fruit has the Spirit begun to produce in your life?
Life Application & Reflection
Invite participants to reflect:
- Am I resting in salvation—or striving for acceptance?
- Do I view growth as earning or expressing life?
- Where do I see evidence of the Spirit’s renewing work?
Closing Insight:
You are not spiritual because you live well.
You live well because the Spirit has made you alive.
If you’d like, next I can:
- Expand Week 5: Walking by the Spirit, Not the Flesh
- Provide a diagnostic tool for discerning growth vs. legalism
- Create leader-only notes on handling assurance and doubt wisely
