3/27/81

 

DOCTRINE OF ADVOCACY

 

A.  The believer continues to sin after salvation, 1 Jn 1:8,10.

 

B.  Satan accumulates a sin file on every believer and periodically accuses the believer in heaven. The information is collected through demons, Job 1:6-11; Zech 3:1-2; Rev 12:9-10.

 

C.  Jesus Christ is retained as the believer’s defense attorney in the court of heaven and He defends every case. Occasionally, some believer is turned over to Satan for the administration of the sin unto death.

 

D.  The basis for our Lord’s defense is the fact that all our sins were judged at the cross in Him by God the Father, 2 Cor 5:21; 1 Pet 2:24.

 

E.  God the Father judged our sins on the cross, Ps 22:1-6; 1 Pet 3:18.

 

F.  Under the law of double jeopardy, those sins cannot be judged again, Rom 6:10. Therefore the believer is defended in heaven from Satan.

 

G.  Hence, every case is thrown out of court by God the Father, Zech 3:1-2.

 

H.  The sins of the believer then become not a court matter but a family matter for the imputation of divine discipline, Heb 12:6.

 

I.  An advocate is one who undertakes the cause of another. In its Biblical meaning, advocacy represents divine enablement and assistance.

 

J.  The New Testament word for advocate is PARAKLETOS, Jn 14:16,26; 15:26; 16:17.

 

K.  Two persons of the Trinity are recognized as advocates:  the Son and the Spirit. Christ in His earthly ministry was an advocate for His own in the world; before He left He promised another to come. By the use of the word “another,” Christ implied that His own ministry on earth had been that of an advocate, Jn 14:16.

 

L.  As a legal representative in the court of heaven, Christ now functions as the believer’s advocate, 1 Jn 2:1. This present work of Christ is known as the “unfinished work.”

 

M.  The advocacy of Christ in heaven regarding the believer’s sin is so complete and perfect that He has the title “Jesus Christ the righteous.”

 

N.  The advocacy of the Spirit is one of intercession and direct aiding, Rom 8:26-27.

 

O.  Thus, there are three general uses of the word advocate:  a legal advocate, which Christ is now in heaven; an intercession agent, which Christ and the Spirit are now; and a general helper, which Christ was while on earth and which the Spirit is throughout the Church Age.