Why is this important? Well, as Gurnall noted, knowing this fact gives relief to the Christian when he’s in doubt of his salvation. Just because a Christian can’t immediately discern godly fear doesn’t mean he should “unsaint” himself. If you don’t have godly fear but you do have a sincere desire to please him, be assured that God’s grace is at work in you, and in time you’ll notice godly fear. Or if your faith is seemingly gone but you have a hearty sorrow when you sin against God, don’t despair. Know that you are a new creation in Christ, and you will again see your faith – it is there!
When God sovereignly regenerates a sinner, that person is renewed, reborn, made new. “…If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creature; the old things passed away; behold, new things have come” (2 Cor. 5:17 NASB; c.f. Gal. 6:15). The person then walks in the newness of life (Rom. 6:4). This doesn’t mean a regenerate person is sinless and perfect, but it does mean that his whole person is made new by God. William Gurnallput it this way:
“As natural corruption is a universal principle of all sin that sours the whole lump of man’s nature; so sanctifying grace is a universal principle that sweetly seasons and renews the whole man at once, though not completely. Grace indeed grows by steps, but is born at once. The new creature has all its parts formed together, though not its degrees. One grace may, we confess, be perceived to stir and so come to be noticed by the Christian before other graces.”
Gurnall is saying that when God renews and regenerates a person, that person is given true faith, repentance, love, fear of God, evangelical obedience, and so forth. These things are called “graces.” Sometimes a Christian sees one of his graces more than another, but it doesn’t mean that other graces aren’t there. God doesn’t just give someone repentance but not godly fear or true faith. Gurnall said that some parts of the world have been discovered before other parts of the world, but the whole world has been in existence since God created it. So it is with Christian graces: God has given them all to all his people, even if we don’t always discover them or notice all these graces at once.
So what? Why is this important? Well, as Gurnall noted, knowing this fact gives relief to the Christian when he’s in doubt of his salvation. Just because a Christian can’t immediately discern godly fear doesn’t mean he should “unsaint” himself. If you don’t have godly fear but you do have a sincere desire to please him, be assured that God’s grace is at work in you, and in time you’ll notice godly fear. Or if your faith is seemingly gone but you have a hearty sorrow when you sin against God, don’t despair. Know that you are a new creation in Christ, and you will again see your faith – it is there! Here’s Gurnall again:
“As by taking hold of one link you may draw up the rest of the chain that lies under water, so by discovering one grace, you may bring all to sight. …This holy kindred of graces go ever together, they are knit, as members of the body, one to another. Though you see only the face of a man, yet you do not doubt that the whole man is there.”
Here’s a good quote to end on:
“Moses would not go out of Egypt with half his company (Ex. 10). Either all must go or none shall stir. Neither will the Spirit of God come into a soul with half his sanctifying graces, but with all his train.”
(These slightly modernized and edited quotes are found in the beginning of “Direction Ninth” in Gurnall’s The Christian in Complete Armor.)