Anthony Pritchard
Active Member
The Visible Mark of the Invisible Birth
The doctrine of the Two Seeds reveals both origin and destiny. It distinguishes between the incorruptible seed of God and the corruptible seed of the serpent, between the child of promise and the child of rebellion. Though this distinction is spiritual, it does not remain hidden. It appears in conduct, in loyalty, and in the direction of a man’s life.
To be born of the incorruptible seed is to be called out of the world’s system, not to remain in its likeness under the banner of outreach. “Come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord.” 2 Corinthians 6:17. God’s children are not camouflaged ambassadors; they are conspicuous witnesses. Light does not blend with darkness; it exposes it. Salt that loses its savor is useless. Matthew 5:13–14.
Christ’s words in Luke 9 are not decorative. They are foundational. “If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow me.” The cross is not a symbol of inconvenience. It is an instrument of death. The believer’s daily call is to die to self, to the flesh, and to the world, and to live unto God.
Modern trends may promote relevance through resemblance, but biblical witness flows from transformation, not imitation. “Be not conformed to this world,” Paul writes, “but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind.” Romans 12:2. The power of the gospel is not found in cultural conformity but in divine contrast. Evangelism that compromises holiness may gather a crowd, but it abandons the commission.
“Come as you are” is the open door, but remaining as you were is not the gospel’s end. The cross does not accessorize the old man; it crucifies him. The seed of God does not merely improve; it regenerates.
Non reformatur vetus homo, sed crucifigitur - The old man is not reformed, but crucified.
~Tony
© A.K. Pritchard 1979 -
Free to use with proper attribution.