In I Thes. 1:10, the Apostle Paul, by divine inspiration, assures believers that the Lord Jesus Christ has βdelivered us from the wrath to come.β He refers, of course, to deliverance from the penalty of sin. But in other passages he declares that we are also delivered from the power of sin.
In Col. 1:12,13, for example, he gives thanks to God βWho hath delivered us from the power of darkness and hath translated us into the kingdom of His dear Son.β
This deliverance, and the glory of our heavenly position and blessings in Christ, we may enjoy experientially now, by grace. Rom. 6:14 says: βFor sin shall not have dominion over you, for ye are not under the law but under grace.β This does not mean that it is not possible for the believer to sin, but rather that it is possible, in any situation, not to sin. Thus the same passage in Romans goes on to say that we should not yield ourselves as servants to sin, but to God, who, in grace has broken sinβs power over us.
Finally, the believer in Christ will one day be delivered even from the presence of sin, for at our Lordβs coming for us βwe shall all be changedβ (I Cor. 15:51). Believers should long for Christβs coming for them, not merely because these bodies of humiliation will then be glorified, but because from that moment on they shall never again be tempted or defiled by sin. What a change that will be!
In II Cor. 1:10 the Apostle includes all three tenses of the believerβs deliverance. Here he tells how God has βdelivered us from so great a death, and doth deliver, in whom we trust that He will yet deliver us.β This is why he could write to the Philippians about his confidence that βHe who hath begun a good work in you will perform [complete] it until the day of Jesus Christβ (Phil. 1:6).
Some may not feel the need of deliverance now, but we all need deliverance from sin and its results. If you have not yet experienced this deliverance, why not place your trust in Christ who died to βdeliver us from the wrath to come.β source