What is impartation?

Quick answer

Impartation is the claim that spiritual blessings, power, or righteousness are transmitted from one person to another or directly from God in a tangible way. While God gives spiritual gifts and transforms believers over time, righteousness is not imparted but imputed through faith in Christ.

WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?

The word impart appears in a few biblical contexts where Paul speaks of sharing spiritual gifts or gospel truths (Romans 1:11; 1 Thessalonians 2:8). These reflect Paul encouraging or instructing, not the transfer of righteousness or divine power in a mystical sense.

The more common modern use of impartation describes the belief that God (or a spiritual leader) conveys spiritual power, gifts, or righteousness into someone through a direct encounter. While God does strengthen and equip His people (Ephesians 3:16; 2 Corinthians 12:9), the Bible does not teach that righteousness is infused or transferred in this way.

Instead of being imparted, righteousness is imputed—credited to the believer through faith in Christ (Romans 4:5-6; 2 Corinthians 5:21). This is the foundation of justification. God certainly works within His people to produce holiness (1 Thessalonians 5:23), but that inner growth flows from salvation—it is never its cause.

Scripture warns against confusing spiritual experience with saving truth. Any teaching that turns righteousness into something passed along or progressively gained through impartation undermines the finished work of Christ.

FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT

FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT

IMPLICATIONS FOR TODAY

The idea of impartation can sound spiritual, but it becomes dangerous when it replaces or confuses the biblical doctrine of justification. Many today seek a spiritual experience—a touch, a moment, a feeling—that will give them victory or power. But what they truly need is not an impartation, but imputation: the righteousness of Christ credited to them by faith.

God does strengthen His people. He gives grace, wisdom, and power to serve. He works within us to conform us to the image of His Son. But none of these are the ground of our salvation. They are the fruit of what God has already done through the cross.

Chasing impartation often leads to disillusionment. It tempts people to look for shortcuts to holiness or external signs of spiritual power instead of pursuing a life of humble obedience, rooted in the gospel. Worse still, it may cause some to trust in experiences instead of the finished work of Christ.

True righteousness is not passed from one person to another. It is a gift from God, received by faith, and sealed in the finished work of Jesus. That is the message we must believe, preach, and cling to with unwavering faith.

UNDERSTAND

REFLECT

ENGAGE