Shall Never Perish
John F. Strombeck
Is a
Gradate of
Northwestern University in 1911
Northwestern University in 1911
Part One
Introduction
ONE
MY SHEEP listen to My voice; I know them, and they follow Me. I
give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one can snatch them out
of My hand. My Father, who has given them to Me, is greater than all; no one
can snatch them out of the Father's hand" (John 10:27-29).
For the believer in the Lord Jesus Christ, no passage in the
Bible has more assurance in it than this one. In it is found an unconditional
statement by our Lord that those who are his are his for all eternity, because
they are in his hand, under his care, and are in the Father's hand, under his
care. The strength of the Father is that which guarantees this condition of safety.
There are those who are not willing to accept this simple and
clear statement without modifying it. Thereby they not only lose the assurance
that might come to themselves; but they rob others of that assurance which is
so greatly needed by every one of God's children.
God makes two kinds of promises to his children: conditional
and unconditional. He always makes it clear whether or not they are conditional
or unconditional. When conditional, he uses the word "if" or its
equivalent; but when his statement is unconditional, he leaves out the
"if". This is therefore an unconditional statement.
Yet there are many who, claiming to accept the Bible as being
God inspired, nevertheless insist that this is a conditional statement, and
that "if" the sheep follow they shall never perish. By what right do
they add the word "if"? As it is neither stated nor implied by the
context, it is clearly a case of tampering with God's word, and changing its
meaning.
Five separate statements are made concerning "My
sheep": (1)Listen to My voice, (2)I know them, (3)they follow Me, (4)I
give them eternal life and (5)they shall never perish. These are five distinct
things said about those who are his sheep. Not one is conditional upon any
other.
By adding the word "if" to the third statement, the
fourth as well as the fifth must become conditional upon it. Thus not only the
question of perishing, but also that of receiving eternal life would be
conditional upon following the Lord. Then, to make the words "follow
Me" mean the living of a life as the Lord Jesus lived his (as some
assert), makes this mean that the one who lives as he lived will thereby
receive eternal life and shall never perish. This is nothing less than
modernism grown to full fruitage. It is salvation by works. Thus this addition
of the word "if" denies salvation by grace through faith; it is a
denial of the grace of God. It is dangerous to tamper with God's word!
As though this light handling of God's eternal truths were not
enough, it is further being preached and taught that while no one can snatch
one of Christ's own out of his hand and out of the Father's hand, it is
possible for one to jump out by his own willed action. By what scriptural
authority is that statement made? Does the wording of the passage permit such a
statement? Only two conditions could make it possible for a sheep to jump out
of his own accord: (1)that he be given the freedom to do so, or (2)that he have
the power to do so against the purpose of God. Are either of these possible?
The sheep belong to Christ; they are "My sheep." They
are his because he, the Good Shepherd, gave his life for them. He purchased
them with his own blood and they have been given to him by the Father.
Ownership means lordship. That which is owned has no right of will contrary to
the will of the owner. It has liberty to go, only within the limits granted by
the owner. It is perfectly clear then, that the Good Shepherd does not grant to
any sheep that has cost him so much to place in his own hand for safety, the
privilege of jumping out of it.
God's hand is not an open hand. It is a hand that holds. When a
father or a mother holds the hand of a small child to lead him safely through
some place of real danger, that father or mother will not let that little hand
go, even though the child might try to pull away.
No, God does not grant the sheep the liberty to jump out of his
hand. It would disgrace a human shepherd of sheep to say that he allowed his
sheep to stray away from him. How much more does it disgrace the Good Shepherd
to say that he allows his sheep to go away from him?
The only question left then is, has the sheep the power to leap
out of God's hand contrary to his will and purpose? To admit this, would be to
contradict Jesus' words: "My Father . . . is greater than all." The
"all" necessarily includes the sheep. It would also contradict his
words, "they shall never perish," for if they did jump out they must
perish.
What a perversion of God's word it is to add the little word
"if" and to limit God by saying that a sheep can jump out of God's
hand!
It denies salvation by grace through faith; it denies the fact
of a believer's eternal life; it makes the will of man stronger than the will
of God; it discounts the keeping power of God, and it robs the believer of his
assurance. Yet men, who are called to be ambassadors of God, to be stewards of
the many and diverse grace of God, often very earnestly and zealously, but
mistakenly, do that very thing.
Jesus made another statement concerning himself and
his sheep. He said, "The good shepherd lays down his life for the
sheep"(John 10:11). This statement and the one, "My sheep shall never
perish," are inter-dependent upon each other. They are to each other as
cause and effect. The one cannot be touched without touching the other.
To deny the effect - the absolute safety of the sheep - is to question the
effective power of the cause - the death of the Good Shepherd. When Jesus says,
"My sheep shall never perish," it is unconditional and final. It is
to be accepted in simple faith and made the subject of rejoicing and
thanksgiving.
TWO
Why This Discussion?
THE TRUTH that "My sheep . . . shall never perish,"
and that " no one is able to snatch them out of the Father's hand,"
is the substance of the doctrine of eternal security of the believer. Some
object to a discussion of this doctrine on the ground that it engenders
controversy and is not essential to salvation. It is true that as far as those
who have been saved are concerned, they are still saved whether they understand
this doctrine or not; but it has been the experience of multitudes that they
have not known whether or not they are saved until they have come to understand
this precious truth. In fact, without spiritual understanding of this doctrine
it is impossible for anyone to be assured of eternal glory with God.
There are some who claim to be certain that they themselves
shall be in heaven, but refuse to accept the doctrine of eternal security. By
what special dispensation of grace shall they be saved? Are they not resting
upon their own stability? Do such people have stronger characters than some
weaker brothers who are frequently stumbling? Does salvation make this
distinction? It is to be feared that these people do not clearly see that
salvation is by grace and grace alone, for the one of strong as well as the one
of weak character, and that none are kept because of the slightest human merit.
The principal reason, however, for this volume is that unless
one understands and accepts the doctrine of eternal security, one can not
accept without a great deal of reservation the doctrines of the grace of God.
The whole body of grace truth loses very much of its meaning to those who
reject the doctrine of eternal security.
Some year ago, a minister of national reputation in this country
was asked the question: "It makes considerable difference, does it not,
how a minister preaches, whether or not he accepts the doctrine of eternal
security?" The immediate answer was: "A vast difference."
If there is a vast difference in preaching due to acceptance or
rejection of this doctrine, then it surely is important to discuss it. Speaking
generally, those who reject this doctrine will in their sermons emphasize
works. It becomes: "You must do this and you must not do that." The emphasis
is on self and their preaching often causes hearers to question their own
salvation. Fear is used as a motive for godly living. Those who accept the
doctrine of assurance, tell of what God has done and offer their hearers a
finished work of salvation by Jesus Christ. Their appeal to holiness is based
on what God has done for the saved one. they magnify the grace of God. Truly
there is a vast difference.
WHY USE THE TERM "ETERNAL
SECURITY"?
There are those who accept the truth of the eternal security of
the believer; but feel that this truth should be taught without reference to
that expression, and that the name of the doctrine, because of the resentment
against it, should never be used. It is true, because of misrepresentations of
the doctrine, that it is wise to follow this course under certain
circumstances, especially when it is impossible to deal extensively with the
subject. But that does not do away with the need for a frank discussion of the
whole subject. There is a great deal of anti-eternal security agitation. Much
is preached and written against it. Gross misrepresentations of the doctrine
are made. Some of the best Bible teachers and most spiritual Christians in the
land are being labeled in certain quarters as "eternal security men"
and doors, which otherwise would be open, are closed to them. Thereby
congregations, sadly in need of being taught grace truth, are not having the
opportunity to hear it. Some of the best Bible teachers are being kept out of
summer Bible conferences because of their belief in eternal security, and the
young people who so greatly need to know the doctrines of the grace of God are
not being taught.
This seems enough to demonstrate the real need of squarely
facing this anti-eternal security agitation. That can only be done by using the
term eternal security. It is impossible to expose the error of this teaching
without using the words that are used so freely.
Some say that the expression eternal security is unbiblical and
should not be used. If that is true, so also are the expressions, The Trinity
or the Triune God, the Vicarious (or Substitutionary) Death, Omniscience,
Omnipresence, and others that are freely used. These identical words are not in
the Bible, but the meaning is there. The Bible teaches that the believer is included
in the "eternal purpose" of God (Eph. 3:10, 11); he has "eternal
life" (1 John 5:13); his salvation is called "eternal salvation"
(Heb.5:9); he has been redeemed by an "eternal redemption" (Heb.
9:12); and he is assured an "eternal inheritance" (Heb. 9:15); and he
is called "to eternal glory" (1 Pet. 5:10). In view of these
expressions, it is surely correct to speak of the "eternal security"
of the believer for each and every one of these conditions does make him
eternally secure.
THREE
The Issued Clarified
The strong antagonism against the doctrine of eternal security
found in some groups is largely due to a misunderstanding of it. There has been
much misrepresentation of this doctrine coming from what might be classified as
three different sources.
There seems to be a small number of persons who make use of the
doctrine as a license to sin. There are not many of these; but those that there
are, are being held up as proof that eternal security is something to be
shunned. Whether or not such persons have ever been saved is a question that
God alone can answer. It is certain, however, that it is not fair to judge a
Bible doctrine by the misrepresentations of men who try to use it as a cloak
for their wickedness. To point to such men and argue that eternal security is
an evil teaching to be shunned is just as reasonable as it would be to hold up
a counterfeit United States twenty-dollar bill and insist that because of it,
all good twenty-dollar bills should be rejected. When counterfeit bills are
found, they are taken out of circulation so as to protect the sound money.
Likewise when someone uses the precious doctrine of eternal security as a
license, the error should be exposed that the truth might be retained.
There is a second source of information about eternal security
that results in misunderstandings. This is presentation of the doctrine that is
not erroneous, but unfortunately is only partial. The whole truth is not
explained and some of those who hear draw wrong conclusions. This presentation
comes from persons, often young people attending either a Bible school or
summer Bible conference, who have received the truth of their security in
Christ as a new revelation previously unknown to them. Being overjoyed in the
assurance that has come to them, after years of uncertainty as to their
salvation, they are eager that others should share the same joy and peace into
which they have entered. It is regrettable that there should be this incomplete
presentation of this comforting doctrine, but who is to blame for that? While
it may be a severe charge, it is none the less true that had there been proper
teaching of Bible doctrines in the home churches attended by these persons,
such faulty presentations could never have been made. Who is to blame?
The third reason, and probably the greatest, for the antagonism
to eternal security is because of the misrepresentation of the doctrine by some
who are opposed to it.. This may not always be intentional, but it is none the
less harmful.
Those who oppose the doctrine of eternal security say that this
doctrine teaches that one who has been saved can not be lost; it makes no
difference how he lives. The emphasis is usually placed on the last clause.
This is what most uninformed Christians in many churches think is being taught
as a doctrine, and they naturally resent such teaching. So do also those who
accept and cherish this doctrine. This is a very unfair and misleading
statement. In fact, the last half is a pure falsehood.
Those who hold and understand the doctrine teach that through
the infinite sacrifice of his Own Son, God through the riches of his grace,
saves the one who comes to him in simple faith; and that every one that has
been redeemed by the blood of Christ, God through his own power, shall bring to
glory.
There is a vast difference between these two statements. The
one is on a human plane, the other is on a divine. The former centers attention
on the believer's life and implies that salvation is dependent thereon. The
second centers attention on God's love and sacrifice and makes salvation
dependent thereon. The first calls attention to the failures of oneself; the
second to God and his infinite power. The first suggests a license to sin; the
second an appeal to holiness. The first temporizes with sin; the second
glorifies God. The first is an appeal to human reason; the second an acceptance
of divine revelation.
It is a dangerous thing to so misrepresent God's revelation.
LOST OR SAVED
In all disputes, much misunderstanding is cleared away by a
proper understanding of the terms used. To be lost is a condition before God of
every individual member of the human race before he is saved. This condition is
described as "dead in trespassed and sins" and "by nature the
children of wrath" (Eph. 2:1, 3). Such are under the condemnation of God's
holy law. To be saved is to have passed from this state of condemnation and
death into a state of eternal life (John 5:24). The lost are under the reign,
or power, of sin to death; the saved are under the reign, or power, of grace to
eternal life. The transfer from the one position to the other is by an act of
God and not of man. A more detailed explanation of what it means to be saved is
found in Chapter six. It is in this sense that the words lost and saved are
used when it is said that one who has been saved shall not be lost.
Salvation itself is not an outward condition but a heart
relationship with God. As a result of it come outward expressions. In the lives
of some, these are more manifest than in others. Abraham and Lot are both
spoken of in the Bible as justified (saved) men, but there was much more
outward evidence of a heart relationship with God in the life of Abraham.
On the other hand, there may be much of what to man appears as
evidence of a new life within, which is not that at all. There are many who
profess to be Christians, who take part in religious work, or have joined some
church, who have never been saved. Going forward in a revival meeting, weeping
or passing through emotional periods, does not constitute being saved. These
may and sometimes do accompany salvation, but they are not salvation. it is
even possible for men to preach in the Name of Christ without having been saved
(Matthew 7:22, 23). A moral reformation is not salvation. In fact, it may be
quite the opposite because it may be the result of human will power and action
and not of God.
Because man judges the outward being and not the heart, there
are many mistakes made in judging persons as saved or unsaved. The doctrine of
eternal security has nothing to say about this vast number of people who only
give outward show, but who lack the heart relationship with God.
As the salvation of an individual is a matter entirely of God's
doing, so also is the security of every one that has been saved. It follows then
that man's knowledge of both the fact of salvation and security must primarily
comes as a revelation from God.
To many, it seems most unreasonable that one who has been saved
is not lost because of his sins and failures. It truly is unreasonable, but it
is equally unreasonable that God should save one who has sunk to the lowest
depths of sin; yes, even a very intellectual and moral person but still a
sinner, and raise him to the highest position in glory far above all other
creatures of God. Yet it has pleased God to reveal that fact to man. He has
also revealed the fact that he has made provision to keep every one that has
thus been saved. There is but one thing to do: accept that which God has
revealed through his word, however much that may differ from what one has been
taught in the past. In the discussion of this question, then, no such
statements as, "We know from our experience" have any weight. It is
only a question: "What does God say?"
FOUR
God Says So
The simplest evidence in support of the doctrine of eternal
security is a large number of scripture passages which state in plain,
unconditional language the facts that can mean nothing else than that all who
have been saved are saved for all eternity.
Some of these, in addition to John 10:27-29 already used, are
quoted below:
"For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only
Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life"
(John 3:16).
"Most assuredly, I say to you, he who hears My Word and
believes in him who sent Me has everlasting life, and shall not come into
judgment, but has passed from death into life" (John 5:24, NKJV).
"All that the Father gives me will come to me, and whoever
comes to me I will never drive away" (John 6:37).
"And this is the will of him who sent me, that I shall
lose none of all that he has given me, but raise them up at the last day. For
my Father's will is that everyone who looks to the Son and believes in him
shall have eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day" (John 6:39,
40).
"But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While
we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Since we have now been justified by
his blood, how much more shall we be saved from God's wrath through him!"
(Romans 5:8, 9)
"Therefore, there is now no more condemnation for those
who are in Christ Jesus" (Rom. 8:1). The last ten words printed in the
King James Version have been added. They are not in the Revised Version, (or
the NIV or the NASB). Those who use the Swedish Bible will find that they are not
in it.
"And if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead
is living in you [and he does live in every saved person], he who raised Christ
from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through his Spirit, who
lives in you" (Rom. 8:29, 30).
"For those God foreknew he also predestined to be
conformed to the image of his Son. . . . And those he predestined, he also
called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also
glorified." (Rom. 8:29, 30).
"Who will bring any charge against those whom God has
chosen? It is God who justifies. Who is he that condemns? Christ Jesus, who
died - more than that, who was raised to life - is at the right hand of God and
is also interceding for us" (Rom. 8:33, 34). All saved are included in
"God's elect." To be lost is to have a charge laid against oneself
and to be condemned. God has made provision against both.
"He [God] will keep you strong to the end, so that you
will be blameless on the day of our Lord Jesus Christ. God, who has called you
into fellowship with his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, is faithful" (1
Corinthians 1:8, 9).
"And just as we [all who are saved] have borne the
likeness of the earthly man [Adam], so shall we bear the likeness of the man
from heaven [Jesus Christ]. (1 Cor. 15:49).
"Being confident of this, that he who began a good work in
you [all who have been saved] will carry it on to completion until the day of
Christ Jesus" (Philippians 1:6).
"For you [who are saved] died, and your life is now hidden
with Christ in God. When Christ, who is your life, appears, then you also will
appear with him in glory" (Col. 3:3, 4).
"The Lord will deliver me from every evil attack and will
bring me safely to his heavenly kingdom. To him be glory for ever and
ever" (2 Tim. 4:18).
"Who through faith are shielded by God's power until the
coming of the salvation that is ready to be revealed in the last time" (1
Peter 1:5).
"Dear friends, now we are children [born ones] of God, and
what we will be has not yet been made known. But we know that when he appears,
we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is" (1 John 3:2). Anyone
who can at this moment, or at any moment say: I am a child of God, I am saved,
can also say, I know that I shall be like him. There is not the slightest trace
of anything conditional in this verse.
These passages are unquestionably written to, or about, the
saved of this age. There is nothing in the context of any of them to qualify
their meaning. They are in non-figurative language which does not call for
explanation.
If these passages do not declare that the one who is saved
shall remain saved to the end and share the glory of Christ in his heavenly
Kingdom, then words are without any certain meaning.
Surely God says that the saved one is eternally secure.
Part Two
FIVE
Eternal Security and the Doctrines of the Grace The Grace of God
In the preceding chapter, a sufficiently large number of
scripture passages were quoted to support the truth of eternal security,
leaving no room for any reasonable doubt. There is yet, even more certain
evidence to support this truth, if any one part of God's word can be said to be
more sure than any other.
It must be admitted by all that the doctrines of the grace of
God are a related body of truth, each part of which harmonizes perfectly with
each and every other part. There must be no contradictions between the various
doctrines and no confusion as to their meanings, for God is the God of order
and not of confusion.
The fundamental question then is: Does the truth of eternal
security harmonies and fit in with all the doctrines of the grace of God, or
does the declaration that one who has been saved can be lost do so? As these
two positions are contradictory to each other, only one of them can be so
harmonized. That position which can be harmonized must then be accepted as
fundamentally correct and the other discarded. This is of far greater weight
than the quotation of separate scripture passages to support the one side or
the other. In fact, it must be conceded that, if it can be established that the
one position is in harmony with all the doctrines of grace and the other is in
discord with them, it becomes imperative to interpret individual verses in
harmony with the conclusions from a study of the doctrines. Certainly no
passage can be interpreted so as to build a doctrine that is out of harmony
with the great body of grace truth.
It is the purpose of this section to show that the truth of
eternal security and all the others either stand or fall together. Each and
every one of these doctrines requires the acceptance of the truth of eternal
security for a full and clear acceptance thereof. Thus the doctrine of eternal
security might be said to be the keystone of the arch of the doctrines of
grace, or it might be likened to the warp of a fabric of which the other
doctrines of grace are the woof. Take out the doctrine of eternal security and
the arch falls, or the fabric falls apart.
Those who support the position that one who has been saved can
be lost never put their position to this test. in fact they are not known to
quote any doctrine of grace to support their position. They rest their case on
individual scripture passages, the interpretations of which are questionable or
have actually been read into these passages by themselves and often entirely
contrary to the context in which they are found. This however, will be
discussed in a later section.
It will not only be shown that the doctrine of eternal security
is in harmony with the doctrines of grace, but it will be shown that the opposing
view makes these doctrines void and meaningless.
It will be seen from the discussion of the different doctrines
that eternal security is not a separate doctrine, but is actually an
inseparable part of each of the doctrines of the grace of God and therefore it
seems more exact to speak of the "truth" or "fact" of
eternal security than the doctrine of eternal security.
What follows is not offered as an exhaustive study of all of
the doctrines, nor is it all of any one doctrine. What is claimed for it is,
that it calls attention to those parts of a large number of doctrines which
have a bearing on the doctrine of eternal security. It makes no claim to be a
scholarly theological discussion of these doctrines.
SIX
Saved by Grace Through Faith
FOR IT is by grace you have been saved, through faith - and
this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God - not by works, so that no-one
can boast" (Eph. 2:8, 9). This passage deals with the past tense of
salvation. It is salvation from the guilt, penalty and condemnation of sin. It
has already been fully accomplished. It is not a process that is being carried
on to be perfected at a later time. In its present tense, salvation is from the
power of sin and is a process. In its future tense, salvation will be from the presence
of sin and will be accomplished "in a moment in the twinkling of an
eye."
Salvation, to use the words of another, is in no sense a
probation. To be saved by grace, to some, seems to mean to be placed in such a
relation to God that at the end of the earthly life, one enters glory,
provided, however, that one has been faithful to God and has lived according to
certain moral standards. It is not stated as definitely as this, but that is a
very fair statement of the meaning of salvation to be gleaned from a great deal
of present day preaching.
The doctrinal epistles tell of a great many things that are
true of the one who has been saved. These are all spoken of as being fully
accomplished. There is no mention of growth or development of any one of them.
They are always considered as being final. The following is only an incomplete
list of these things. It is not necessary to enumerate all in order to prove
that the one who has been "saved" is in an unalterable condition.
Some of these are more fully discussed in later chapters.
The saved person has been redeemed from under the law (Gal.
4:5), and the curse of the law (Gal. 3:13), by an eternal redemption (Heb.
9:12). He is dead to the law (Rom. 7:4), and shall not come into condemnation
(John 5:24, Rom. 8:1). He is reconciled to God (2 Cor. 5:18), and is at peace
with him (Col. 1:20). He is justified (Rom. 5:1), and all sins have been
forgiven (Col. 2:13). He has been rescued from the power of darkness and
brought into the kingdom of the Son of God (Col. 1:13). He has been born again
of imperishable seed (1 Peter 1:23); is a son of God (John 1:12); and has
eternal life (John 5:24). He is a new creature (2 Cor. 5:17). He is perfected
forever (Heb. 10:14); is complete in Christ (Col. 2:10); and has been accepted
by God (Eph. 1:6). He has been born of the Spirit (John 3:6); baptized by the
Spirit (1 Cor. 12:13); is lived in by the Spirit forever (John 14:16, 17); and
has been sealed (or security marked) with the Spirit for the day of redemption
(Eph. 4:30). He has become the object of God's love (Eph. 2:4), of his grace
(Rom. 6:14), of his power (Eph. 1:19), and of his faithfulness (1 Cor. 1:9). He
is a citizen of heaven (Eph. 2:19 and Phil. 3:20); is seated with Christ in the
heavenly places (Eph. 2:6); and is already glorified (Rom. 8:30).
All of the above, and more too, God says of the one who has
been saved. Before the one who has been saved can be lost, everyone of these
things must be made null and void. Is that possible? God's word is absolutely
silent as to any such possibility. This should be final, for it is only through
his revelation that these facts are known to man. It could only, by a similar
revelation, be known that they are subject to change if that were possible.
Can one who has been redeemed by an eternal redemption be
brought back into bondage? Can one who is dead to the law be made alive to it?
Can one within the Kingdom of God be taken out of it? Can one born again of
imperishable seed and having eternal life die? Can one that has been perfected
forever be found imperfect? Can one that is complete in Christ become
incomplete? These are eternal in their very nature, and therefore are
unalterable.
Only when all of these questions can be answered in the
affirmative, can one who has been saved be said to be lost. The burden of proof
rests squarely on those who say that one who has been saved can be lost to show
that these things can be made void. To many, it is a light matter to say that
one who has been saved can be lost, but how many understand the full
implications of that statement?
IT IS BY GRACE
Grace excludes all merit on the part of the one who is the
object thereof. Therefore to be saved by grace cannot take into account any
merit in the saved one, either before, at the time of, or after the time he is
saved. Furthermore, grace is shown toward the one who is actually guilty.
"While we were still sinners, Christ died for us" (Rom. 5:8).
Therefore demerit does not hinder the operation of grace, nor can it set aside
that which grace has accomplished. In fact, demerit is the occasion for grace
to accomplish its work.
The conclusion drawn from this is that that which God has done
by the operation of his grace is unalterable, and this is exactly what God says
about grace. ". . . it is of faith, that it might be by grace; to the end
that the promise might be sure to all the seed" (Rom. 4:16).
Thus to be saved by grace is to be unalterably saved and that
for all eternity. The saved one cannot be anything but eternally secure.
THROUGH FAITH
There is no merit in faith. "It is of faith that it might
be by grace." If there were the slightest merit in faith, it could not be
a channel through which grace could work. It would be a counter agent to grace
which, as has been seen, by its very nature excludes merit on the part of the
one saved. Faith not only excludes the thought of merit, it actually includes
the idea of helplessness and hopelessness. In faith one calls on another to do
that which one is unable to do for oneself. A child in the family is sick and near
death. the family physician is called. In doing this the parents confess their
own inability to deal with the illness and express their confidence in the
doctor. There is no merit in calling the doctor. their faith in the doctor
merely gives him the opportunity to work.
The object of the sinner's faith is Christ. He did not come
into this world to help men to be saved. He came to save that which was lost -
that which was beyond all human help. As Saviour, he came to give his life as a
ransom - to die, and thereby take on himself the judgment for sin.
Jesus gave a clear illustration of what faith in him means. He
said to Nicodemus: "Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert, so
the Son of Man must be lifted up, that everyone who believes in him may have
eternal life" (John 3:14, 15). The Israelite in the desert showed his
faith by looking on the snake of brass that hung on the pole (see Numbers
21:5-9). This one act of faith expressed a confession of sin and utter
helplessness and was an acknowledgment that God's provision was his only hope.
He neither understood the significance of the snake, nor why it was made of
brass. He didn't analyze his faith to see if it was sufficient. He didn't
question the intensity of his look. He surely claimed no merit for looking.
There were just two things on his mind: his own absolute hopelessness and the
sufficiency of God's provision. This is all there is to the faith through which
the lost are saved. There is no power in faith that contributes to salvation.
Yet there are men who discuss faith as something which is
meritorious on the part of the believer. Some even say that faith is a work.
This is impossible, for salvation is through faith and "not by
works." Sometimes one hears sinners invited to come to the cross and lay
their sin burden there. If this were possible, it might be contended that faith
is a work, but even this is impossible. No person can take the sin burden off
himself. The sin burden must always rest on a person and it stays on the sinner
until it is taken and placed on Christ and that can only be done by God.
"The LORD has laid on him the iniquity of us all" (Isa. 53:6). If man
is totally incapable of doing anything to remove the sin burden from himself,
he is much more incapable of contributing anything to doing all the things
already mentioned as being true of the one who is saved.
Through faith (that is the acknowledgment of one's own utter
helplessness and hopelessness and the casting of one's self upon God's
provision) God is able to act in grace. That is the meaning of: "It is of
faith that it might be by grace." That is also the meaning of: "Yet
to all who received him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right
to become children of God" (John 1:12).
The meaning of faith then, as well as the meaning of grace,
excludes every possible vestige of human merit. If every possible vestige of
human merit is excluded, then man's acts, apart from accepting the Saviour, are
not related to salvation and thus no act of man or demerit of man can cause him
to be taken out of the condition of being saved. Yet this is exactly what is
argued by those who contend against the doctrine of eternal security.
The fact that saving faith is an act and not a process must not
be construed to mean that there is no further need for faith. "The
righteous will live by faith" (Rom. 1:17 [Quoting Hab. 2:4]). God has much
more in view for the saved person than being saved from the guilt, penalty and
condemnation of sin and into the Kingdom of his dear Son, even as much as that
means. He desires that those who have themselves been saved shall bear
"more fruit and "much fruit." This is to live a Spirit-directed
life that shows others the way of salvation. That is the life that the
righteous (one who has been justified, making them righteous before God through
one act of faith) shall live by the faith principle of confessing one's own
inability and full dependence on God.
AND THIS NOT FROM YOURSELVES
God does not trust man to see his own absolute lack of merit
merely through the meaning of the word grace and faith, for to know his own
lack of merit and absolute worthlessness in relation to God is man's hardest
lesson to learn. So God adds the definite statement "not from
yourselves." Again, no human merit can contribute to salvation. God is
very zealous to have it known that he and he only is responsible for man's
salvation. Yet well meaning, sincere Christians will insist on some
"must" or "musts" on the part of man in order for him to
remain saved.
There is a further meaning to the words "not from
yourselves." The word "yourselves" is addressed to men who in
themselves are fallible, who are finite and who are incapable of good as God
judges goodness. If salvation were by such, it would be faulty, it would be
limited in extent and duration, it would not be good and acceptable to God.
If it were part of God and part of self, as it must be if the
slightest degree of merit or demerit of man were taken into account, it would
still be faulty, limited and unacceptable to God, to whatever extent man's
merit or demerit be taken into account. There would somewhere be one weak link
in the chain. As the strength of the chain is the strength of its weakest link,
there cannot be the slightest link of human merit in the salvation chain that binds
the believer to God, but there is no weak link in that chain, because it is
"not from yourselves" and therefore the believer is eternally secure.
Every argument against the eternal security of the believer is
based on the human element. As God definitely and clearly excludes all human
element in salvation, every one of these arguments is thereby ruled out.
IT IS THE GIFT OF GOD
Salvation is a gift from God. Again, and for the fourth time,
all thought of merit is excluded, for a gift is not a gift in the full sense of
the word if it is in exchange for even the slightest thing. The fact that
salvation is said to be a gift from God, makes it unchangeable, for the
"gifts . . . of God are irrevocable" (Rom. 11:29).
This gift is "of God." It is not only given by God,
it is also prepared by him. All of aforementioned things that are true of every
believer are provided by God and are thereby perfect and acceptable to him.
"They are made to stand on the unchanging person and merit of the eternal
Son of God" (Lewis Sperry Chafer in his book, Salvation), for they are all
"through Christ" and because of his merit. They are therefore of
infinite and eternal value in the sight of God. the one who has received the
gift of salvation must then be eternally secure. To say that one who has been
saved can be lost is to say that there can be a failure in these things which
are of God. That implies deficiency in the merit of Christ and in the power of
God working through him. Dare anyone say that that is possible?
NOT BY WORKS, SO THAT NO-ONE CAN BOAST
Works and grace are said to be mutually exclusive of each
other. "And if by grace, then it is no longer by works; if it were, grace
would no longer be grace. But if by works, then it is no longer grace; if it
were, work would no longer be work" (Rom. 11:6). Therefore, as salvation
is by grace, all that in any way might be works, whether it be to will or to
do, is excluded.
Works are the opposite of faith. That which is of works is of
man's effort and is meritorious to him. By works man confesses his own ability
and displays confidence in self. Israel did this at Sinai when they answered
Moses: "We will do everything the LORD has said" (Ex. 19:8). On the
contrary, as has been seen, faith admits one's own disability and dependence
upon another for that which is to be done.
Thus where there are works there is boasting of man, but where
it is through faith, there is no boasting of man. Therefore salvation is
"not by works, so that no-one can boast." "Where, then, is
boasting? It is excluded. On what principle? On that of observing the law? No,
but on that of faith" (Rom. 3:27). This is "so that no-one may boast
before him" (1 Cor. 1:29).
Thus there can be nothing - absolutely nothing - bearing on the
salvation of man from the guilt, penalty and condemnation of sin and into the
glorious Kingdom of the Son of God that can in the slightest degree be of works
by the saved one himself. This is all excluded for the very purpose of
excluding boasting by man.
TO THE PRAISE OF HIS GLORIOUS GRACE
God does not save man because of any value in man or because
man is too good to be lost; for there is no goodness in man, "they have
together become worthless; there is no one who does good, not even one"
(Rom. 3:12 [See also Eccles. 7:20; Psalms 53:1-3]). God saves men so "that
in the coming ages he might show the incomparable riches of his grace,
expressed in his kindness to us in Christ Jesus" (Eph. 2:7).
The supreme purpose of God in salvation is: "To the praise
of his glorious grace" (Eph. 1:6 and 2:7). In eternity those who are saved
shall sing a new song saying: "You were slain, and have redeemed us to God
by Your blood" (Rev. 5:9 NKJV). There shall be no discord in that song.
Here on earth there is a definitely discordant note every time someone says that
the saved one must not sin, must continue in faith, must hold out, must do this
and must not do that in order to remain saved. The praise is not all given to
the blood, but these notes shall not be heard there, for they are of the flesh,
and no flesh shall glory in his presence. To him only and to the glory of his
grace shall be all the praise.
SEVEN
The Gift of the Son of God
THE ONLY basis on which God does anything for man is the gift
of his own Son. "For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only
Son" (John 3:16). It was "while we were still sinners, Christ died
for us" (Rom. 5:8). This offer is to all, but only to "as many as
received him . . . he gave the right to become children of God" (John 1:12
NKJV).
To those who accept the Son as a gift, God gives everything
else that is needed by a child of his. "He who did not spare his own Son,
but gave him up for us all - how will he not also, along with him, graciously
give us all things?" (Rom. 8:32). The fact that the Son was given up thus
becomes of infinite value to every one that receives him, for all things are
given and received with him. The "all things" include every possible
thing that the believer's spiritual welfare might require under every
conceivable condition. It is nothing less than a divinely perfect provision for
the one who has the Son. This must include a provision against being lost.
There are some things that are specifically mentioned in the
Bible as being gifts from God. They are: eternal life (Rom. 6:23), The Holy Spirit
(Acts 8:17) and Righteousness (Rom. 5:16, 17).
As long as a person has the Son and with him these other gifts,
he is saved.
Those who teach that a saved person can be lost necessarily
teach that these gifts can be lost. They say God takes the eternal life back to
himself or that the Holy Spirit will depart from one who has received him.
These are man's words, not God's.
What does God say? He says "the gifts . . . of God are
irrevocable" (Rom. 11:29). If God says that he will not revoke a gift, it
is contradicting him and calling him a liar to say that he takes his gifts
back. No. One who has received, as a free gift from God, first his Son and with
him righteousness, eternal life, and the Holy Spirit and all other things, will
always have these throughout all eternity and is eternally secure.
Still there are some who prefer to reason rather than accept
the finality of God's word. They say: "Oh, yes, God does not take back his
gifts, but a man can throw them away.: Where is the scripture proof for this?
The Bible says that the Holy Spirit abides forever (John 14:16). Can he be
thrown away? The gift of Righteousness is a matter of God's own accounting
(Rom. 4:24). Has man access to God's books so he can change them? Can eternal
life be thrown away? Man can throw away his physical life by committing
suicide, but that life is a mortal one. Can suicide be committed when the life
is eternal?
God has given these infinite gifts to men that he should be
praised for them. Paul says "Thanks be to God for his indescribable
gift!" (2 Cor.9:15 NKJV). There is no thanks given to God by teaching that
God takes his gifts back or that they can be thrown away.
Thus the doctrine of eternal security is inseparably related to
the teachings concerning the gift of the Son.
EIGHT
The Substitutionary Death of Christ
"THE WAGES of sin is death" (Rom. 6:23), "The
soul who sins shall die" (Ezek. 18:4 NKJV). This is God's law. It is far
more unalterable than the laws of the Medes and the Persians. God's own
righteousness demands that his law be held inviolate; the penalty of the law
must be enforced. There can be no exception made. Not one sin can he overlook,
even the smallest. God, sitting as Judge, would be unjust if he did not impose
the death penalty of his law upon all.
The voice of his law has stopped every mouth and declared
everyone guilty before him (Rom. 3:19). There is no human means of escape, but
God has provided a means whereby he might remain just and yet deliver the
sinner from the death penalty of his sins.
The sentence has been imposed. Sinning humanity stood guilty
before the Judge, awaiting the execution of the sentence, but before the
execution took place the gates of heaven were opened. the Son of God was sent
forth. He was given a body which was in the form of sinful flesh, but he was
not sinful. He committed no sin, and no deceit was found in his mouth" (1
Peter 2:22 [See also Isa. 53:9]). He was as "a lamb without blemish or
defect" (1 Peter 1:19). the centurion was right when he said: "Surely
this was a righteous man" (Luke 23:47).
Because he was sinless, he was not under the condemnation of
the law, but he presented himself to God the Judge to ransom those who were
under that condemnation, and paid the death penalty on their behalf. Thereby
those who accept him as the one who paid the penalty of the law in their stead
shall not die, but live.
He, himself, said that this was the very reason he came into
the world. "For the Son of Man came to seek and to save what was
lost" (Luke 19:10). "The Son of Man" came "to give his life
as a ransom for many" (Matt. 20:28). "I have come that they (the
sheep) may have life" (John 10:10).
This giving of his life was a voluntary act on his part. He
said, "No-one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord"
(John 10:18).
God the Judge accepted his offering and "laid on him the
iniquity of us all" (Isa. 53:6). "God made him who had no sin to be
sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God" (2
Cor. 5:21).
"He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree" (1
Peter 2:24). "For Christ died for sins once for all, the righteous for the
unrighteous, to bring you to God" (1 Peter 3:18).
In that great event that took place on Calvary's hill, God, the
righteous Judge, sitting in judgment, took the sins of sinning mankind and laid
them on his own Son. Then he carried out the execution of the judgment upon
him. Everyone standing before God as a guilty sinner who will acknowledge this
death of the Son of God as paying the penalty for his sins is immediately
declared by God as having fully satisfied the demands of the law and is free
from its penalty. Because Christ died on his behalf, he is then in the sight of
the law as one dead. He is dead to the law and from that time on the law, as
the only giver of death, has nothing to do with him. Paul states this fact
clearly and repeatedly: "So, my brothers, you also died to the law through
the body of Christ" (Rom. 7:4), and again: "But now, by dying to what
once bound us, we have been released from the law" (Rom. 7:6), and still
again: "For through the law I died to the law" (Gal. 2:19).
The substitutionary death of Christ then means that he was put
to death in the place of the sinner to satisfy God's law that demands that
"The soul who sins shall die." Thus the death sentence has not only
been imposed; the sinner who believes in Christ, has in the Person of Christ
been executed and from then on he cannot be condemned by the law for he is dead
in its sight. Thus one who has been saved by being ransomed by the death of
Christ cannot be lost.
"Payment God will not twice demand,
Once from my bleeding Surety's hand
And then again from me."
Some are able to accept this truth insofar as it affects sins
committed prior to the time they were saved, but believe that sins committed
afterward may cause one to be lost. To such there are several answers.
In the first place, did Christ die for their sins at the moment
they accepted him? No. it was almost nineteen hundred years before a single sin
has been committed by them., When he died he did so for the sins of the whole
human race which have been committed over a period of six thousand years.
Therefore it cannot be a question of the time sin was committed.
Again, it must be remembered that God doesn't work according to
the calendar. When he looks at the life of any particular individual it isn't
as a biography of successive events, but as a composite portrait of sinful and
righteous acts. This must be so, for he saw everyone before the foundation of
the world, before time was. In taking an individual's sins then, and placing
them on Christ, whether it was those of a saint of the Old Testament or of one
living today, he considered the entire sin element of that life and passed
judgment on it. As far as the penalty of God's holy law and the demands of his
righteousness are concerned, the sin question is settled once and for all the
very moment an individual believes that Christ paid the penalty in his place.
If one who has been saved and is dead to the law by the body of
Christ could be lost, then it would be possible to put the same person to
death, twice. This is impossible. Therefore, to say that it is possible for one
who has been saved to be lost, is to deny the value of the substitutionary
death of Christ.
But God does not leave this question open. He has given the
most definite assurance that those who have been saved by the death of Christ
shall be eternally saved. He says: "But God demonstrates his own loves for
us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Since we have now
been justified by his blood, how much more shall we be saved from God's wrath
through him!" (Rom. 5:8, 9).
NINE
Redemption
BECAUSE "THE law brings wrath" (Rom. 4:15), one who
is under the law is subject to the wrath of God.
"Whatever the law says, it says to those who are under the
law, so that every mouth may be silenced and the whole world held accountable
to God" (Rom. 3:19). The law is the service of death and of condemnation
(2 Cor. 3:7, 9). Therefore, one who is under the law is guilty before God and
condemned to death.
Therefore, the one who is under the law is lost.
A saved person has been redeemed from the curse of the law
(Gal. 3:13) and from under the law (Gal. 4:5). He is no longer under the law,
but under grace (Rom. 6:14).
Redemption was accomplished by the death penalty being borne by
Jesus Christ instead of by the sinner. Thus execution by substitute, as
explained in the preceding chapter, has been actually carried out. In the sight
of the law, the guilty sinner is dead - dead to the law (Rom. 7:4) and
therefore free from it.
If one who is saved is to be lost, it is necessary to return
him into the state of being under the law. As he was freed from the law by
payment of the death penalty, he can be brought back under it only by the
execution of his substitute. Until that is done, the law can have nothing to
say to him. Therefore the payment by Christ of the death penalty of the law on
behalf of every sinner that comes to him demands the acceptance of the doctrine
of the eternal security of the believer.
Redemption is said to be: "not with perishable things -
but with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect."
This redemption price can never lose its value, for it is imperishable. It is
infinite in its value, for it is the blood of the infinite Christ. It is
perfect for He was without blemish or defect, and it is precious. An
imperishable, infinite, perfect and precious redemption price insures an
unchangeable, infinite, complete redemption. And such is the redemption of the
believer. "He (Christ) entered the Most Holy Place once for all by his own
blood, having obtained eternal redemption" (Heb. 9:12). Inasmuch as the
redemption of the one who has been saved from under the law is eternal, he
cannot again come under the law and be condemned to death by it. He can,
therefore, not be lost. Eternal redemption and eternal security are one and the
same thing. There can be no doctrine of eternal redemption without the fact of
eternal security.
As conclusive as all of this is, it is not all that God has
done to make the redemption of the saved one absolutely certain. Redemption is
not only from something, it is also to God (Rev. 5:9). Everyone who is saved
had been "bought" (1 Cor. 7:23) by Christ, and the transaction has
been sealed and witnessed.
After an individual has, through faith, accepted Christ as his
redeemer, he is sealed with the Holy Spirit and is also given him as a witness
to what has been done. This sealing is "until the redemption of the
purchased possession" (Eph. 1:14). The seal is legal evidence of a
consummated purchase, and is proof of ownership.
A beautiful illustration of the use of the seal is found in the
story of the purchase by Jeremiah of a field from Hanameel, his uncle's son.
The transaction was sealed according to law; and witnesses and the purchase
price, seventeen shekels of silver, was weighed in the balances. Then Jeremiah
gave the evidence of the purchase, both that which was sealed according to law,
and that which was open (ie. witnessed) and gave them to Baruch to be put in an
earthen vessel. The field was then Jeremiah's by purchase. (See Jeremiah
32:8-14.)
That incident in the life of Jeremiah is a beautiful picture of
the sealing by the Holy Spirit. The transfer of the field to Jeremiah was a legal
transaction. So also Christ becomes owner of every believer through a legal
transaction. Natural man is under the law and condemned to death. In Christ is
vested the right of redemption. He paid the redemption price, not shekels of
silver, the redemption money of the temple, but his own precious blood to
satisfy the requirements of the law. On behalf of everyone who believes,
evidence is subscribed and sealed. The seal is the Holy Spirit. In addition
thereto, a witness is taken. This also is the Holy Spirit (Rom. 8:15, 16).
These evidences are then place in an earthen vessel - the believer's body,
where they continue until the redemption of the purchased possession is
consummated.
A sealed and witnesses transaction is unalterable. It is final.
It is irrevocable. The one who has been bought from under the bondage of sin
and the condemnation of the law cannot be returned to that state. The seal is
effective throughout the entire earthly life of the believer. To deny the
eternal security of the believer is to reject the value of the seal and witness
of the Holy Spirit.
Thus the fact of eternal security is as vital to the doctrine
of redemption as life is to the body. Take life away from the body and it is
useless, it returns to the dust. take security out of the doctrine of
redemption and its life-giving power is gone. The doctrine of Redemption
demands the doctrine of eternal security.
TEN
The New Birth
UNFORTUNATELY, COMPARITIVELY few Christians really understand
what it means to be "born again." "You must be born again"
is a favorite sermon topic, but why is it such a rare thing to hear a simple
explanation of what the new birth means and what takes place when one is born
again? Those that deny the eternal security of the believer do not explain it.
The new birth is as real as the first birth. The Lord Jesus
Christ said to Nicodemus: "Flesh gives birth to flesh, but the Spirit
gives birth to spirit" (John 3:6).
The word birth, when used literally, always means the coming
into existence of a new life which has the same nature as the parents. When a
wolf, or a sheep, is born, there is a new life which has the wolf nature or the
sheep nature, as the case may be. When a child is born into the world, new life
comes into existence. This life has a human nature which is sinful. It is
therefore subject to death. This is the birth that Jesus called "of the
flesh" and the result of that birth is flesh. This life cannot change its
nature. It is as grass that withers, and as a flower that falls away (1 Peter
1:24). To be saved does not mean that this life which is born of the flesh is
changed or made over. This cannot happen, for its nature cannot be changed.
That is the condition that makes the new birth imperative. The only thing God
could do with the flesh was to judge it, and the judgment resulted in
condemnation and execution (Rom. 8:3; Gal. 2:19; Rom. 6:6).
The new birth is a birth of the Spirit. It is to be "born,
not of natural descent, nor of human decision, or a husband's will, but born of
God" (John 1:13). It is the coming into being of a new, divine life which
has the imperishable and immortal nature of God. Of the new birth Peter writes:
"For you have been born again, not of perishable seed, but of
imperishable, through the living and enduring word of God" (1 Peter 1:23).
This seed not only lives forever, but it has also been revealed that it remains
(1 John 3:9) in the one who is born of God. Such a life must be eternal and
that which is eternal cannot die. All who are born of imperishable seed have an
imperishable nature and have eternal life. It is impossible for such to be lost
for that would mean the perishing of the divine nature and that which cannot
die.
By the new birth, one who has already been born into the human
race is born into the spiritual realm, that is, the Kingdom of God. This is the
only way to see or enter into that realm (John 3:3, 5).
Not a single individual who has been born into the human race
has been able to remove himself from it. Many have committed suicide, but all
that achieves is to shorten the days of their earthly existence. Their
existence still continues, on and on and on into the eternity of the future.
How some people would like to obliterate themselves entirely from the human
race! Yet they cannot because of the relentless law: once born a human, always
a human.
Despite all this, some teach that one who has been saved can be
lost by willfully going away from God. This is the same as saying that one who
has been born into the Kingdom of God can, by his own will, separate himself
from the spiritual realm. By analogy with the human race, this is impossible.
The burden of proof rests heavily upon those who so teach to produce scripture
passages which show that this is possible. None has as yet produced such proof.
In fact, these teachers do not attempt to prove this and similar statements by
quoting scripture. They simply make the statements and their hearers or readers
who are untutored in Bible doctrine accept them at face value.
Those who reject the eternal security of the believer, pervert
the doctrine of the new birth (either consciously or unconsciously) by
believing that eternal life is received first at the end of the present earthly
life. In the meantime the "saved person" might lose his chance of
receiving it. This is a widely accepted error. Eternal life, however, is an
ever present possession of all who are born again, from the very moment they
were so born.
Jesus said: "Most assuredly, I say to you, he who hears My
Word and believes in him who sent Me has everlasting life, and shall not come
into judgment, but has passed from death into life" (John 5:24 NKJV).
All of this is accomplished in a moment when the sinner, by
believing, accepts Christ and is born again. The word "has" does not
mean "is receiving" nor "will receive." It means already
possessed. Three times in this verse, the unending nature of the believer's
life is stated: (1) has everlasting (eternal) life, (2) shall not come into
judgment and (3) has passed from death into life. Notice also that Jesus calls
special attention to the fact that he is authority for the statement. He says
"I say to you," and that is not all, he emphasizes it with the
strongest expression he ever used: "Most assuredly" (NKJV);
"Verily, verily" (KJV); "Truly, truly" (NASB); "I tell
you the truth" (NIV). What finality of expression is used here by the Lord
Jesus Christ!
Even still, it is possible to be so blinded by the teaching
that one who has been saved can be lost, that this cannot be understood. At the
close of a session of a Bible class in which the truth of the believer's
present possession of eternal life had been pointed out, one of the members
said: "I can't believe that we now have eternal life, for that would be
eternal security and I won't believe that." Not all are as honest in
expressing their position as was this person, but their minds are just as
closed to the truth. They cannot see the truth, because of adherence to a false
teaching that absolutely contradicts it.
Those who teach that one who has been saved can be lost, also
teach that one such a person can be saved again. To be saved means to be born
again. If it were possible to be lost, that would mean the death of the life
resulting from the new birth. Then to be saved a second time it becomes
necessary to be born again a second time. With some, it would be a third,
fourth, fifth time and so on indefinitely. Is there any scripture to support
such juggling of the simple meaning of the word birth?
Just how far astray the rejection of the doctrine of eternal
security will bring people is seen in connection with the doctrine of the new
birth. To accept "new birth" as meaning a new eternal life as real as
the physical life received by the first birth makes their position
indefensible. So the new birth is called a "symbol of salvation."
This precious, basic, vital doctrine is made figurative language. Its force is
lost. Its clear meaning is lost. The word of God has been made meaningless.
ELEVEN
The New Creation in Christ Jesus
THERE IS a doctrine that is very little known and still less
taught that is very closely related to the doctrine of the New Birth. It is the
"new creation in Christ Jesus."
He who is saved is "created in Christ Jesus" (Eph.
2:10). "Neither circumcision nor uncircumcision means anything; what
counts is a new creation" (Gal. 6:15). This creation takes the place of
the old creation in the first Adam. "Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he
is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come!" (2 Cor. 5:17).
This new creation is "the new self, created to be like God in true
righteousness and holiness" (Eph. 4:24).
The new self is the born-again self, the one born of the
spirit, as distinguished from the old self, or carnal self, the one born of the
flesh. The old self has a corrupt human nature, with inborn tendency to evil.
The new self is partaker of a divine nature and life and is in no sense the old
self made over, or improved. (See Dr. Schofield's Reference notes to Eph. 4:24
and Rom. 6:6)
God created Adam in his own likeness (Gen. 5:1, 2). Afterward,
"Adam . . . had a son in his own likeness, in his own image; and he named
him Seth" (Gen. 5:3). Thus is stated the beginning of the generations of
the human race, but something had happened in the interval between the second
and third verses. Adam through sin had lost the likeness of God. When Seth was
begotten in Adam's "own likeness, in his own image," it was not in
the original likeness to God but it was in the likeness of the sinful Adam.
Also, as it was said of Adam "and then he died," so it was also said
of Seth - "and then he died." The observant reader will find the
following formula throughout the chapter: "Altogether . . . lived . . .
years . . . and then he died." There is one exception, Enoch who was
"taken from this life, so that he did not experience death" (Heb.
11:5), is a prototype of those saints who are to be caught up when Christ comes
for his Church.
Ever since that same formula has applied to man. every
descendant of Adam from Cain and Seth down to the present day, has been born in
the likeness and image of Adam, with a sinful nature and subject to death.
There is absolutely no escape from this condition. "Therefore, just as sin
entered the world [humanity] through one man, and death through sin, and in
this way death came to all men, because all sinned. Consequently, ... the
result of one trespass was condemnation for all men" (Rom. 5:12, 18).
The words that are written large over the first creation, that
of which Adam is the federal head, are - "SIN HAS REIGNED, TO DEATH."
That condition is unalterable, for God had commanded Adam not to eat the fruit
of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil and has made death the penalty
for disobedience. This means death in its fullest significance, physical death,
spiritual death and the second death which is the final everlasting separation
of the body, soul and spirit from God. God's commandment has been broken and
the penalty cannot be avoided.
To be lost in this first creation is to be dead in trespassed
and sins.
When the Son of God became flesh and came into the world, he
lived among men of the old creation, but he was not of it. He was not of the
seed of Adam, but of the seed of the woman. He was conceived by the Holy
Spirit. Therefore, he did not possess Adam's sinful nature. He was full of
truth (John 1:14). He was in the likeness of sinful flesh (Rom. 8:3), but no
sin was in him.
Then through infinite love, he identified himself with the
first creation and took upon himself the guilt of it. He was the Lamb of God
which takes away the sin of the world. As a result, he tasted death for every
man (Heb. 2:9).
But God raised him up, "freeing him from the agony of
death, because it was impossible for death to keep its hold on him" (Acts
2:24). He arose victorious over death. The Son of God? Yes, but also the Son of
man. With his resurrection there was a new creation raised by God out of the
death of the old. All who are saved are enlivened together with Christ in this
resurrection. "But God ... made us alive with Christ ... even when we were
dead in transgressions - it is by grace you have been saved. And God raised us
up with Christ and seated us in the heavenly realms in Christ Jesus" (Eph.
2:4-6).
As the first creation has one man as its federal head, so also
has the new, the man Jesus Christ (Rom. 5:15). The first creation received its
sinful nature from its federal head, Adam. The new creation receives its
righteous nature from its federal head, the man Jesus Christ, for "through
the obedience of the one man the many will be made righteous" (Rom. 5:19).
In each case, the nature of the creation depends on the act of the head. It
doesn't depend on the acts of those people that derive from those heads.
As the unalterable law of the first creation is Sin, to death,
so the law of the new is GRACE REIGNS THROUGH RIGHTEOUSNESS, TO ETERNAL LIFE.
This law of the new creation is even more unalterable than that of the first
creation. "For if, by the trespass of one man, death reigned through that
one man, how much more will those who receive God's abundant provision of grace
and of the gift of righteousness reign in life through the one man, Jesus
Christ" (Rom. 5:17). Since the head cannot be condemned (Rom. 6:9, 10),
the members of the new creation cannot be condemned.
To be saved is to be in the new creation under the law of
righteousness, to eternal life. To be lost is to be in the first creation under
the law of sin, to death. If one who has been saved can be lost, it must be
possible to bring him back into his original position in the old creation. That
is impossible. To say that this could happen would be to contradict Jesus' own
words: "Whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me ... will not be
condemned; he has crossed over from death to life" (John 5:24).
Furthermore, for everyone that is in the new creation, the old has passed away
(2 Cor. 5:17). There can be no return to it.
To say that a saved person, one who has been enlivened together
with Christ, can be lost is to reject completely God's teachings concerning his
new creation.
TWELVE
An Unbroken Chain
FOR THOSE God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to
the likeness of his Son, ... And those he predestined, he also called; those he
called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified" (Rom.
8:29, 20).
This is an unbroken chain of things that God has done for the
saved one. All is based on his foreknowledge and culminates in glorification.
All is in the past tense, therefore already accomplished.
There is no stage at which there is the slightest possibility
that the number of individuals is reduced. Just as many are glorified as are
predestined. Not a single one less! As all who are called are glorified, not
one can be lost.
There are five doctrines of the Grace of God in this passage.
Not a single one of them can be fully accepted without accepting the doctrine
of the eternal security of the believer.
1. GOD FOREKNOWS
The foreknowledge of God is a part of his omniscience. To say
that God is omniscient is to say that he knows everything - past, present and
future. This he declares of himself: "I am God, and there is none like me.
I make known the end from the beginning, from ancient times, what is still to
come" (Isa. 46:9, 10).
In the following passages the foreknowledge of God is made the
very basis for salvation. "For those God foreknew he also predestined to
be conformed to the likeness of his Son" (Rom. 8:29).
"For he chose us in him before the creation of the world
to be holy and blameless in his sight" (Eph. 1:4).
"Chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father"
(1 Peter 1:2).
These passages state clearly that what God has done in
salvation was based on his foreknowledge. He knew before Adam was created, or
before a single saved person was saved, every detail of each life from the
cradle to the grave. In view of this foreknowledge, he "predestined"
and he "chose." If it is possible by sin in the life, or by loss of
faith, or by "willing to go away from God" to be lost, what can be
said about the foreknowledge of God? If God did not see these things he is not
omniscient. If he saw them and in spite of them undertook to predestine, to
call, to justify and glorify, he started something which he cannot finish.
Only by accepting the doctrine of the eternal security of the
believer can one accept without reservation the doctrine of the omniscience of
God.
2. HE ALSO PREDESTINED
Predestination, as defined by Dr. Schofield, is "that
effective exercise of the will of God by which things before determined by him
are brought to pass."
In this discussion, predestination is considered only with
reference to the saved. These are said to be predestined to be conformed to the
image of God's Son. (See also Eph. 1:5, 1 Cor. 15:49, 1 John 3:2)
God, therefore, by the effective exercise of his will has
determined that all who are saved shall be conformed to the image of Christ.
If a single saved person is lost, God has failed as far as that
person is concerned to exercise his will effectively, and has not accomplished
that which he determined to do. To say that one who has been saved can be lost
is to deny that God has power to do what he has determined to do. One must
either accept at full face value God's own statement, or else reject it. There
is no middle ground. One cannot even admit the "possibility" of a
saved person being lost.
To emphasize the certainty of predestination, it is said to be
"in accordance with his pleasure and will" (Eph 1:5). How then dare
anyone say that a man can will to go away from God and be lost? That would
clearly be interference with the pleasure of God's will and is a direct denial
of God's own word.
When God clearly says that he shall conform those who are saved
into the image of his own Son, there is only one thing to do. That is to
believe it. Any other attitude rejects this great doctrine.
3. HE ALSO CALLED
The calling of God is to "share in the glory of our Lord
Jesus Christ" (2 Thess. 2:14). It is according to his own purpose and does
not depend, at any time, upon the saved one's own works. For it is written:
"Who has saved us and called us to a holy life - not because of anything
we have done but because of his own purpose and grace. This grace was given us
in Christ Jesus before the beginning of time" (2 Tim. 1:9).
This purpose of God in calling is to make known the riches of
his glory, through those called, who are "objects of his mercy, whom he
prepared in advance for glory" (Rom. 9:23, 24). "To those whom God
has called ... Christ the power of God" (1 Cor. 1:24). The faithfulness of
God is involved in the calling (1 Cor. 1:9). Again, the calling shall not be
altered. Israel was nationally broken off as the branches of the olive tree,
but shall be grafted in again, (Rom. 11:24) "for all Israel shall be
saved." (Rom. 11:26) This is because "God's gifts and his calling are
irrevocable" (Rom. 11:29).
The calling of God then is the carrying out of his own purpose,
independent of the saved one's works. It is to make known the riches of his
glory through the objects of mercy. Christ (not they themselves) is the power
of all that are called. The calling is based upon God's faithfulness and is
irrevocable
All who are saved are called (2 Tim. 1:9).
Therefore, in order that one who has been saved, be lost, God
must, by something in the life of such a person, be thwarted in his purpose. He
will fail to make known the riches of his glory through that object of mercy.
Christ is an insufficient power in that individual; God is not faithful, and he
does revoke his call. To say that one who has been saved is not eternally
secure is to bring these charges against God.
4. HE ALSO JUSTIFIED
Justification is that act of God by which he imputes (or
counts) righteousness to one who believes in Jesus Christ as the one who was
made "to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness
of God" (2 Cor. 5:21). It is entirely apart from any merit on the part of
man, so that boasting might be excluded (Rom. 3:27).
Justification is through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus
(Rom. 3:24). Because Christ was presented as a sacrifice of atonement for sin,
God is able to justify the one that believes in Jesus and still remain just
(Rom. 3:25, 26).
It is not a process that is being perfected as long as the
believer continues to believe, but is a single act of God performed the instant
an individual exercises faith in Jesus Christ. It is repeatedly spoken of as
finished. (Rom. 5:21, 8:30, 1Cor. 6:11, Titus 3:7).
It is also an unalterable condition of every saved person. The
righteousness that is imputed in justification is a free gift (Rom. 3:24;
5:17). As God never revokes his gifts (Rom. 11:29), he will never count one who
has been justified as anything else than righteous.
Justification is by grace (Rom. 3:24). Therefore, it is
certain. That which is by grace is unfailing. "The promise comes by faith,
so that it may be by grace and may be guaranteed to all ... who are of the
faith of Abraham" (Rom. 4:16).
All who are saved are justified. In order for one who has been
saved to be lost, he must lose his standing before God as justified. To do so,
some deficiency in the redemption of Christ and his death as a sacrifice of
atonement must be found, for justification is based entirely on that, apart
from any merit or demerit of man. If a person can throw away his salvation as
some say, it would be necessary for such a person to have access to God's
accounting records and change them, for imputation of righteousness is a matter
of God's reckoning. It would be necessary for God to take back a gift, which he
never does. The promise according to Grace which God says is sure would have to
fail.
5. ALREADY GLORIFIED
Those who hold that one who has been saved can be lost will
unhesitatingly agree that when saints reach glory there is no more danger of
being lost. These friends overlook the fact that believers are already
glorified and that it is but the revealing of the reality that is still in the
future. There are things which God has already accomplished, but the revealing
has been delayed until later. Thus, Christ is said to be the Lamb "chosen
before the creation of the world, but was revealed in these last times" (1
Peter 1:20).
Similarly, the believer is already glorified; "those he
justified, he also glorified," but the revealing of it is in the future.
"Your life is now hidden with Christ in God. When Christ, who is your
life, appears, then you also will appear with him in glory" (Col. 3:3, 4).
The glorification has taken place, although appearance in glory is in the
future and in the meantime the believer's life is "hidden with Christ in
God." Can anyone be more secure?
If one who is saved can be lost, it must have to be by taking
such a person from his place in glory where he is hidden in God. Surely no one
dares to say that this is possible. There are those who enthusiastically preach
that the believer's inheritance is secure, because it is reserved in heaven.
Yet they strongly deny the security of the believer. Have they overlooked the
fact that the believer is already glorified, and that his life is not only in
heaven but in God? It is impossible to accept the truth that the believer is
already glorified and deny his eternal security.
"What, then, shall we say in response to this? If God is
for us, who can be against us? He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him
up for us all - how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all
things?" (Rom. 8:31, 32).
THIRTEEN
God's Judgments of the Sins of the Saved
GOD CANNOT ignore the sins of the unsaved. They must be judged.
Neither can he ignore even the so-called smallest sin of one who is saved. Many
who oppose the doctrine of the security of the believer freely consent to and
teach, that God is merciful and will overlook the faults of those who are
saved. This is error of the grossest kind. It means nothing less than that God
compromises his own righteousness. Then he would not be God.
God always judges sin in the life of a believer. In fact he has
made a double provision for judging such sin!
This judgment is double in that it is penal and corrective. The
purpose of the penal judgment is to satisfy fully the demands of his righteousness.
The corrective judgment is to satisfy his everlasting love (Jer. 31:3). Thus
neither his righteousness nor his love is compromised.
This dual judgment of the sins of the saved is seen in the
advocacy of Christ and in the chastening by the Father. If it can be shown that
God has made provision to keep the saved one from being lost, when he may
commit sin after he has been saved, then the case is settled; for every cause
that has ever been offered as a condition by which one may be lost, is in fact
sin. It is sometimes admitted that one who has been saved might sin, and still
not be lost; but it is said that if he stops believing, he is lost. That is
just one form of sin, for "everything that does not come from faith is
sin" (Rom. 14:23). Again it is said that one can, of his own will, go away
from God and be lost. Again, this is sin, for the setting up of one's will
against the will of God is sin in its very essence. There is but one problem
and that is SIN.
THE ADVOCACY OF CHRIST
My
little children, these things write I unto you, that ye sin not. And if any man
sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous: And he is
the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for the sins of
the whole world. (1 John 2:1, 2).The scene here is on legal ground. Sin, the
violation of God's holy law is being judged. The sinner has an Advocate who is
righteous in the sight of the law. The Advocate is pleading the case on the
basis of atonement, that the penalty has been paid. An advocate always pleads
before a judge. The Judge is he who is the Judge of the whole world, but he is
also called "the Father." Therefore it is a son that is being judged.
There must also be an accuser to bring the charge. Elsewhere (Rev. 2:10) it is
revealed that he is Satan.
Satan is before God day and night accusing the brethren. When a saved
person sins, Satan files a prompt charge and demands
condemnation, ie., the full penalty of the law. He himself is under that same
penalty because iniquity was found in his heart (Ezek. 28:15, 16). In the face
of this accusation what is the hope of the sinning "saved one"? God
cannot overlook that sin. He would compromise his own righteousness by ignoring
the sin of the sinning "brother" and holding Satan responsible for
his sin.
There is indeed need of an advocate! What plea has the sinning
saint to offer? Do not forget that all who have been saved are in this position
at some time or other - some more often than others. "If we claim we have
not sinned, we make him out to be a liar and his word has no place in our
lives" (1 John 1:10).
Thank God! There is an Advocate. He is the only hope of a
believer. It all depends on him. He is Jesus Christ the Righteous. Being
righteous, he has never broken God's holy law. He is perfect in its sight.
Furthermore, he cannot do anything that will compromise that law. Therefore,
his advocacy is a righteous one, and is in harmony with the law.
What then does he plead on behalf of the sinning saint? It is
the fact that he is the atonement for sins. He points to that hill outside of
Jerusalem where there were three crosses. On two, hung men who were paying the
penalty for their sins against human laws. On the center one, was hanging one,
who was the Son of man, yes also the Son of God. He was there paying the
penalty for sins of others. He was there as the "Lamb of God, who takes
away the sin of the world" (John 1:29). It is he himself that he points to
and, as the Advocate of the sinning saint, he pleads: "I am that Lamb
without blemish or defect (1 Peter 1:19). I am that righteous one dying for the
unrighteous (1 Peter 3:18). I was crushed for his iniquities (Isa. 53:5). I
bore his sins in My body upon that tree (1 Peter 2:24). I have redeemed him
from the curse of this law under which he is now being accused, because I was
made a curse for him (Gal. 3:13). I, the Righteous, was there made sin for him,
that he might be made righteous in the sight of this holy law (2 Cor.
5:21)."
That is a picture of the Advocate, and that is, in God's own
words, the ground for his pleading. On the basis of that plea both the holy law
and the righteousness of the Judge are held unbroken.
Paul has grasped the full glory and significance of this when
he, through inspiration exclaimed: "Who will bring any charge against
those whom God has chosen? It is God who justifies. who is he that condemns?
Christ Jesus, who died - more than that, who was raised to life - is at the
right hand of God and is also interceding for us" (Rom. 8:33, 34).
And then in the light of full satisfaction, both past and
present, of God's righteousness, he further exclaims: "Who shall separate
us from the love of Christ?" And his answer, so full of assurance (verses
35-39) can be summed up in the one word - NOTHING.
The tremendous significance of this present work of Christ can
be somewhat understood from the comparison that is made of it with his own
redemptive work.
"Since we have now been justified by his blood, how much
more shall we be saved from God's wrath through him! For if, when we were God's
enemies, we were reconciled to him through the death of his Son, how much more,
having been reconciled, shall we be saved through his life!" (Rom. 5:9,
10).
Is the saved one now justified? Unquestionably. "Much
more" then ... he shall be saved from wrath; ie., from the penalty of
God's holy law. God's "shall" is certainty, but this is a "much
more" shall. The saved person can be much more certain of salvation from
wrath than he can be of the already certain fact of justification! This is to the
extent that life is much more than death. Reconciliation, - salvation of the
past - is by his death. Salvation of the present and the future is by his
resurrection life. How dare finite mind question such a declaration by God? Can
the finite understand the infinite? No. But with simple God-given faith man can
say, "I believe."
And still God's revelation of this unsearchable theme is not
exhausted. It has pleased him to reveal clearly that there is to be no
interruption to this advocacy. "But because Jesus lives forever, he has a
permanent priesthood. Therefore he is able to save completely those who come to
God through him, because he always lives to intercede for them" (Heb.
7:24, 25).
The altogether too common interpretation of the words,
"save completely" ("save to the uttermost" KJV), is that
God can take a sinner, even when sunk to the lowest depths of sin, and raise
him to glory. Undoubtedly this has helped many who have seen themselves so low
in sin that they have considered themselves as hopeless. Yet this is not what
God intends. Such an interpretation permits degrees of sin more or less
difficult for God to deal with. Scripture does not support this idea. Twice in
the two verses, the ever existent nature of the Intercessor is made the
condition for his ability to save to the uttermost. Furthermore, the words of
the original here translated "to the uttermost" (KJV)
("completely" NIV) are in the John 13:1, translated "to the
end." Therefore the essential revelation in this passage is that the
salvation, which is accomplished by the resurrection life of Christ, is without
interruption. It is an eternal salvation (Heb. 5:9).
The advocacy of Christ is therefore a provision to guarantee
the eternal security of every believer.
GOD'S CHASTENING
God's provision in Christ's advocacy on behalf of the saved one
is not all that he does for the specific purpose of keeping him from
condemnation. there is a corrective judgment provided for sin which is not
self-judged. This judgment of sin is chastening.
"To chasten is to purify morally and spiritually by the
providential visitation of distress and affliction; to purify from errors or
faults as the effect of discipline. It implies imperfection, but not
guilt."
This is exactly what God does with the Christian who fails to
judge himself. One purpose of God's chastening is that the one chastened shall
not be "condemned with the world." In other words, this chastening is
for the purpose of keeping the saved ones from becoming lost. "But if we
judged ourselves, we would not come under judgment. When we are judged by the
Lord, we are being disciplined so that we will not be condemned with the
world" (1 Cor. 11:31, 32).
Chastening is a provision of God exclusively for those who are
heirs; that is, saved. It is for no others and no son (heir) is excluded (Heb.
12:6-8).
If God has made a special provision for the saved person who
persists in sinning, to keep him from being lost, how can he be lost? It is a
case of denying the sufficiency of God's provision in chastening to say that
one who has been saved is not eternally secure.
The same provision is found in the Old Testament and is stated
in unmistaken able words. It is a part of God's unconditional covenant
(contract agreement) with David.
"I will raise up your offspring to succeed you, ... and I
will establish his kingdom... and I will establish the throne of his kingdom
for ever. ... I will be his father, and he shall be my son. When he does wrong,
I will punish him with the rod of men, with floggings inflicted by men. But my
love (or mercy) will never be taken away from him, as I took it away from Saul,
whom I removed from before you" (2 Sam. 7:12-15).
Notice that God says very definitely that even though wrong
(which is sin) is committed, his "mercy will never be taken away." As
long as God deals in loving mercy it is impossible to be lost.
Someone may argue that as God took his mercy from Saul so will
he take it from the saved one who sins. In the first place, this would deny
God's statement that he chastens the saved one in order that he not be
condemned with the world. In the second place, the case of Saul and the saved
person is not the same. Corrective chastening was not a part of the mercy that
God showed to Saul and that he took away from him. It is very definitely a part
of God's mercy toward the saved one as it was to David's son. The unsaved are
objects of God's mercy, but there is no corrective chastening in that mercy and
it shall be taken away from them if they do not become saved.
But how did God dare to say that sin on the part of David's
offspring would not result in his rejection? There are present-day preachers
who criticize similar statements to God's children of this age. If God himself
exalts his grace as being greater than the sins of one of his children, how
dare anyone condemn the one who similarly glorifies God's grace in this age? It
is a serious matter to criticize the exaltation of the grace of God. This is
the very purpose of salvation. It is "to the praise of his glorious
grace" (Eph. 1:6).
The one who fights the doctrine of security of the believer, as
some are now doing, says that God will take his grace away from the sinning
saint. Are they not then doing the very opposite to praising God's glorious
grace? Is this not sin? If it is possible to become lost, what is their
position? Are they not advocating their own condemnation?
Surely God has made ample provision by the advocacy of Christ
to meet Satan's accusations and by chastening to correct the life of the saved
one to keep him saved. Is it possible to accept at full value God's revelation
of these provisions and still say that the believer is not eternally secure?
FOURTEEN
The Office of the Holy Spirit
THERE CAN be no adequate understanding of the purpose of the
Holy Spirit's presence in the world as long as one rejects the doctrine of
eternal security.
TO BE WITH YOU FOREVER
Just before Jesus left this earth, he promised those that were
his: "I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Counselor to be
with you for ever ... he lives with you and will be in you" (John 14:16,
17).
Therefore, in this age the Holy Spirit dwells in the individual
believer and is there to abide forever.
It is true that David prayed, "Do not cast me from your
presence or take your Holy Spirit from me" (Psa. 51:11), but that was
before Jesus had promised that the Holy Spirit would abide forever. That makes
a vast difference. That Holy Spirit can be grieved (Eph. 4:30) and may be
quenched (1 Thess. 5:19) so that his voice is not heard; but this doesn't imply
that he's taken away.
The Holy Spirit never dwells in a lost person. Such a person is
spiritually dead, which means that he is separated from the Spirit. It is a
contradiction, then of the promise which Jesus gave to his disciples, to say
that one in whom the Holy Spirit has come to abide forever, can be lost.
SEALED, AS TO POSITION
Believers are sealed by the Holy Spirit to the day of
redemption (Eph. 4:30). What is the purpose of that sealing?
In Revelation (Chap. 7:2-8) is a company of servants of God who
are sealed in their foreheads. The purpose of this seal was to keep them secure
(Rev. 9:4).
After Daniel had been cast into the lion's den, "A stone
was brought and placed over the mouth of the den, and the king sealed it with
his own signet ring and with the rings of his nobles, so that Daniel's
situation might not be changed" (Dan. 6:17).
In his vision, John (the writer of Revelation) saw Satan bound
for a thousand years, cast into the bottomless pit, and shut up; and a seal was
set upon him so that he could no longer deceive the nations, until the thousand
years were ended (Rev. 20:2, 3).
In the first case, the servants were sealed so as to be secure
against the torments of the locusts. In the second case, the seal was applied
so that there could be no change in the king's command. In the third instance,
the seal assures that Satan will be in a place of safe keeping from which he
cannot escape.
In all three instances, the seal denotes an unalterable
position of those who are sealed. That is exactly what the Holy Spirit as a
seal means to the saved person. God has sealed him by his own Spirit so that
he, as a believer, cannot be changed until the day of redemption.
SEALED AS TO OWNERSHIP
The seal also signifies ownership. Everyone who believes is
sealed with the Holy Spirit "until the redemption of those who are God's
possession" (Eph. 1:14). This sealing then is effective and cannot be
broken as long as a believer is in this mortal body. It is not needed after
that. Those whom Christ has purchased with his own blood shall always be his
very own. As the seal cannot be broken, they are secure. (See also page 43.)
DEPOSIT ON OUR INHERITANCE
In addition to all of the above, the Holy Spirit is given as a
deposit guaranteeing the believer's inheritance (Eph. 1:14). A deposit is a
payment made by a purchaser to guarantee the completion of the transaction by
him. In Christ, the believer has obtained an inheritance which was
"predestined according to the plan of him who works out everything in
conformity with the purpose of his will" (Eph. 1:11).
The believer has not as yet entered into possession of this
inheritance, but the Holy Spirit has been given as a deposit that it shall be
given when the transaction has been fully completed. To say that one who has
been saved can be lost is to say that possession of the inheritance shall not
be given to one to whom God has already paid a deposit. "God is not a man,
that he should lie, nor a son of man, that he should change his mind, Does he
speak and then not act? Does he promise and not fulfill?" (Num. 23:19).
Thus the doctrine of the eternal security of the believer is
required by the fact that the Holy Spirit has come into the saved one to stay
forever; he is sealed by the Holy Spirit, both for the purpose of security and
as a sign of ownership due to purchase; and God has given him as a pledge to
the believer that he shall receive an inheritance in heaven.
If the believer is not eternally secure, what does all of this
teaching concerning the Holy Spirit mean?
FIFTEEN
Objects of the Love of God
MAN MAY be either the object of the love of God or the wrath of
God. There is no middle ground. Those who are lost are called objects of wrath
(Eph. 2:3). In fact, being the object of wrath constitutes being lost (John
3:36). On the other hand to be saved is to be an object of his love.
"Having loved his own who were in this world, he now showed them the full
extent of his love" (John 13:1).
If it be possible for one who has been saved to be lost, it
must of necessity be possible for one who has been the object of the love of
God to be taken out of that position and be made the object of the wrath of
God. Does any scripture passage teach that? Definitely not! On the contrary, it
is taught that God loves his own with an everlasting love (Jer. 31:3). All
saints of this era were chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world
that they should be with him as loved sons (Eph. 1:4-5).
This is a part of the purpose of God in order to bring praise
to the glory of his grace (Eph. 1:5, 6). If it were possible to revert into the
condition of being a child of wrath, then God can be thwarted in his purpose.
It has been pointed out elsewhere (see page 57) that that is not possible.
Furthermore God says, in the most definite and understandable
language, that nothing, or no-one, can separate the believer from the love of
God which is in Christ Jesus. "For I am convinced that neither death nor
life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any
powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be
able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord"
(Rom. 8:38, 39).
Even so, there are those who make all this void by saying,
"While it is true that nothing can separate a believer from the love of
God, he can of his own free will, go away from God's love." This statement
is due to a false understanding of the free agency of man (see page 117). The
passage itself here in Romans eight also clearly excludes any such possibility.
Several "creatures" are mentioned as being unable to
"separate us from the love of God." Then in order to leave no
possible chance for doubt, these words are added, "nor anything else in
all creation." As every believer is a creature of God, he is also included
in the words "anything else in all creation." It is, therefore, a
flat denial of God's word to say that a man can separate himself from God's
love. If anything is emphatically taught in the Bible, it is that when man has
become the object of the everlasting love of God, there is no change in that
condition.
God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son to
satisfy the demands of his own righteousness. Those who reject that Son are
under the wrath of God, but whoever accepts that Son as the one on whom the
wrath of God was poured because of his sin, he is then and thereby unalterably
made the object of the everlasting love of God. It is every believer's
privilege to rejoice in this glorious revelation of God's love. To deny the
eternal security of the believer is to rob many of this rejoicing.
THE SOVEREIGN GRACE OF GOD
One who is the object of the love of God is under the sovereign
grace of God. The unsaved man is under the condemnation of the law. Sin reigns
in his life accompanied by death (Rom. 5:21).
That which is sovereign is independent of, and unlimited by any
other. It is supreme or highest power. Therefore where sin reigns, grace can't
be sovereign and where grace is sovereign, sin has no dominion.
when grace has become sovereign, sin can never again reign, for
it is said: "Sin shall not be your master, because you are not under law,
but under grace" (Rom. 6:14). Notice that it is shall not (not does not)
which indicates that the reign of sin in death has been definitely brought to
an end. Thus the grace of God is the supreme power and reigns with eternal life
in the case of everyone that comes under its sovereignty.
That the grace of God is sovereign can mean nothing less than
that the believer is eternally secure. If one who has been saved could be lost
because of sin (and remember that is the only thing that can cause anyone to be
lost) then sin would have to become a greater power than grace which is
impossible.
In the covenant made with David (previously referred to), God
specifically said that even if David's son would commit iniquity, his mercy
would not leave him (2 Sam. 7:14, 15). This shows that sin in the life of one
in a covenant relationship to God, does not limit the sovereignty of his grace.
To deny the eternal security of the believer is to deny the
sovereignty of the grace of God. One who does not see himself as eternally
secure under the sovereign grace of God can never sing with the psalmist:
"O give thanks to the LORD for he is good, and his mercy endureth
forever" and under all circumstances of life, repeat that refrain
twenty-five times (Psa. 136).
SIXTEEN
Kept by God's Power
JESUS PRAYED: "Holy Father, protect them by the power of
your name ... so that they may be one as we are one" (John 17:11). Peter
who heard that prayer wrote some years later: “Kept by the power of God through
faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time” (1 Peter 1:5).
A. IS GOD OMNIPOTENT?
Thus those who are saved have been committed by Jesus, who for
them gave His Own life, to God for safe keeping. If God fails to keep a single
one of those whom Christ bought with His own blood, He fails to conserve that
which was accomplished by the death and resurrection of Christ. God forbid the
thought.
There is a need today for believers to know that they are being
kept by the power of God. Paul realized this in his day, and wrote to the
Ephesian saints, to "the faithful in Christ Jesus," that he prayed
that they might know "his incomparably great power for us who
believe." Then he described that power as: "the working of his mighty
strength, which he exerted in Christ when he raised him from the dead and
seated him at his right hand in the heavenly realms, far above all rule and
authority, power and dominion, and every title that can be given, not only in
the present age but also in the one to come. And God has placed all things
under his feet and appointed him to be head over everything for the church,
which is his body..." (Eph. 1:19-23).
No finite mind can fathom the "incomparable
greatness" of this power, but everyone who believes may know in simple
faith that this power is exercised in his behalf.
The power of God, in raising Christ from the dead, surpasses
every other power, for it raised Christ from a death which was caused by the
sum total of human sin and placed him far above every other power, present and
future. It is nothing less than omnipotence.
As this power is greater than all human sin, it is surely
greater than the sins of any single saved person. As it is clearly stated that
this power is exercised on behalf of everyone that believes, it is nothing less
than a denial of the omnipotence of God to say that by sinning, or by ceasing
to believe, or by willing to go away from God, a saved person can be lost.
As this power is the greatest expression concerning God's
power, it can be said, to use the words of another, "the universe will
crumble before a single saved one can be lost."
To deny the eternal security of the believer is to deny the
omnipotence of God.
B. WAS CHRIST RAISED FROM THE DEAD?
The resurrection of Christ is considered in God's word as
guaranteeing the resurrection of believers. Both are by the same power.
"By his power God raised the Lord from the dead, and he will raise us
also" (1 Cor. 6:14).
Jesus himself gave the fact of his resurrection as a guarantee
of the resurrection of believers. He said, "Because I live, you also shall
live" (John 14:19). The same truth is also found in Romans 8:11. "And
if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you, he who
raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through
his Spirit, who lives in you."
One who is lost has no part in the resurrection of the saints,
but God's word to those who are saved is, that they shall participate in that
resurrection and points to the resurrection of Christ as evidence of that fact.
Thus the denial of the security of the believer questions the power of God to
resurrect those who are saved. It implies that something might happen in the
life of a saved person to interfere with the operation of God's power. If
that's possible, then isn't there also room even to question the resurrection
of Christ as having taken place?
Thus it is seen that the denial of the security of the believer
raises questions as to the power of God and as to the resurrection of Christ,
the very ground for the hope of eternal life.
SEVENTEEN
Some Pertinent Questions
MUCH MORE could have been written than space here permits; but
from the foregoing, it is clear that the doctrines of the grace of God demand
the doctrine of eternal security, and that the doctrines of grace are made void
by the contention that one who has been saved can be lost.
Those who deny the eternal security of the believer and teach
that someone who has been saved can be lost, must show how that can happen in
view of all that has been said. They must answer the following questions:
How can someone, who has received Christ and all things with
him as a gift which God says he does not revoke, be lost when the possession of
this gift means eternal life?
How can someone whose salvation does not depend in the
slightest upon human effort or merit, but entirely on the power of God and the
merits of Christ, be lost by some human act, either by the mind or by the body?
How can someone for whom Christ by his death paid the full
penalty of the law, and satisfied all the demands of God's justice, be made to
pay that penalty again?
How can someone who has been redeemed by an eternal redemption
and by the precious blood of Christ, which has infinite value, be returned to a
state of condemnation?
How can someone who has been born of imperishable seed and thus
given eternal life as a gift which God does not revoke, die?
How can someone whom God says shall not be condemned, be
condemned?
How can someone who is a new creature and in a new creation in
which sin, condemnation and death are not known and in which the unalterable
law is life, ever be condemned and die?
If every believer was foreknown by God, and all who were
foreknown were predestined to become conformed to the image of the Son of God,
and all who were predestined have been called, and all who were called have
been justified, and all who were justified have already been glorified in the
sight of God, at what point is is possible for a single one to be lost?
If God has made provision for every saved person through the
advocacy of Christ, which is based solely on his righteousness and the fact
that his death was a sacrifice of atonement for all sin, to answer all charges
made by the accuser against him, how can such a person be condemned (lost)?
If in every saved person the Holy Spirit lives forever; if he
is sealed with the Holy Spirit for security and sealed and witnessed as to
Christ's ownership; and if he has been given the Spirit as a guarantee of
something which he can only receive when he reaches glory, how can he not reach
glory?
If being an object of God's wrath is to be lost and being an
object of his love is to be saved, and if God says that someone who has become
an object of his love shall always be so; in fact that is the very purpose of
salvation: how can one be lost?
If God declares that he is exercising the very same power on
behalf of the saved one as he did when he raised Christ from the dead and set
him at the greatest height of power and glory, how can it be said that it is
possible for one who has been saved to be cast by God into the lake of fire
which means to be lost?
It seems then, that those who deny the eternal security of the
believer must honestly face every one of these questions and prove by scripture
passages that their position does not contradict, but harmonizes with all of
the doctrines of the grace of God. Until they do this, they are unquestionably
subject to the charge that they are teaching against the grace of God.
Until that has been done, the eternal security of every
believer will stand as the most strongly attested revelation in God's word.
Part Three
Eternal Security and Godly Living
EIGHTEEN
Grace Teaches - Love Compels
IN PART two, it was shown that the doctrines of the grace of
God cannot be understood and fully accepted without the acceptance of the truth
of eternal security. This section deals similarly with eternal security in its
relation to godly living, or practical Christianity.
The great and widely accepted charge against the teaching of
eternal security is that it leads to carelessness in the lives of Christians
and robs the Church of its spiritual power. It is said that to teach that one
who has been saved cannot be lost is to offer a licenses to sin. Incidents from
the lives of individuals are cited as proof of this contention. The argument is
always founded upon human observations and judgments.
In reply, much evidence might be offered both from the lives of
living Christians and from history to refute this charge. The lives of the
Puritans, who held this truth, are outstanding illustrations which might be
used with considerable effect. But in a discussion of an issue as infinite as
this, finite observations and often fallible conclusions based upon them,
cannot be considered as conclusive evidence. The only evidence that can be
admitted as final is that which is taken from God's own revelation, the Bible.
That is absolute and infallible. Those who make the charge that teaching
eternal security is to offer a licenses to sin never support their charge with
any scripture passage.
The fact is, the charge that teaching eternal security leads to
carelessness in Christian living is a direct contradiction of God's word. Many
of the strongest appeals in the Bible for a pure, holy, righteous and godly
life are based on statements which definitely teach the eternal security of the
believer. This being true, as will be shown extensively in the following
chapters, it is those who deny the eternal security of the believer and thereby
rob these passages of their true and full meaning who are contributing to the
low state of standards of Christian living. This can hardly be overstated.
God does not, as is the popular conception, make righteous
living the condition for eternal life and glory with him. That, as has already
been shown, is a matter of pure grace. It is the fact of eternal life and
assurance of glory and all that these include that is the incentive to holy
living. It is what God has already done through the operation of his sovereign
grace. It is the doctrines of the grace of God which have been shown to demand
the doctrine of eternal security upon which God rests his appeal for practical
righteousness. Men who teach against eternal security do not fully understand
these doctrines and therefore cannot appeal to holiness on God's own basis.
It is not God's holiness nor his righteousness; it is not the
law, nor is it the threat of condemnation (being lost) that teaches Christians
to live soberly, righteously and godly. It is his grace that does so. Paul
wrote to Titus giving instructions as to what he should teach as rules of
conduct. Then he gave the reason in these words: "For the grace of God
that brings salvation has appeared to all men. It teaches us to say
"No" to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live
self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age" (Titus 2:11,
12).
Thus those who limit the grace of God by denying the eternal
security of the believer, limit that which God says teaches godly living; while
those who magnify his grace are teaching that which God says teaches believers
how to live lives that please him.
It is important to be guided, not by what man's judgment or
conclusions teach, but by that which God's word reveals.
THE LOVE OF CHRIST COMPELS US
As the grace of God teaches how to live as children of God
ought to live, so it is the love of Christ that compels the saved one so to
live. Paul says "For Christ's love compels us" (2 Cor. 5:14).
Therefore, fear of the wrath of God (being lost) cannot be the dynamic of holy
and righteous living. Neither can it be said that it is the righteousness or
holiness of God that is the compelling influence.
It is that love that was expressed when Christ died and rose
again. It was through that death and resurrection that all old things passed
away, yes even the curse and the condemnation of the law, and the believer
became a new creature in Christ that cannot die (Chapter 9). It is that love of
God which he manifested when he was in Christ on the cross, reconciling the
world to himself (2 Cor. 5:15-19). It is that love of God from which the
believer cannot be separated (see Chapter 15), and which guarantees the eternal
security of everyone that has become the object of it.
If Paul's statement is true, then to proclaim that love, to
magnify it, to call attention to its eternal and unchanging nature is to open
the hearts and lives of Christians for that which compels them to be what God
would have them be. On the other hand, to deny the unbroken flow of this love,
by saying that one who has been the object of it can be lost, is to hinder
God's own dynamic from operating in the life of the saved one.
This is undoubtedly the greatest charge that can be brought
against the teaching that those whom God through infinite love, expressed in
the death of his Son, has saved, can be lost.
It is grace that teaches and the love of Christ that compels
believers to live as God would have them live. The need of the Church today is
a clear teaching of this.
NINETEEN
Incentives to a Surrendered Life
POSSIBLY THE strongest appeal to a life entirely surrendered to
God is in the following words: "Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view
of God's mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to
God - this is your spiritual (real or logically expected) act of worship. Do
not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the
renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what is God's
will is - his good, pleasing and perfect will" (Rom. 12:1, 2).
Here is a plea to the believer that his body be made a living
sacrifice. The word sacrifice signifies change of ownership for the purpose of
being consumed for the benefit of the new owner. It includes a complete
surrender of self-will. This sacrifice is to be living, that is, continuous and
productive of results. It is to be holy. It is to be acceptable to God.
Furthermore, all conformity to this world is to end and the life shall be
transformed through the mind's seeking the good, pleasing and perfect will of
God. In this there is nothing left of self.
Paul does not make this strong appeal for a surrendered life
without first stating very clearly and definitely the motive or incentive that
prompts that kind of life. He does so in these words, "Therefore, I urge
you, ... in view of God's mercy." The word "therefore" shows
that he rests the whole argument on what he has in the preceding part of his
letter taught about the mercy of God. These are the doctrines of the grace of
God. This is always God's method. How different this is from the purely human
and altogether unscriptural method of scolding and threatening Christians and
using the element of fear that they may be lost, to arouse from worldly interests
and to awaken interest in spiritual things!
As Paul pleads on the basis of the "God's mercy," it
is perfectly clear that his appeal is without force until this mercy is known,
understood and accepted. The better known and the more clearly understood these
are, the greater is the force of the argument. On the other hand if the mercy
of God is denied, then the force of the appeal is lost and there is no reason
for heeding it.
Any appeal that is based on certain facts or conditions has
force only in the same measure as is the certainty of those facts or conditions
on which it is made. For years banks appealed to the public to make deposits
because of the securities guaranteeing the repayment of the money. This appeal
had force, and men, women and children, rich and poor, brought their savings.
Why? Because the security of their funds was not questioned. But times changed,
the banks' investments dropped in value, people began to question the security
of their funds, deposits dropped off and withdrawals became greater and
greater. The banks' appeals for deposits were without force because their
argument based on safety was not accepted.
This is how it is in the Christian life. God makes his appeals
to the saved to invest their lives, their all with him and offers his mercy as
security. This mercy of God which he offers as security is guaranteed by the
precious blood of Christ. Is it certain? As long as his blood is effective,
this security is good. Thus it is highly important both to know what the
doctrines of the grace of God are and to understand them. They are seldom
taught and, as much of the meaning of these doctrines is lost by the denial of
the eternal security of the believer, it is not strange that Christians these
days do not sacrifice their bodies to God as they ought to do.
The all important thing then is to consider the "mercy of
God" or the grace of God as explained in the part of the letter to the
Romans preceding the appeal.
The first part of Romans (Rom. 1:18 - 3:20) deals with the
sinfulness of man and concludes that there is no righteous human and that the
whole world is guilty in God's sight. Man or woman is shown to be incapable of
doing anything towards his own justification. This is a prerequisite for the
functioning of the grace of God.
Against this background of utter helplessness and absolute
hopelessness on man's part, the mercy of God is revealed.
But there is a righteousness for man. It is not by doing what
the law commands. It is of God and is revealed in the gospel (Rom. 1:17). It is
manifested in the life of faith that Jesus Christ lived, and is given to all
that believe (Rom. 3:22). It is a gift from God (Rom. 5:17). Being a gift from
God, this righteousness shall always be the possession of him who has received
it through faith, as has already been shown (p. 34).
The one to whom this righteousness has been imputed is said to
be justified by grace (Rom. 4:24, 25). Inasmuch as justification is by grace,
it is unalterable (see p. 59). Justification is made possible by the redemption
that is in Christ Jesus (Rom. 3:24). This again proves that it is unalterable,
for redemption is eternal (see p. 42).
Those who have been justified henceforth stand in grace (Rom.
5:2). They are no longer under the law but are under grace (Rom. 6:14). One who
is not under the law, which is the ministry of (and the only ministry) of
condemnation, cannot be lost. There is no condemnation for them because they
are in Christ Jesus. "Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those
who are in Christ Jesus" (Rom. 8:1). If you are in Christ Jesus at this
moment, you cannot be condemned and lost.
Another aspect of God's mercy or grace is the provision that
those who have been justified shall be saved from wrath. This is "much
more" sure than the fact that Christ died for them while they were still
sinners (Rom. 5:8, 9). This is achieved by the present life of Christ (v. 10).
"As sin reigned in death, so also grace might reign ... to
bring eternal life through Jesus Christ" (Rom. 5:21). Therefore the one
that is under grace is assured of eternal life. This eternal life is also said
to be a "gift of God" (Rom. 6:23), and therefore always remains in
the possession of the one who has received it.
The bodies of all in whom the Spirit lives (and that includes
all who have been saved) shall be given life, by the Spirit of God who lives in
them (Rom. 8:11).
Believers have been predestined to be conformed to the image of
his Son. They are already glorified (v. 29, 30). No-one can condemn them,
because Christ has died for them, and even intercedes for them (v. 34). Finally
in the strongest language possible it is said to be impossible to become
separated from the love of God (v. 35-39).
These are the aspects of God's mercy on which Paul rests his
argument for a completely surrendered life in God's service. Every one of these
mercies is absolutely unalterable. The security that God offers his children
when he pleads with them to invest their lives with him cannot lose its value.
That is why the full surrender of self is a "reasonable" (KJV) or
"logical" (Concordant Version) service.
Those who deny eternal security discount the value of God's
mercy and grace and deny the effectiveness of the shed blood of Christ. To them
these have value only as long as the Christian does this or that which they
themselves specify. Thus the whole appeal is lost, for the things added cause
an appalling amount of uncertainty and confusion. In view of this, who is it
that is responsible for the lack of sacrificial lives in the churches?
TWENTY
Walk Worthy of Calling
AS A prisoner for the Lord, then, I urge you to live a life
worthy of the calling you have received" (Eph. 4:1). In the remaining part
of this letter, Paul discusses Christian conduct, all of which is part of
living worthily of the calling, and therefore a part of the appeal. This appeal
to those who have been saved by grace through faith to live a life worthy of
their calling, is introduced by the word "then." thus it becomes
necessary to turn back and consider the reasons for the appeal. No appeal to
live worthily of a person's status means anything without a knowledge of the
importance of that position.
In the first three chapters, the apostle has presented the
believer's standing before God. It is these truths that are the basis for the
appeal to walk worthily.
Believers have been chosen in Christ before the creation of the
world to be holy and without blame in God's sight. They have been predestined
to be adopted as his loved sons. All of this has been done in accordance with
his pleasure and will, and so that his glorious grace will be praised (Eph.
1:4-6). The choice was according to his foreknowledge, so he made no mistake as
to whom he chose. As predestination is "the effective exercise of the will
of God by which things before determined are brought to pass" (see p. 57),
it is certain that nothing can interfere with the accomplishment of adopting
every believer as a loved son, blameless in God's sight. This is the same
position that Christ had with the Father before the creation of the world (John
17:24). It is the most exalted position into which any of God's creatures can
ever be placed. It is above all of the angels of heaven. As it is all of grace,
and that which is of grace is certain (p. 25), there can be no question as to
its accomplishment.
God has sealed with the Holy Spirit everyone that he has
chosen. Repeated emphasis is placed on the fact that all that is done by God is
"according to the plan of him who works out everything in conformity with
the purpose of his will" (see v. 5, 9, 11). All of this is to "the
praise of his glorious grace" (v. 6) and "to the praise of his
glory" (v. 12, 14). There is no possibility of making any part of this
conditional in the slightest on human works or merit.
It is further revealed that God is exercising on behalf of the
believer the same power that he exercised in that greatest manifestation of his
power, when he raised Christ from the dead and set him above all rule,
authority, power and dominion. If anything is certain, it must be that which is
being accomplished by that power.
Salvation by grace through faith as a gift of God apart from
any work or merit of man, has already been discussed (chapter 6), and was shown
to be unalterable. This is a part of the high calling of God.
It is all of this and more too to which the word
"then" in Paul's appeal refers, and which is made the basis for the
appeal to live worthily of God's calling.
Another appeal to walk worthy of God is found in 1
Thessalonians 2:11, 12. This is based on God's calling the believer into his
Kingdom and glory. As the calling of God is irrevocable (Rom. 11:29) and is
therefore unalterable, here again that which assures the eternal security of
the believer is made the basis for the appeal.
This emphasis upon the certainty of the grounds for these
appeals must impress the careful Bible student. To say that one who has been
saved can be lost is to inject an element of uncertainty into that which God
makes certain. It confuses that which must be understood clearly to give force
to the appeal, and thereby weakens the appeal. On the other hand, the teaching
of eternal security honors and illuminates every statement God makes concerning
those who are saved, so that the basis for the appeal can be accepted, and the
appeal understood
BE NOT CONFORMED TO THE WORLD
In order to walk worthy of God, it is necessary that one be not
conformed to the world, but separated from it. The apostle Paul also makes this
appeal and, as in the case of the appeal for full surrender of body and will
and also the appeal to walk worthy of God, this appeal is also based on
conditions which guarantee the eternal security of the believer.
In Romans 12:1, 2, previously considered, there is an appeal to
those who have received the mercies of God that they "no longer conform to
the pattern of this world, but be transformed" (mentally). Differentiation
from the world is thus made directly dependent on the doctrines of the grace of
God, which, as was shown in the last preceding chapter, demand the eternal
security of the believer.
There are other passages in the doctrinal (teaching) letters
that are equally clear in dealing with this question of distinction from the
world. Paul pleaded with the Corinthian Christians to flee from sexual
immorality and his appeal was based on the fact that their bodies were members
of Christ. This appeal was followed by an appeal to glorify God in the body and
in the spirit because the body was the temple of the Holy Spirit that was in
them, and because they were bought with a price (1 Cor. 6:15, 20).
Here, then, two unalterable conditions are made the basis for
the appeal. The Holy Spirit who was in them was there to stay forever (John
14:16) and the purchase by the blood of Christ had been both sealed and
witnessed by the Holy Spirit (see p. 44) until the redemption of the body. Thus
again it is the certainty and unchangeable work that God has done for the
believer that is the basis for the appeal.
In 2 Corinthians 6:14-16 is an appeal to believers not to be
unequally yoked together with unbelievers, because believers are the temple of
the living God.
An appeal to set your mind on things above and not on things on
the earth is based on one of the strongest statements in the Bible concerning
the eternal security of the believer in these words: "Set your minds on
things above, not on earthly things. For you died, and your life is now hidden
with Christ in God" (Col. 3:2, 3). Can anyone be more secure than the one
who has been hidden in God so that nothing can touch him?
This same appeal to nonconformity with the world because of
what the believer is and because of God's purpose, is found in 1 Thessalonians
5:5, 6, 9, 10. "You are all sons of the light and sons of the day. We do
not belong to the night or to the darkness. So then, let us not be like others,
who are asleep, but let us be alert and self-controlled." "For God
did not appoint us to suffer wrath but to receive salvation through our Lord
Jesus Christ. He died for us so that, whether we are awake or asleep, we may
live together with him."
Every one of the conditions upon which these various appeals
are based on are materially weakened, if not entirely destroyed, by the
teaching that one who has been saved can be lost, for that denies that
unalterable nature of these conditions.
It would seem, then, that worldliness in the church of today is
chargeable to failure to teach the doctrines of the grace of God, which are
inseparable from the truth of eternal security. As denial of the truth of
eternal security makes it impossible to teach these doctrines in their
fullness, it follows that those who teach against that truth are contributing
to the present state of worldliness in the churches.
TWENTY-ONE
An Appeal to Purity
EVERYONE WHO has this hope in him purifies himself, just as he
is pure" (1 John 3:3). This is an appeal to purity of life. The standard
is the purity of Christ - nothing less than that. It is addressed to those who
have a certain hope - to no others. What is this hope? It is stated in the
preceding verse. "Dear friends, now we are children of God, and what we
will be has not yet been made known. But we know that when he appears, we shall
be like him, for we shall see him as he is" (v. 2). This is an unqualified
statement that those who are now children of God shall be like Christ. It is
not, "those who remain children," or "remain faithful," or
"hold out," it is all who are now children, and this "now"
has been there during the entire Christian era. This hope is "an anchor
for the soul, firm and secure. It enters the inner sanctuary behind the
curtain, where Jesus, who went before us, has entered on our behalf" (Heb.
6:19, 20).
It is because of this sure hope that those who have been saved
are urged to purify themselves. A constant realization of the fact that one
shall be like Jesus Christ, the Son of God, makes all impurity of life seem
strangely out of place.
But if a person has no definite assurance that he shall be like
Jesus, then the appeal loses its force. How many Christians are there who do
not K-N-O-W that they shall be like Christ! How can anyone know, if it is
possible to be lost? If it is possible for any one saved person to be lost,
that same possibility exists for all. Thus no-one can know that they shall be
like Christ if the teaching against eternal security is right. If no-one can
know for sure, that he or she shall be like Christ, then this appeal is just so
many words wasted.
How different God's appeal is from that which is so often made
from pulpits: "If you do not do this," or "if you do that,"
you will not be taken when Christ comes!
Thus the teaching of the eternal security of the believer
supports God's appeal for purity of life while the denial of it undermines it.
Another appeal to pure living is found in Colossians 3:5, 6. "Put to
death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature: sexual immorality,
impurity, lust, evil desires and greed, which is idolatry." Again the
appeal is based on an unconditional statement to which the word
"therefore" points back. It is this: "When Christ, who is your
life, appears, then you also will appear with him in glory." Again it is a
definite, unconditional statement that connects the believer with Christ in
glory that is the reason given as the incentive to purity. To teach that one
who is saved might not appear with Christ in glory (that is, be lost), possibly
because of one of the sins mentioned in the verse quoted, is to take away from
such a person this written incentive to purity that God has given for his or
her special help when tempted.
DESIRE THE WORD OF GOD
God's appeal for purity of life is not merely negative; it is
for the purpose of making the saved person yearn for the word of God, as in the
following appeal:
"Therefore rid yourselves of all malice and all deceit,
hypocrisy, envy, and slander of every kind. Like newborn babies, crave pure
spiritual milk, so that by it you may grow up in your salvation" (1 Peter
2:1, 2). This is an appeal which may well be heeded in many churches today. The
things mentioned here are of a class that are usually not mentioned by those
that oppose eternal security as causing someone who has been saved to be lost.
Such things as envy and slander are so subtle and common that few Christians
would escape being lost, if sin could cause a saved person to become lost. Yet
Peter says get rid of all of these and crave the word of God. What a great need
there is now to be occupied with the word of God! Yes, and there is a crying
need for the simple explanatory preaching of it.
This appeal is to persons who have been addressed as
"chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father" (1 Peter
1:2). It has already been shown (p. 56) that election (God's choosing) based on
God's foreknowledge means eternal security or else God is not omniscient.
Therefore in the very greeting these persons (and it is all who are saved) are
reminded of their eternal security in Christ.
But the appeal is based on a particular argument as is shown by
the introductory word "therefore." This argument is found in the last
three verses of the previous chapter. "For you have been born again, not
of perishable seed, but of imperishable, through the living and enduring word
of God. For, "All men are like grass, and all their glory is like the
flowers of the field; the grass withers and the flowers fall, but the word of
the Lord stands forever""(1 Peter 1:23-25. Quoting Isaiah 40:6-8).
The unending nature of the life that results from the new birth, and which is
offered as the sole argument for laying aside malice, envy and so on, and
desiring the word of God is the very heart of this passage. That life is not of
perishable, but of imperishable seed.
This statement is both a negative and a positive statement. By
the unchangeable law of birth, the one born has the same nature as the one who
gave birth. The unending nature is asserted for the third time in the words
"living and enduring." Then the perishable nature of flesh which is
like grass, is contrasted with the new life which comes from the word of God;
and finally it is stated that the word of God (which is the life of the saved
person, because Christ is the Word, and our life) stands (or endures) forever.
This passage forcefully declares the eternal nature of the new life of the
saved person. It is just this fact that is the reason given for those who are
born again (saved) to get rid of malice and deceit, hypocrisy, envy and slander
and instead of these, desire the word of God.
If the fact of the unending characteristic of the new life of
the saved person (which means that he or she is eternally secure) is denied,
then there is very little left, if anything, on which to appeal to saved people
to get rid of all these things and to cultivate an appetite for God's word.
Nothing can stimulate a desire for knowledge of God's word more than a clear
understanding of the fact that one is born again of imperishable seed and is
certain of being in glory with Christ.
Thus again the appeal to a godly life is based on the security
of the saved and denying it robs the appeal of its force.
TWENTY-TWO
Stand Firm
IN 1 CORINTHIANS 15:58, Paul makes this most earnest plea:
"My dear brothers, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give
yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labour in
the Lord is not in vain. "Something has been said which gives assurance
that their work shall not be in vain. What is this something? It is found in
the preceding verses, going back as far as the fifty-first. "Listen, I
tell you a mystery: We will not all sleep, but we will all be changed - in a
flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet ... For the perishable
must clothe itself with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality, then
the saying that is written will come true: "Death has been swallowed up in
victory ..." ... But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our
Lord Jesus Christ."
Those are the certain facts on which the appeal to standing
firm and a life given fully to the work of the Lord is made. Such work cannot
be in vain because of the certainty of the facts on which the appeal is based.
What is it that is certain? All shall be changed. All who were members of
"the church of God in Corinth," all who are "sanctified in
Christ Jesus," all who are "called to be holy, together with all
those everywhere who call on the name of our Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Cor.
1:2). These saints in Corinth did not have the best record, yet Paul made no
exception. He stipulated no conditions nor is there any that can be implied. It
is "we will all be changed." This is so because the victory over
death is by God through Jesus Christ, and "God, who has called you into
fellowship with his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, is faithful" (1 Cor. 1:9).
If it is possible for anyone who is now saved to be excluded
from that "all" and not be given the victory over death by Jesus
Christ, the appeal loses its force. If there is any possibility that one now
saved might not be "changed" at the last trumpet, then there is a
chance that such a person has worked for the Lord in vain. If anyone who is
saved is later lost, then whatever labour such a person has done for the Lord
has been in vain, for God can't reward that work and cast the person into the
lake of fire. If this possibility exists for any saved person, it surely exists
for all and then no-one can know that his labour is not in vain. But this
contradicts Paul's statement that we know that our labour is not in vain. Thus
to deny the eternal security of the believer makes void God's word on which God
bases his appeal to stand firm.
A middle-aged man once admonished a younger man that he should
not waste all his money but save some for the future. The young man replied:
"But I might die before I get ready to use it; then it would do me no
good." The uncertainty of the future kept that young man from living a
steady or disciplined life and saving for the future. To the believer, as an
incentive to steadfastness and a life given fully to the work of the Lord, God
pledges himself that the believer's work will not be in vain. The believer's
assurance of a life with God throughout all eternity is then the incentive for
a steadfast, immovable Christian life on earth which is fully dedicated to the
work of the Lord. Those who teach Christians that they might be lost are
thereby encouraging them to do as the young man did, enjoy the present world
for there is no definite assurance that they shall, in the world to come, enjoy
the fruits of their labour.
Paul said in this same fifteenth chapter: "If I fought
wild beasts in Ephesus for merely human reasons, what have I gained? If the
dead are not raised, "Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we
die."" (v.32. Quoting Isaiah 22:13) And so in measure as Christians,
through the denial of eternal security, are being told that they might not be
raised to a life of glory with God; are "eating and drinking" in many
churches instead of standing firm and being given fully to the work of the
Lord.
Similar appeals to standing firm are found elsewhere and are
based on equally unalterable conditions.
"Therefore, my brothers ... stand firm in the Lord"
(Phil. 4:1). The "therefore" looks back to: "But our citizenship
is in heaven. And we eagerly await a Saviour from there, the Lord Jesus Christ,
who, by the power that enables him to bring everything under his control, will
transform our lowly bodies so that they will be like his glorious body"
(Phil. 3:20, 21).
"So then, brothers, stand firm and hold to the teachings
we passed on to you, whether by word of mouth or by letter." In this case
the "so then" refers back to "From the beginning God chose you
to be saved ... He called you to this through our gospel, that you might share
in the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ" (2 Thess. 2:15, 13, 14).
The appeal here is based entirely on God's choosing and
calling. There can be no failure in these (see p. 58).
Thus very clearly and definitely God first gives full assurance
to the believer that he or she shall be raised from the dead or be changed at
the last trumpet; that his vile body shall be made like the glorified body of
the Lord Jesus Christ by the working of the infinite power of God. This is so
because God has chosen and he has called by the gospel (good news). It is only
after God has made these facts clear that he appeals because of this assurance
for firm immovable lives, given fully to the work of God.
To deny the eternal security of the believer denies the
certainty of that which God makes definite, robs the believer of his assurance
and undermines God's appeal.
CONCLUSION
Thus in Chapters 18 to 22 inclusive, it has been shown that it
is the grace of God that brings salvation, which also teaches how to live
soberly, righteously and godly in the present world; and it is his eternal love
with which he loves, both before the sinner is saved and afterward, that is the
dynamic of that life. It is his mercy, as seen in the unalterable standing of
the believer in grace, that is the incentive to a full surrender of body and
mind to God. It is the believer's high calling in Christ, planned and
determined by God before the foundation of the world, and being carried out according
to the pleasure of his own will, that is the incentive to an earthly life that
honors Christ, and is distinct from the world. It is the certain knowledge of
being transformed into the image of Christ and appearing with him in glory that
is the basis for an appeal to a pure life away from earthly lusts. The
imperishable, undying nature of the new life of the one who has been born again
is given as a reason for desiring to feed on the word of God; and finally the
assurance of the resurrection of the body, the transformation of the present
depraved, imperishable body into one made like Christ's glorious body is the
appeal to stand firm and always dedicated to God's work.
Every one of these conditions on which these various appeals
are made demand the eternal security of the believer. Therefore to teach that
it is possible for anyone who has been saved to be lost is to undermine the
very structure of God's argument for a life that is pleasing to him. Thus the
charge that the teaching of eternal security leads to carelessness and a state
of low spirituality is not only false; but the teachings against security by
those who make this charge are responsible for these same conditions for which
they blame those who are faithful stewards of the teachings of God's grace.
To merely neglect the teaching of these truths is a serious
matter.
Part Four
Arguments Against Eternal Security Answered
TWENTY-THREE
Can We Know from Experience?
THE ARGUMENTS against eternal security and for the contention
that one who has been saved can be lost fall into two broad groups: (1) those
based on human observations and reason and (2) those based on scripture
passages interpreted in order to make them so teach. In some arguments both of
these errors are intermingled.
Those based on human observations and reasoning shall be
considered first. In fact, inasmuch as the subject being considered is one that
can be known only through what God has revealed to us, all arguments or parts
of arguments that are purely on a human level must be ruled out. No evidence
can be recognized as such that is not based on God's own revelation. It is
good, however, because of the wide acceptance of some of the arguments that are
purely human, to show how these arguments deny and contradict God's own word.
No attempt is made here to deal with all arguments that have
been offered against eternal security. Space will not permit nor is it
necessary; as the case rests not on refutation of human arguments, but on the
positive revelation of God as it is found in the doctrines of grace. What
follows is offered to show that the arguments against eternal security are
untenable, and to help some who are bothered by these arguments.
A very familiar argument of this type is: "We know from
our own experience of people who have been saved, but later have been
lost." Instances are also cited of men who have at one time preached the
gospel, but have later denied God. The human observation and conclusion drawn
from it, supporting this argument, may both be incorrect, for man is far from
infallible, but that isn't the most serious objection to the argument. Anyone
who definitely makes the statement about someone, that he has been saved and is
now lost, is making a double judgment where he puts himself in the position of
God. This is a serious charge, but it can be sustained by scripture. Anyone who
is saved, is saved through faith, that is, believing. "Whoever hears my
word and believes him who sent me has eternal life" (John 5:24). Believing
is a heart attitude toward God. "It is with your heart that you believe
and are justified" (Rom. 10:10).
What does God say about the judgment of a heart attitude toward
himself? "The LORD does not look at the things man looks at. Man looks at
the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart" (1 Sam. 16:7).
Thus God specifically says that man cannot judge as to whether or not a man is
in his heart, right with God. Christians ought to recognize others as
Christians, or refuse to recognize them as such in fellowshipping with them (1
Cor. 5:11 and 2 Thes. 3:6, 14, 15); but this is quite different from making a
positive statement that men are saved or not. Thus no man can definitely
declare of another that he is either saved or lost.
God has caused to be written down in his word, the lives of two
men, and has also given his own judgment as to whether these men were saved or
lost. In both cases God's judgment is opposite to man's, based upon experience.
A favorite sermon subject of a few years ago was, "Lot
Pitched His Tent Toward Sodom." Invariably it was said that, as a result
of this first move toward Sodom, Lot became a lost man. This surely is the only
conclusion that can be drawn from judging the experience or the "outward
being" of Lot, but those who preached this entirely overlooked God's
testimony concerning Lot, recorded some two thousand years after Lot died. It
is found in 2 Peter 2:7, 8. "He rescued Lot, a righteous man, who was
distressed by the filthy lives of lawless men (for that righteous man, living
among them day after day, was tormented in his righteous soul by the lawless
deeds he saw and heard)." Man, judging the outward being of Lot, says he
was lost. God, judging his soul, which in scripture is nearly synonymous with
heart, calls him righteous.
Who is right, God or man? No modern case quoted as proof
against eternal security has looked more hopeless than Lot. Yet men who are
teachers of God's word say, "We know from our own experience that persons
who have been saved can be lost."
Let no-one condemn this reference to the life of Lot nor say
that it should not be mentioned, as it encourages sinful living. The fact that
God has had it recorded in his word is authority for its use. When properly
understood, the life of Lot becomes a tremendous warning, in the most concrete
terms possible, of what it means to be "saved, but only as one escaping
through the flames" (1 Cor. 3:15). This warning is entirely lost when it
is used to warn saved people of the supposed possibility of their being lost.
Lot's life is placed in contrast to that of Abraham. To both, righteousness was
imputed, unrelated to works. Surely no Christian would choose the life of Lot
with its barrenness and ultimate loss of everything except life itself, when it
is possible to have a life like that of Abraham to whom God revealed his
purposes and who was called the friend of God.
The other person in God's record is one whom man's judgment
calls saved, but God said that he was lost. It is Judas Iscariot. Judas is the
ever present proof to many for the possibility of being saved and later lost.
Read his life. He was counted as one of the twelve earthly disciples of Jesus.
He was so trusted by the others that he was made their treasurer. He was with
the twelve when they were sent out to preach the gospel of the Kingdom. There
is not the slightest record of any of the other eleven mistrusting him. He was
included in the "we" when Peter said, "We believe and know that
you are the Holy One of God" (John 6:69). Surely from experience, Peter
and the other disciples thought they knew that Judas was saved.
But when Peter made that great confession of faith in Christ,
which is in itself the very basis for being saved (John 3:36), and included in
it Judas, Jesus immediately challenged it by saying, "One of you is a
devil." What made this difference in judgment? Peter knew only the outward
being of Judas - Jesus Christ knew his heart.
Again, after Jesus had washed the disciples' feet, he was very
careful when he said, "‘you are clean'" to add, "'though not
every one of you.' For he knew who was going to betray him, and that was why he
said not every one was clean" (John 13:10, 11). Jesus had washed the feet
of Judas as well as the others. Therefore, the difference between Judas and the
others was that he had not 'had a bath' (v. 10); hence he was not clean. This
is the washing (the same root word as is used for bathed in John 13:10) of
regeneration (Titus 3:5) by which Judas had not been cleansed. As this bath is
a "once for all" cleansing (Heb. 10:1-12), Judas had never been
saved, according to the record of the scripture.
In the days of the early Church, there were those among the
true believers who went out from among them. Of them it is written: "They
went out from us, but they did not really belong to us. For if they had
belonged to us, they would have remained with us; but their going showed that
none of them belonged to us" (1 John 2:19). As the very purpose of their
going out was to show that they were not of the saved, it is clear that they
had been fully recognized as saved.
Finally then, the one who says, "We know from our own
experience that there are those who have been saved but are lost," places
his own observations and judgment above God's statements to the contrary. But
that is not all, he allows his own limited human observations and judgments to
deny what God teaches in all the doctrines of the grace of God, which, it has
been shown, demand the eternal security of the believer for their full
understanding and acceptance. It is placing fallible and finite judgments and reasoning
of man above God's infinite and infallible word.
TWENTY-FOUR
Is Man a Free Moral Agent?
THOSE WHO reject the doctrine of the eternal security of the
believer rely heavily on the argument that man is a free moral agent, and, as
such can, after he has been saved, will to go away from God and become lost
just as he had previously willed to come to God and be saved. This is one of
their strongest arguments.
Space doesn't permit an exhaustive discussion of the free moral
agency of man, nor is it necessary. All that is needed is to show the error of
the argument as presented.
There are at least four separate and distinct fallacies in this
one argument: (1) Man can reverse his freedom of action and its effects at
pleasure; (2) Being a free moral agent, man is a free agent in other matters;
(3) that man is a free moral agent in respect to salvation; (4) That the
sovereign grace of God is limited by the free moral agency of man.
1. IS MAN FREE TO REVERSE HIS ACTIONS AND
THEIR EFFECTS AT PLEASURE?
It is argued that because man can come to God and be saved, he
can therefore will to go away from God and be lost. In other words, he can
reverse his action and thereby the effects of his action. If it can be shown
that there are conditions under which the effects of voluntary acts of man
cannot be reversed by the free will of man, then the argument falls for no
other proof is ever offered to support the statement that man can go away from
God and be lost. There surely is no revelation from God in this matter and nothing
less than that has any weight.
To Adam was given freedom to eat or not to eat of the tree of
the knowledge of good and evil. He was therefore in the true sense, a free
moral agent. He ate of the fruit in disobedience to God's command and as a
result, became a sinner and his nature became sinful. Because of this sinful
nature, he, as well as the whole human race, lost that state of being a free
moral agent with ability either to obey or disobey God's commandment. No one of
Adam's seed has ever been able to fully obey God’s law. Not one has by a
voluntary deed been able to reverse the effects of Adam's act committed by him
as a free moral agent.
Again, a woman may be a free agent in the mater of entering
into marriage relations with a man, but thereafter, the Bible clearly states,
she is bound by the law of the husband as long as he lives (Rom. 7:2).
These two citations prove conclusively that freedom to act
along a given line does not imply freedom to reverse that action and its
effects. It surely does not then follow, that because someone has willed to
come to God and be saved, he can will to go away and be lost.
2. A FREE MORAL AGENT IS NOT A FREE AGENT.
A free moral agent is a "being capable of those actions
... which can properly be denominated good or evil in a moral sense."
There are matters outside of the moral realm in which a free moral agent is not
a free agent. The contention that someone who has been saved can go away from
God and be lost because such a person is a free moral agent, ascribes a power
to will and act far greater than can possibly be included under the free moral
agency of man. In fact, it really makes man, who is only a creature, an
entirely free agent independent of his Creator and Saviour.
No man or woman ever willed to be born into the human race, and
equally powerless is he to will to separate himself from the human race and
become something else or even nothing at all. He may, by suicide, shorten his
earthly existence, but he is still in the human race and shall be called as a
man out of his grave. In this, he is clearly not a free agent. Yet it is argued
that a saved man can will to separate himself from God. His entry into the
kingdom of God was by birth. He was "born of God" into that state. It
was not of his own will, for someone who is "born of God" is born
"not of natural descent, nor of human decision" (John 1:13). It is
true that the unsaved man wills to come to God, but it is not the willing to
come to God that places him in the kingdom of God. That is by an act of God.
Man has as little to do with that, as he had to do with his physical birth. As
it is impossible for man, by free action to separate himself from the human
race, so it is equally impossible for him, by a free act, to separate himself
from God's kingdom. To whatever degree man may be a free moral agent, that
freedom is exercised entirely within the limits of his humanity. There is no
such thing as free moral agency of man within the kingdom of God, for those who
are born of God cannot sin (1 John 3:9). They have a divine nature that is in
harmony with God. (See also p. 50.)
Clearly, then, the contention that man is a free moral agent
does not include the freedom to will to go away from Christ and God. Truly,
once a son of mankind, always a son of mankind, and equally true, once a child
of God, always a child of God. There is no possibility for a man, by his own
will or action, to change either of these two conditions. As man cannot change
this condition and God will not, for Jesus said: "Whoever comes to me I
will never drive away" (John 6:37); all who are saved are secure for all
eternity.
3. IS MAN A FREE MORAL AGENT WITH REFERENCE
TO SALVATION?
To say that man is a free moral agent and, as such, can come to
God and be saved; and can, therefore, go away and thereby be lost, implies that
man is saved or lost, due to his own actions as a free moral agent. The
argument, as it is stated, does not leave room for any other cause of salvation
than the free agency of man. No other power greater than that of man as a free
moral agent could possibly contribute to salvation, if the power of man as a
free moral agent can set it aside.
As a free moral agent is a being capable of good and evil
actions, necessarily to be saved, such a being must always do that which is
good.
Adam was created "good" and was made a free moral
agent. He and Eve before the fall, were the only members of the human race that
could truly be called free moral agents. But Adam (and this includes Eve)
exercised his free moral agency by disobeying God's commandment, and thereby
was placed under the condemnation of that commandment. This condemnation is
death and everyone descended from Adam is in the same position, for "death
came to all men" (Rom. 5:12). The unsaved are described as dead in transgressions
and sins; and are energized by Satan as children of disobedience (Eph. 2: 1,
2). They are blinded by the god of this world (2 Cor. 3:14). Not until God has
shone in their hearts by the convicting ministry of the Holy Spirit (John
16:7-11) can they intelligently exercise saving faith. No-one can come to Jesus
Christ unless the Father draws him (John 6:44). This is God's picture of man.
Is that the picture of a free moral agent who can will to come to God and be
saved? Scarcely!
Notice that the free moral agency of Adam was in the matter of
obeying or disobeying God's law. Through Adam's disobedience, his nature became
sinful and that sinful nature, by the law of birth, was passed on to all men.
This sinful nature makes man incapable of those actions that are good in a
degree demanded by God's law, and therefore he is not a free moral agent. Paul,
speaking of his old nature which came from Adam, said: "I am unspiritual,
sold as a slave to sin." He also said: "What I want to do I do not
do, but what I hate I do." He saw himself brought into captivity to a law
of sin which was in his members (Rom. 7:14, 19, 20, 23). This is the true
picture of the Adamic nature of every man - every so-called free moral agent.
Because of this, it could be said: "All have sinned and fall short of the
glory of God" (Rom. 3:23). Only one has been able to "reject the
wrong and choose the right" (Isa. 7:15). He was the Seed of the woman and
not of the sinful Adam. (see Gen. 3:15)
Thus it is impossible for man by any free action on his part to
live so that he is good in the sight of God's holy law. In other words, man
cannot be justified by the works of the law. He is not saved by any good action
that he may take as a free moral agent.
If a man is not saved through his acts as a free moral agent,
then the conclusion that he can go away from God and be lost, certainly does
not follow. Thus for the third time the argument has been shown to be
fallacious.
4. IS THE SOVEREIGN GRACE OF GOD LIMITED BY
MAN'S WILL?
To say that man can will to go away from God and be lost is to
make the sovereign grace of God subject to the will of man. This must be so
because it is clearly revealed that grace reigns to eternal life (Rom. 5:21).
If man can will to go away from God and be lost, then grace does not reign to
life - grace is not sovereign. To many there seems to be a clash between the
so-called free moral agency of man and the sovereign grace of God. This is not
true.
As has been shown, after Adam had sinned, man was no longer a
free moral agent in the sense that he was able to do good and thereby fulfill
the demands of God's holy law. Therefore, because of the demands of God's
righteousness, man is lost. But God made a special provision whereby man can
satisfy the demands of God's righteousness as expressed in his holy law.
This provision is in the person of his own Son who paid the
death penalty of the broken law. This being done, God again gave man freedom to
will. This second freedom to will is with respect to his Son. Man can either
reject or accept him. Those who reject him remain in the position of being
guilty and under the condemnation of the law. The one who accepts him as the
one who paid the penalty of the law for him, through faith, establishes God's
law. The law is thus held inviolate and God's righteousness is vindicated. Each
and everyone who in this way accepts Christ acts as a free agent under God's
commandment.
It has already been pointed out that when Adam exercised his
freedom and broke God's commandment, he thereby became possessor of a sinful
nature which made it impossible for him to act freely and be restored to his
former status and condition. So also by contrast, when someone has of his own
free will accepted Christ as the propitiation which satisfies the demands of
God's holy law, he is given a new divine nature which makes it impossible for
him to will to return to his former state.
It is at this point that man's free agency in the matter of
fulfilling God's law comes to an end. In fact, by so acting as a free agent,
man confesses that he is not a free moral agent. By accepting Christ as the
sacrifice of atonement for his sins, a person admits that he is not free to do
good himself and thus satisfy God's law.
It is also at this very point, when man exercises saving faith,
that the sovereignty of grace begins to operate. Until a man has accepted
Christ and thereby established God's law, he is under the demands of God's
righteousness. When these demands are satisfied, the floodgates of grace are
opened and grace becomes sovereign and reigns to bring eternal life (Rom 5:21).
It is, therefore, the righteousness of God that limits the sovereignty of his
grace. Man, by accepting God's provision for satisfaction of his own
righteousness, places himself at the mercy seat where nothing but the grace of
God can touch him. Thus man's freedom of will is related to God's holy law and
ceases to exist in the matter of life or death (saved or lost) when the
sovereignty of grace begins.
Surely nothing can be ascribed to the free moral agency of man
that can in the slightest interfere with the operation of the sovereign grace
of God that guarantees the eternal life of everyone who has been saved.
Is any further proof needed to show the unbiblical position of
the argument based on the free moral agency of man?
Thus the case of the backslider, when considered in the bright
light of God's own revelation instead of in the dim light of human reason,
becomes a strong and intensely specific argument for eternal security. Nor is
that all, it contradicts the charges that those who accept eternal security
teach that it makes no difference how a saved one lives.
TWENTY-FIVE
Some Arguments Answered
ANSWERS TO many of the arguments against eternal security have
been given throughout the preceding pages. These answers need not be repeated
here, but it might be helpful to some to have the arguments mentioned and
references made to the pages where answers to them can be found.
One of the most familiar arguments against eternal security and
one that meets with much sympathetic reception is the statement: "To teach
that a saved person is eternally secure and cannot be lost causes worldliness
in the church and loss of spiritual power." This argument is not only
answered in chapters 18-22; but it has been shown that denial of the security
of the saved one robs God's appeal for a holy and godly life of their force,
and thus it is in fact those who oppose the doctrine of eternal security who
are responsible for that condition.
Another criticism is that young people, who go away from home
and are taught eternal security at a Bible institute or conference, come back
and enthusiastically, but unwisely, spread the doctrine in their home church.
In the first two pages of chapter 3, it is pointed out that the responsibility
for this condition rests upon those who have been responsible for the Bible
training in that church, because they have failed to teach properly the
doctrines of the grace of God.
The statement that, while Christ will not cast out one that
comes to him, it is possible for a saved person voluntarily to go away from
God, has no basis whatever in scripture. It is purely human imagination and
cannot be accepted as an argument to decide a question, the only known facts of
which are to be found in God's own revelation. That it is impossible for a
saved person to go away from God is shown in chapter 24, point 2.
The argument that a sheep can jump out of God's hand and be
lost is also of this same class. No direct statement from the Bible has ever
been offered to sustain it. The only authority backing it is the reasoning of
the fallible human being that makes it. The impossibility of such an action is
shown in the third and fourth pages of chapter 1. As the freedom of man's will
is here involved, the answer to the last preceding argument applies here also.
It is argued that while eternal life is eternal, it is possible
for a saved person to lose that eternal life, and that under certain conditions
(which are never clearly defined), God will take back the eternal life to himself.
This argument entirely ignores God's revelation concerning the new birth. (See
chapter 29.) It would be just as reasonable to say that a mother can take back
to herself the life that she has given to her child. Furthermore, it has been
shown (chap. 6) that eternal life is a gift from God and that he never revokes
his gifts.
It is often said that a saved person can lose the Holy Spirit.
This is a direct denial of John 14:16, which clearly states that he stays
forever.
It has been argued that as the physical life can be starved
until it dies so also the spiritual, if it is not fed, will starve to death.
This is offered as proof that a saved person can be lost. The fallacy in this
argument is that comparison is made between two absolutely dissimilar things:
physical life and the life that comes through the new birth. That physical life
is universally mortal (subject to death) is clearly taught in the Bible. Death
has come to all men (Rom. 5:12). But that spiritual life, which is given to
someone who is born again, is by God said to be eternal. This it must be, for
it is of imperishable seed (1 Peter 1:23). Comparing these two kinds of life
and saying they are similar in this essential respect is to contradict God's
declaration that they are diametrically different.
It is contended that of the two views, it is more reasonable to
hold that someone who has been saved can be lost. That statement can be freely
granted, but it must be remembered that that which springs from a loving heart
is not the result of reason, even when on a human plane. Salvation is
completely unreasonable. Why should God give his only begotten Son, and why
should that Son voluntarily give his life so that mankind, who had rebelled
against him and was worthy of nothing but everlasting separation from him might
throughout all eternity live - not as restored to the originally perfect state
that he was created in - but as a being like the Son himself, higher than all
others of God's created beings? Salvation is made all of love and mercy. Where
then is there any room to argue the reasonableness of any part of God's plan of
salvation? In the light of God's own revelation of his infinite love, the
argument from human reason instantly fades into nothingness. It is, however,
most unreasonable to accept God's revelation concerning his love and sacrifice
in saving a person, and then deny that he "who works out everything in
conformity with the purpose of his will" (Eph. 1:11), has not provided for
the keeping of that for which he has sacrificed so much.
But why weary the reader (further) by multiplying refutations
of these purely human arguments? Enough has been given to demonstrate that
these arguments are without support in God's word. In fact, are contrary to it.
Nor, as has already been said, does the proof of the controversy lie in
answering all such arguments that the human mind might conceive. The real proof
is in God's own revelation which has been presented at considerable length. It
is, as someone has said: "We are not governed by reason but by
revelation."
As a help to those who have been confused by what has been
offered as biblical proof against eternal security, a few more arguments will
be answered. Certain "musts" are imposed upon those who are saved in
order to remain saved. Two will be mentioned. It is said that a believer is
secure as long as he remains in Christ, but he must remain in Christ or he
shall be lost. For a consideration of this "must," the reader is
referred to (chap. 28 par. 21).
Another is, "the saved person must continue to
believe." If he ceases to believe he is lost. Few who make this statement
realize that if this is true, then a saved person is lost the instant he
harbors a doubt. One argument which is hardly worthy of recognition, except for
that fact that it has been quite freely used in certain quarters, is that the
ending -eth of believeth (KJV) makes the word mean continuous believing. If
this is true, then all verbs ending in -eth (in the KJV) also signify
continuous and incomplete action. It is suggested that the reader try this out
by reading John 4:5, 7 and 13 and 11:28, 38. But there are some who are truly
concerned about this point. For those, assurance will be found in John 5:24,
"I tell you the truth, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me
has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has crossed over from death to
life." This verse makes it clear that saving faith is not a process, but
an act. Anything that is brought to pass by a process cannot be spoken of as
accomplished as long as the need for the process continues. When a thing has
been accomplished, then that through which it was brought to pass is no further
needed. In this verse eternal life (which cannot end) is said to have been
given. It is not being given. It is also stated that whoever believes "has
(already) crossed over (past tense) from death to life." Salvation from
the penalty of sin, that is from the condemnation of the law, is by no means a
process; it is an instantaneous act of God in response to a single act of faith
on the part of the sinner.
It is taught in Ephesians 1:13, 14, that after a person has
believed (a finished act) he is sealed with the Holy Spirit until the
redemption of the purchased possession. This passage once and for all rules out
the argument that one must continue to believe.
There is a need for continuous faith on the part of the saved
person; but that is not in relation to the question of eternal life (being
saved) or everlasting condemnation (being lost), and therefore is not a part of
this discussion.
It is said that sin in the life of a saved person will result
in that one's being lost. There are not many who are willing to go so far as to
say that any sin whatsoever will cause a saved person to be lost, especially if
they are reminded that, "everything that does not come from faith is
sin," and "anyone, then, who knows the good he ought to do and
doesn't do it, sins" (James 4:17). In fact anything that falls short of
the glory of God is sin (Rom. 3:23). Yet it is maintained that there are
certain kinds of sins: unconfessed sins, willful sins, or continued sinning
that will result in the one who commits them being lost. To accept this
condition is to acknowledge that there are degrees of sin. It is to say that
there are sins which a saved person can commit and still remain saved, but
there are others which must be avoided or you will be lost. To make this
concrete, the following list of sins is given: an unkind thought, a slight snub
of a fellow Christian, a bit of envy because someone else has been more highly
honored, a hasty unkind word, a misrepresentation of someone else, a white lie,
pride, envy, jealousy, resentment to another, a root of bitterness, greed,
hatred, wrath, strife, theft, falsification, idolatry, drunkenness, revellings,
fornication, adultery, murder. From the above list, which sins can be safely
committed and which not? Where is the line to be drawn and by whom? And where
is the Bible authority for the classification when it is finished? Those who
contend against eternal security are unwilling to state clearly their position
in this matter. They are not as frank as is the Roman Church which classifies
sins as venial and mortal.
But one need not be bewildered by this indefinite presentation
of the sin question. God in the death of Christ made an absolute and full
provision for sin and satisfied all demands of his law. This has already been
explained in chapters 8 and 9, and need not be repeated here.
And this leads on to the next argument: "If a saved person
cannot be lost, what of backsliders?" This word is greatly misunderstood.
In the first place, the word never occurs in relation to the saved of the
Church era. It is exclusively an Old Testament word and, with one exception
(Prov. 14:14 which is a different word in the original), is applied nationally
to Israel and Judah. As the things that are recorded concerning God's chosen
people Israel, are examples to believers of this era (1 Cor. 10:6), it seems
entirely proper to speak of a saved person who has departed from a life of
obedience to God as a backslider. But when this is done, to be consistent, such
person must necessarily be considered in the same light as God considered his
Old Testament backsliding people.
In connection with the first mention of backsliding, it is
written: "Your wickedness will punish; your backsliding will rebuke
you" (Jer. 2:19). Rebuke then is connected with backslidings. this at once
suggests chastening through which God corrects those saved persons who do not
judge themselves (see p. 62).
In the next chapter are found these words, "'Return,
faithless people,' declares the LORD, 'for I am your husband'" (Jer.
3:14). Here the Lord speaks of that which he regards as an unbreakable tie.
Then follows a prophecy of that restoration of Judah and Israel to their own land
which has not yet been fulfilled. Then in verse 22 is a loving entreaty:
"Return, faithless people; I will cure you of backsliding," and they
answer: "Yes, we will come to you, for you are the LORD [YHWH or Jehovah,
the redemptive name for God] our God."
In this passage surely there can be found nothing on which to
base the statement that a backslider is lost. On the contrary, it teaches that
a backslider is in an inseparable relation to God and will be restored.
In a second message God says (Jer. 5:6) or Judah, "Their
rebellion is great and their backslidings many"; and then tells of what
another writer calls punishment, "with the rod of men, with floggings
inflicted by men" (2 Sam. 7:14) that are to happen to them; but also adds:
"Yet ... I will not destroy you completely" (v. 18). Yet again God
pleads: "Why does Jerusalem always turn away?" (Jer. 8:5) and again
more corrective punishments are predicted. They shall be melted like in gold
refining, and tested (Jer. 9:7); they will be made to "eat bitter food and
drink poisoned water" (v. 15). The student of history well knows how hard
the rod has been and how severe the floggings; how they have been melted and
refined by the fires of persecution and how bitter the food and drink. It has
all been chastening, but not everlasting separation.
More than six hundred years later, it was written: "Did
God reject his people? By no means! ... God did not reject his people, whom he
foreknew" (Rom. 11: 1, 2). "And so all Israel will be saved" (v.
26) because "as far as election is concerned, they are loved on account of
the patriarchs" (v. 28).
And so also the backslider, while chastened by the Lord, is
never driven away (John 6:37), because he also is "chosen (elect)
according to the foreknowledge of God" (1 Peter 1:2). "For God's
gifts and his call are irrevocable" (Rom. 11:29).
While here is comfort, there is also a warning of the most
solemn kind. God's mercies can not be trifled with. One who trifles with the
grace of God, though not lost, because salvation is of grace, will suffer the
just consequences of his sins.
TWENTY-SIX
Why the Warnings?
IT IS argued: if a saved person cannot be lost, why then all
the warnings in the Bible? To ask this question is to imply that all warnings
are addressed to saved persons and the only thing that God needs to warn those
about, who are saved is that they do not do something to cause him to condemn
them to everlasting death. Is there then nothing else for an individual that
God is concerned about than the matter of eternal life or everlasting
condemnation?
There are many warnings addressed to believer but, before
considering some of them, it might be well to discuss briefly some warnings
which are often taken to apply to Christians but really do not directly apply
to them.
Some of the passages in which certain individuals are warned
are addressed to other than the saved of this era. In Matthew 24:42 and Mark
13:14 are warnings to servants to watch. In both, it is clearly said that this
watchfulness is in the expectation of the coming of the "Son of Man"
(Matt. 24:37 and Mark 13:34). Speaking of this coming, Matthew 24:30 says:
"All the nations of the earth will mourn. They will see the Son of Man
coming on the clouds of the sky, with power and great glory," and
according to verse 29, this will take place immediately after the great
tribulation. As the Church is taken up before the tribulation, these passages
cannot, in their primary sense, be applied to present-day believers.
It is to be noted also that these warnings are to "servants."
Jesus in speaking to his disciples said, "I no longer call you servants
... Instead, I have called you friends" (John 15:15). Under the law, God's
people in their activity for him are servants, but under grace they are
"friends." Thus it is doing violence to the new relationship to say
that these passages apply to Christians.
Another passage in which there is a warning that is made to
apply to saved persons is Hebrews 6:1-9. This is discussed elsewhere at
considerable length (see p. 147). This warning is directed against the
possibility of Jews in the early groups of Jewish Christians trusting in the
sufficiency of ceremonial worship and the kingdom teachings, but without a
personal faith in the Saviour indispensable to salvation. There are large numbers
in the churches today who have the form of godliness, but do not know the power
of it. These, who merely profess to be Christians but are not true believers,
are warned by passages such as this one. There is a special need today to warn
the unsaved within the churches. By applying to Christians warnings as this
one, is to rob that class of people who need so sadly the warnings of God's
word to them.
Throughout the pages of the Bible are found records of the
mixture of the weeds with the wheat. From the days of the mixed multitude that
went with Israel out of Egypt to the false teachers of the Christian era who
transform themselves into apostles of Christ (2 Cor. 11:13; 2 Pet. 2:1 and 1
John 4:1), there has been a need for warnings to God's people to distinguish
between those who are truly God's own and those who aren't. Here then is one
great reason for the warnings in the Bible.
As great as the subject of eternal life is, God most certainly
has much more than this for each person he has saved from the penalty of sin
and, through the new birth, placed in his own kingdom. If that was all, why
doesn't he take all those who are saved to himself immediately after they are
saved? Certainly someone who has been purchased at so great a price as the
blood of his own Son wouldn't be left on earth at the risk of being lost if he
could be lost, and also without any purpose for that earthly life!
But God has a purpose for the earthly life of those who are
blood bought, and it is in relation to this purpose that the warnings are
addresses to believers.
THE FRUITS OF THE EARTHLY LIFE MIGHT BE LOST
It is very possible for someone who has received eternal life,
whose spirit has been saved, to suffer loss of all that might have been
accomplished by his earthly life. Every man's work (the sum total of his
earthly life) shall be tested by fire. "If it (any man's work) is burned
up, he will suffer loss; he himself will be saved, but only as one escaping
through the flames" (1 Cor. 3:12-15).
In line with this, the writer of the Hebrews says: Therefore,
since we are receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, let us be thankful, and
so worship God acceptably with reverence and awe, for our 'God is a consuming
fire.'"(Heb. 12:28, 29 [Quoting Deut. 4:24]). A similar warning is found
in 2 Corinthians 5:10-11. Lot is the outstanding example of such a person. All
the works of his life were lost in Sodom. Even upon those of the city who were
nearest to him, his influence was lost. Certainly no Christian wants to be
saved the way Lot was when he could be like Abraham. A first need for the
warnings to saved people then is the possibility of the loss of the fruits of
the earthly life.
WARNINGS AGAINST LOSS OF INFLUENCE
A second need for warnings to saved people, which is really a
part of the one just mentioned, but important enough to justify special
mention, is the ever present possibility of a Christian losing his influence in
the world for God.
The possibility of salt losing its savour and being cast out
and trodden under foot of man (Matt. 5:13) is used as a warning of this type.
So also is the possibility of a man withering as a branch and being cast by men
into the fire (John 15:6).
One of the most searching warnings of this kind is found in
Revelation 2:5. "Remember the height from which you have fallen! Repent
and do the things you did at first. If you do not repent, I will come to you
and remove your lamp stand from its place." This warning is addressed to
the angel of the church at Ephesus. This church had stood as a great light
bearer surrounded by dark heathenism and even at the time the warning was
spoken, much good was said about this church; but it had left its "first
love" and therefore the warning. How sensitive God is in the matter of
letting his light shine out through those who are his own! All through the
centuries of the Christian era, the pages of history are filled with records of
churches and individual men that have been discarded by God as light bearers in
this world of darkness. To interpret this warning as a possibility of being
lost is to rob that church (or individual) which is very actively engaged in
God's work and zealous for the faith delivered once to the saints, of the much
needed warning that being a light bearer essentially requires a personal love
for the Lord.
REWARDS MIGHT BE LOST
God will reward in eternity those who serve him faithfully
during their earthly life. "If what he (any man) has built survives, he
will receive his reward" (1 Cor. 3:14). But it is also possible for a man
to lose that reward which God had made possible for a man to lose the reward
that God had made possible for him to gain and he solemnly warns of this:
"Hold on to what you have, so that no-one will take your crown" (Rev.
3:11). Crowns are rewards for faithfulness to God. They do not represent
eternal life. This is perfectly clear from Revelation 4:4 to 11, which depicts
the scene wherein the twenty-four elders cast their crowns before the throne
saying, "Thou are worthy, O Lord, to receive glory and honour and
power." There is a glory and honour for eternity that can be lost and God
warns his children of the possibility of losing it.
WARNINGS TO AVOID CHASTENING
So far only warnings as to loss or gain for eternity have been
considered. There are also warnings that consider the present life of the
believer. While it is true that every child of God is subject to chastening, it
is also true that the amount of chastening may be more or less, depending on
the believer's judgment of himself for allowing sin in his life. Those who do
not judge themselves are warned that God will judge and chasten them. (1 Cor.
11:27-32).
IT IS POSSIBLE NOT TO ENTER INTO REST
The Lord Jesus Christ said: "Come to me, all you who are
weary and burdened, and I will give you rest" (Matt. 11:28). What can be
meant by this rest? It is the rest that he gives to all who have labored with
the heavy burden of sin, which he through his death takes away from all who
have come to him, confessing themselves as sinners. It is a rest in the
finished work of salvation.
That this is a rest to be enjoyed during this earthly life is
clear from the words that follow: "Take my yoke upon you and learn from
me."
There are many Christians who do not have this rest because
they do not understand that when Jesus Christ died on the cross, God performed
through him a finished work of salvation which is theirs through simply coming
to him in faith. Instead of resting in the finished work of Christ, they are
constantly laboring in order to be accepted by God. They are trying to be
justified by their own efforts. They are always struggling to "hold
out" but have no rest - no assurance - that they will see Christ in glory.
God has given a solemn warning against just this condition, but
the warning has to a large extent been lost because the passage has been made
to mean the possible loss of eternal life.
This warning is found in Hebrews 4:1-3. "Therefore, since
the promise of entering his (God's) rest still stands, let us be careful that
none of you be found to have fallen short of it. For we also have had the
gospel preached to us, just as they did; but the message they heard was of no
value to them, because those who heard did not combine it with faith. Now we
who have believed enter that rest." The interpretation that makes this
passage teach that a saved person can be lost and thus fail to enter into rest
in heaven overlooks the present tense of the words: "Now we who have
believed enter (not 'will enter') that rest." The tenth verse makes this
even more definite for there the entering into rest is already an accomplished
fact. "For he that is entered into his rest, he also hath ceased from his
own works, as God did from his" (KJV). And here it is clearly said that
the rest is from one's own works.
Those who deny the eternal security of the believer and add
works as a condition for salvation are responsible for the failure of many
Christians to cease from their own works and to enter into that rest which
comes from faith in the finished work of Christ.
While there are many other warnings in the Bible, enough has
been considered to show the emptiness of the argument, "Why then the
warnings, if a saved person cannot be lost?", and also the shallowness of
the interpretation of the Bible which denies eternal security.
TWENTY-SEVEN
Misinterpreted Bible Passages
A CONSIDERABLE NUMBER of scripture passages selected from
various parts of the Bible are offered as arguments against eternal security.
The basic principle of Bible study and interpretation is that
the Bible is one great, harmonious presentation of truth and that each part
must harmonize with every other part and with the whole. The great truths
concerning sin and condemnation, and grace and eternal life, are outlines which
everything else must conform to. Therefore the doctrines of sin and of the
grace of God are the background that individual verses must be examined
against. If there is an apparent meaning that contradicts these established
teachings, then it is necessary to seek some other meaning. Even if no other
meaning seems possible, such a verse cannot be made to annul all that is taught
by the whole body of harmonious truth vastly outweighing such verse.
The only God-honoring practice is to accept the divine
revelation of the large body of truth and humbly seek a harmonious meaning for
the few individual, difficult verses. To do differently is to rob God's Word of
its power to give comfort, joy and assurance.
Interpretations given to passages to make them contradict the
eternal security of the believer are subject to various errors that might well
be considered under four different groups:
1. Applying to the saved, passages addressed to others.
2. Interpreting passages outside of their context.
3. Difficult, or obscure passages wrongly interpreted.
4. Using passages in figurative language to formulate a
doctrine.
Only a part of the passages that are offered to prove that a
saved person can be lost can be considered here. Those considered will,
however, be sufficient in number to give you a clear picture of the various
interpretational errors. Nor is it necessary in all cases to give a full and
correct interpretation of each passage quoted. For the purpose of this
discussion, all that is needed is to show a good reason why any given passage
cannot mean that someone who has been saved can be lost.
1. APPLYING TO THE SAVED,
PASSAGES ADDRESSED TO OTHERS
"When a righteous man turns from his righteousness and
does evil, and I put a stumbling block before him, he will die" (Ezk.
3:20). this was true under the law, but the saved person is "not under
law, but under grace" (Rom. 6:14), and therefore it cannot apply to him.
Every saved person has been justified (counted as righteous) through the
redemption that is in Christ Jesus (Rom. 3:24) and does not stand before God in
his own righteousness.
"The soul who sins is the one who will die" (Ezk.
18:4, 20). This also is under the law. Under grace, the saved person is already
dead in the person of his substitute, Jesus Christ (2 Cor. 5:14), and is free
from the condemnation (death penalty) of the law.
Matthew 18:23-35. This passage is under law. The principle for
forgiveness which applies to the Christian is found in Ephesians 4:32,
"... forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you."
"But he that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be
saved" (Matt. 24:13). This is said of Israel passing through the great
tribulation and cannot be applied to Christians. The same is true of Mark
13:13. the context in each case shows this clearly.
The person referred to in Luke 11:24-26, into whom the evil spirit
reenters, cannot be someone who has been born again, for every such person is
inhabited by the Holy Spirit, who stays forever (John 14:16, 17). That
individual was merely reformed - not regenerated.
"The Spirit clearly says that in later times some will
abandon the faith and follow deceiving spirits and things taught by
demons" (1 Tim. 4:1). This passage doesn't speak of the individual's faith
in the Saviour for salvation. Those spoken of here teach lies told them by
demons instead of truths of faith which the Church has taught. In 1 John 2:18,
19, these same people are mentioned, and there it is clearly stated that
"they went out from us ... but their going showed that none of them
belonged to us." Hence, they have never been saved, even though they have
passed as believers and represented themselves as such. There are several
passages that speak of false teachers who are a part of the apostasy of these
last days. They have departed from the faith held by their fathers in the
Church. Thus to depart from the faith does not require a previous, personal
faith in Christ as is necessary to be saved.
2. PASSAGES INTERPRETED
OUTSIDE OF THEIR CONTEXT
Some very serious errors are made by using certain passages
entirely out of context to show that someone who has been saved can be lost.
"You have fallen away from grace" (Gal. 5:4) is quoted as a sure
proof that a saved person can be lost. This statement is made to describe a
Christian who has fallen into sin. If those who use this statement like this will
take time to read the entire verse, they will see how far they miss the true
meaning. It is not those who fall into sin, but those who are particularly
concerned with doing everything that the law requires in order to be righteous
in God's sight, so as to remain saved, that have fallen from grace. Thus it is
they themselves who insist on works to remain saved who have fallen from grace.
To apply the by-works principle to the unsaved is to be guilty of preaching
another gospel (Gal. 1-8:9). Applying it to believers is to encourage them to
fall from grace.
The theme of Galatians is "After beginning with the
Spirit, are you now trying to attain your goal by human effort?" It is not
a treatise on the new birth as John 3:1-21, nor on salvation from the penalty
of sin as Ephesians 2:1-10. It is an appeal to a life in the liberty of grace
instead of in bondage to the law.
Another favorite statement used entirely out of context to
prove that a saved person can be lost is found in Hebrews 6:6. It consists of
these five words: "If they fall away." It is said that this shows
clearly the possibility of a Christian being lost. What is the context? Verses
4-6 are all one sentence that speaks of people who have had certain experiences
which are mentioned. It is true that in the words, "if they fall
away," it is implied that it is possible to fall away from that which had
been experienced, but the essential statement concerning these persons, whoever
they may be, is: "It is impossible ... if they fall away, to be brought
back to repentance." If the words, "if they fall away," refer to
persons that have been saved, so also must the words, "It is impossible
... to be brought back to repentance." Do those who make the implied
meaning prove that a saved person can be lost also accept and teach that
someone who has been lost again, cannot be brought back to repentance? They do
not. They are always urging backsliders to come and be saved again. This
illustrates the shallowness of much of the teaching against eternal security.
That this statement isn't made concerning believers is
clarified in verse 9. "Even though we speak like this, dear friends, we
are confident of better things [than those mentioned] in your case - things
that accompany salvation." Thus these persons haven't been saved. Who then
were they? This explanation is suggested. The letter is written to the Hebrews.
Read the first three verses of the chapter and notice how perfectly they
describe Nicodemus who came to Jesus by night. Yet Jesus refused to be
addressed by him as "a teacher who has come from God," but told him
that he needed to be born again. While with Jesus, Nicodemus entered into those
things mentioned in verses 4 and 5. Had Nicodemus gone away from Jesus and
"fallen away" from all that he received there, then he could not have
been brought back to repentance, for he would have gone back and continued to
try to establish his own righteousness, as did the other Jews of whom Paul
writes in Romans 10:1-3. Thus this passage refers to Jews passing from under
the covenant of the law into salvation and can't be said to be concerning saved
people.
Hebrew 10:26-29, 39 is a similar passage.
3. OBSCURE PASSAGES
WRONGLY INTERPRETED
A third error in the use of scripture passages to deny the
eternal security of the believer is to wrongly interpret passages, the meaning
of which depends upon the meaning of some word or phrase in the passage. A
favorite passage of this class is 1 Corinthians 9:27. In Voices from the Silent
Centuries, Dr. Harry Rimmer has the following to say concerning this passage.
It is quoted here with his consent:
"Strange as it may seem, however, there are some who do
not care to rest in the security of the finished work of Christ, and these
reject the provisions of the doctrine of Grace; contending that we are safe
only as long as we are able to keep ourselves. This school of thought would
have us saved one day and lost the next, losing sight of the gracious promise
of Jesus, 'I GIVE unto them eternal life, and they SHALL NEVER PERISH.' Pressed
for some verse of scripture on which to base their unhappy doctrine, they
generally refer to 1 Corinthians 9:27. Here Paul writes, 'But I keep my body
under, and bring it into subjection: lest by any means, when I have preached to
others I myself should be a cast-away.' this implies, according to these
mistaken friends, that Paul was afraid he would be lost after he had been saved
and serving!
"This erroneous idea would never have been rooted, if we
had possessed the knowledge, when the New Testament was rendered into the English,
that has since come to us from archeology. The whole matter turns on the
meaning of the word Paul uses here, ADOKIMOS. This Koine word was lost to the
world for ages, and is just recovered from the ostraca. It was a common
household word in the days of Paul, and was applied to a certain pottery vessel
in sad condition. Remembering that all the utensils of a household service were
pottery. it is easy to understand how often such would be cracked or broken. A
woman, busy about the hearthstone with a pottery cooking vessel in her hand, in
careless haste might bump the pot against the stones and crack it so that it
would no longer hold water.
"Did she then throw away this leaky vessel? You know she
didn't! Just look at your own pantry and see how many tea cups are on the
shelf, with a handle broken off, or an unsightly crack marring the smooth
surface of the porcelain! Never forget that we are dealing with FOLKS in these
old discoveries, and that human nature has not changed one iota in two thousand
years! so the ancient housekeeper, having a cracked pot that was no longer fit
for boiling water, PUT IT ON THE SHELF. Perhaps she hoped to use it again as a
receptacle for beans or wheat, perhaps she was just thrifty; but when a pot was
cracked and laid on the shelf, it was called ADOKIMOS! Was it Lost? No! It was
just laid aside.
"So Paul, contemplating the effects of sin in the
Christian life, states in terms that his readers could most appreciate, 'I
strive so to live that I may not be PUT ON THE SHELF!' To how many living men
would that phrase be aptly applied! Do we not all of us know men who have been
used of God in His service, who allowed the flesh to gain the ascendancy? Where
are those men today? In the language of Paul, which is strangely reminiscent of
the slang of this age, 'they are on the shelf.' So Paul writes of his ministry,
and says, 'I do not want to be a cracked pot! (Adokimos).'"
In Philippians 3:10-11 Paul says, "I want to know Christ
and the power of his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, and so,
somehow, to attain to the resurrection from the dead." This is made to
teach that Paul could have been lost, because his participation in that
resurrection that takes place when Christ comes for his Church was dependent
upon his present striving as indicated in the preceding verses.
So interpreting this passage, not only compromises grace
principles, but it completely denies that salvation is by grace and that
eternal life is a gift of God.
This passage can't possibly refer to the resurrection of the
body. In the next verse Paul says that he hasn't yet attained it. It would be
meaningless for someone not yet dead to say that he had not been raised from
the grave. The resurrection Paul refers to must be something attainable in the
earthly life of the believer.
The following interpretation is offered, not only as in perfect
harmony with the sure teachings of the grace of God, but also as suggested by
other scripture passages.
In these verses the fellowship of the sufferings of Christ and
becoming like him in his death are related to the resurrection of the dead. In
2 Corinthians 4:10, and 11 are also found, though in different words, the same
two conditions, the fellowship of suffering and being like Christ in his death.
There it clearly states the purpose of these two, that the life of Christ may
be revealed in our mortal (subject to death) body. This then suggests that the
resurrection of Philippians 3:11 is the same as the revealing of the life of
Christ in the present mortal body of the believer. This suggestion is strongly
supported by Romans 6:4, where the new life of the believer is likened to
Christ's resurrection from the dead.
Furthermore the words, "Not that I have already obtained
all this, or have already been made perfect," (Phil. 3:12) seem to support
even further the suggestion that "the resurrection from the dead" (in
this context) means the full revelation of the life of Christ in the present
mortal body. Surely here is life out of death.
1 John 5:16 is sufficient grounds for some to deny the eternal
security of the believer. It reads: "If anyone sees his brother commit a
sin that does not lead to death, he should pray and God will give him life. I
refer to those whose sin does not lead to death. I am not saying that he should
pray about that." The meaning of this verse depends on the meaning of the
words death and life. They are said to mean eternal life and everlasting death
or condemnation. No other scripture passage is ever quoted to support the
interpretation. This interpretation is fraught with at least five distinct
errors:
1. It flatly contradicts
the words of Jesus (also recorded by John): "Whoever ... believes ... has
eternal life and will not be condemned" (John 5:24).
2. It denies the
interceding work of Christ (also recorded by John and in the same letter):
"If anybody does sin, we have one who speaks to the Father in our defense
- Jesus Christ, the Righteous One. He is the atoning sacrifice for our
sins" (1 John 2:1, 2).
3. To teach that one man
can pray for another and thereby the one prayed for is delivered from the guilt
of his sin and given eternal life is to recognize a human mediator between God
and man as the Roman ('Catholic') church does. This is contrary to God's own
word: "There is one ... mediator between God and men, the man Christ
Jesus" (1 Tim. 2:5).
4. It classifies sin (in
the sense of transgression of the law) into two classes; those capable of being
forgiven and those that take away grace and involve the death of the soul.
These are the venial and mortal sins of Roman theology, pure and simple. In
relation to eternal life or everlasting death, there are no degrees of sin, all
are the same. James writes (Jas. 2:10): "For whoever keeps the whole law
and yet stumbles at just one point is guilty of breaking all of it."
5. It teaches that through
the prayer of another a believer secures forgiveness of sin. This cannot be
supported by other scripture passages. In fact it is contradicted by a passage
which also is recorded by John and in the same letter: "If we confess our
sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from
all unrighteousness" (1 John 1:9). It is one's own confession, not the
prayer of another, which God honors in forgiving a sinning saint.
This illustrates the awful error it's possible to fall into
when an individual passage is interpreted without reference to the great
fundamental (primary and essential) doctrines of the Bible.
There is another interpretation of this passage that can be
supported by other passages and does not do violence to any of the great
doctrines of the Bible. This interpretation considers the word
"death" to mean physical death. That physical death can result from
sin is clearly taught in 1 Corinthians 11:29, 30, "For anyone who eats and
drinks [the Lord's supper] without recognizing the body of the Lord eats and
drinks judgment on himself. That is why many among you are weak and sick, and a
number of you have fallen asleep." The word "sleep" is a
euphemism for the physical death of believers. Jesus said that Lazarus slept
when he was dead (John 11:11). When stoned, Stephen "fell asleep"
(Acts 7:60).
Thus there were those in the Corinthian church who had died
physically because of sin, but they were not lost because the word
"sleep" is never used for death except in the case of those who are
saved. It is therefore, correct to interpret the word death as meaning physical
death. Thus it seems most reasonable in the light of other scripture to
interpret the passage in question as an command to pray for people who are (or
may become) sick because of sins committed that they may be restored to health,
yet in the case of some sin, prayer shall not be offered. This interpretation
must not of course be made to support the false teaching that all sickness is
due to sins committed by the sick person.
TWENTY-EIGHT
Misinterpreted Bible Passages - Continue
4. USING PASSAGES IN
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE TO FORMULATE A DOCTRINE.
A SERIOUS ERROR committed by those who deny eternal security is
to use passages that are in figurative language to prove the contention that
one who has been saved can be lost. It is only after a given interpretation of
a figurative passage has been fully authenticated by other scripture that it
can be used as proof. To use interpretations not so authenticated is to base
doctrine on purely human thinking and reasoning. Doctrine, which is truth, in
order to be true must be a divine revelation.
A SOWER WENT OUT TO SOW
The parable of the sower (Matt. 13:1-23) is an outstanding
example of this class of passages. It is claimed that the seed that grows in
the stoney ground and among the thorns represents persons that are saved, but
who became backsliders and are lost. This interpretation is never sustained by
other scripture texts. In the first place, such interpretation directly denies
salvation by grace through faith and all the other truths considered in
chapters 5-17 and therefore must be dismissed.
There is a key word in this parable, the significance of which
is learned from several passages. That word is "fruit." There were
two kinds of growth, that which bore no fruit and that which bore fruit. In
connection with the first use of the word fruit (Gen. 1:11), it is said that it
contains the seed. Therefore, according to the law of first mention where there
is fruit, there is seed and where there is no fruit, there is no seed. That
which grew among the rocks and the thorns, bore no fruit hence it had no seed
in it, while that which bore fruit did have seed. As has been previously
mentioned, all who are born again (ie. saved) are born "not of perishable
seed, but of imperishable, thought the living and enduring word of God" (1
Pet. 1:23), and that seed remains in them (1 John 3:9). Thus the Bible clearly
makes the continuing presence of seed a sign of new birth. The absence thereof
becomes a sign that regeneration has not occurred. Natural man and all the
moral development and the so-called Christian culture, apart from regeneration
is flesh which is as the grass and the flower of it that withers. Jesus speaking
of himself said: "Unless a grain of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it
remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds."
["much fruit" (KJV)] This "much fruit" are those who are
saved through his death and resurrection. Note carefully, they are
"fruit" or the "seed" - not the blade and the stalk which
withers.
The life that is in the seed of any grain today is the same
life as was in the seed, of that same kind of grain, that God made and put into
the earth on the third creation day. Therefore, seed means the enduring life
and stands for the eternal life of a saved person; whereas the stalk which has
a life of a very limited duration, represents flesh or the earthly life of a
man.
It is very interesting to notice that to the perfect creation
before the fall, God gave to the beast "every green plant", but to
man he gave "every seed-bearing plant" and "every tree that has
fruit with seed in it Here seed undoubtedly stands for spiritual food, whereas
green plants represent mere bodily food. In the light of these different texts,
harmonizing with each other, it seems only reasonable to conclude that only
that which bore fruit represents saved men and women. That which bore no fruit
represents merely natural men who have either been stirred emotionally with
outward signs similar to spiritual evidence or who have only been morally
improved due to hearing the teachings of the word. That the word of God is a
great influence for human uplift, even in the lives of people who are not born
again, cannot be denied. Considerable space has been given to this passage not
only because of its important, but also because the same issue arises in the
next passage for consideration.
THE VINE AND THE BRAHESNC
In John 15:1-6 is the record of the words of Jesus concerning
the vine and the branches. This passage is a particular favorite of those who
claim that someone who has been saved can be lost. It is said that every branch
in Jesus is a saved person and the branches that are cut off are saved persons
who are lost.
Much can be said to refute this interpretation. All agree that
there are two kinds of branches; those not bearing fruit and those bearing
fruit. It has already been shown at considerable length in the discussion of
the previous passage that fruit and seed are a sign of being born again. As the
unfruitful branches do not have this sign, it is only reasonable to conclude
that they cannot represent saved persons.
On the other hand, the fruitful branches have seed and are
children of God. But the Father Husbandman cares for these branches in a
special way - he purges them. He removes part of the woody growth so that they
will bear more fruit. This is exactly what the "Father" does with
every one who is born of imperishable seed - everyone who is his child.
"The Lord disciplines [or chastens] those he loves, and he
punishes everyone he accepts as a son" and, "If you are not
disciplined (and everyone undergoes discipline), then you are illegitimate
children and not true sons" (Heb. 12:6, 8). And significantly enough, the
purpose of this chastening is exactly the same as the purging of the fruitful
branches, to bear more fruit in the form of righteousness (Heb. 12:11).
The unfruitful branches are not purged. Thus in two ways, the
two kinds of branches are identified by other scripture passages. The
unfruitful branches cannot be saved persons, because they definitely lack the
two indispensable signs of son ship, having seed in them and being chastened.
It is still contended that the expression, "in me,"
can only mean a saved person for, "if anyone is in Christ, he is a new
creation" (2 Cor. 5:17). This would be true if the words "in me"
had the same meaning as "in Christ," but there is much to show that
they don't. The message of the gospel of John is "the Word was made
flesh" -the Son of God becomes the Son of Man and in him is life - life
both in a universal sense for all men, and in an individual sense only for
those who believe.
It was as the Son of Man that he became identified with the
whole human race. He said, "But I, when I am lifted up from the earth,
will draw all men to myself" (John 12:32). That he said this of himself as
the Son of Man is clear from the immediately preceding statement, "The
hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified" (v. 23) and an earlier
statement, "Just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so the
Son of Man must be lifted up" (John 3:14).
By the drawing of "all men to" himself, life went
from him to all men. Death entered the human race by sin (Rom. 5:12). On the
cross the Son of Man took away all sin, for he was "the Lamb of God, who
takes away the sin of the world" (John 1:29). Thus that by which death
entered the human race (Rom. 5:12) was removed, and life was brought back to
the human race. That he gave life to all is clearly taught in John 6:33,
"For the bread of God is he who comes down from heaven and gives life to
the world." "In him was life, and that life was the light of
men." "The true light that gives light to every man was coming into
the world" (John 1:4, 9).
There is still another statement as to life in the Son of Man
that applies to all men. "Do not be amazed at this, for a time is coming
when all who are in their graves will hear his [the Son of Man's] voice and
come out - those who have done good will rise to live, and those who have done
evil will rise to be condemned" (John 5:28, 29). This is the bodily
resurrection of all men which was made possible only by the death and
resurrection of the Son of Man. "For since death came through a man, the
resurrection of the dead comes also through a man. For as in Adam all die, so
in Christ all will be made alive" (1 Cor. 15:21). Thus in he who said,
"every branch in me," there is life in a universal sense. It is for
all men. This life is on a purely human plane. It is not divine [of God], nor
is it eternal. In the figure, it is represented by the perishable wood and
leaves of the branches.
"In him" there is also a divine life that becomes
available to all because of the fact that he has overcome for all, the physical
death which came through Adam's sin. He, on the cross, became, in his humanity,
united with all men. Those who through faith in him as the Son of God become
united with him in his divine being have become children of God. They are
"in Christ" and have eternal life.
As the gospel of John clearly teaches the universality of life,
of a human nature, in the Son of Man, so it also teaches the certainty of a
divine eternal life in the Son of God for a limited number - all who believe.
While he drew all men to himself on the cross, only those who receive him are
born of God (John 1:12, 13) and those who believe in him as the only begotten
Son of God have eternal life (John 3:16). He was the bread of God from heaven
that "comes down from heaven and gives life to the world," but only
"whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life" (John
6:33, 54).
Thus Jesus (as recorded by John) taught that there was life in
him in this double sense. He also made it clear that for some the resurrection
of the body was to life, while for others it was to condemnation (John 5:29).
In other words, some are raised to life which is a continued union with God
while others are raised to life in order to be condemned, that is separation
from him. Isn't this in perfect harmony with what happens to the branches? Some
are separated and some continue in union with him.
Thus this word picture of the vine and the branches, with
perishable wood representing humanity, and fruit with its seed, divine life, is
a perfect and full illustration of what he who was both Son of Man and Son of
God accomplished for the human race. He spoke this himself at the very moment
that he faced the cross by which all was to pass. What harmony there is in it
all! Contrast this with that school of interpretation of scripture which never
hesitates to make some difficult passage contradict the, "Verily, verily,
I say unto you" (John 5:24 KJV) of the Son of God.
Much more can be said about this passage, but this is not an
exposition of it, except insofar as it is used to deny the eternal security of
every saved person.
There are, however, two other verses in this passage that are
made to deny eternal security. The words, "Remain in me, and I will remain
in you" and "unless you remain in me" are offered as a proof
that someone who is in Christ can be separated from him. As the words
"remain in me and I will remain in you," are addressed to people who
have been declared to be clean (v. 3), they must be applied to saved people
only and not to saved and unsaved as in verse two. Here is a definite command
by God and the reason for it follows; but it is not an obligation placed on the
saved person, as is clear from the last three words. A comparable command is
found in Luke 5:13. Jesus there said to the man covered with leprosy, "Be
clean." This clearly does not imply that the man was to cleanse himself.
So also the command, Remain in me, and I will remain in you," does not
mean that those who have been cleansed by a similar command on his part must
keep themselves in him. The Lord's command to the sinner to be clean and to the
cleansed person to remain in him are both brought to realization by God's own
power (See chapter 16). This command then states the law of divine life in
Christ as being a continuous need on the part of the one who has been washed by
the washing of regeneration, to remain in continuous union with him. From his
own words (recorded in the same gospel), "Whoever hears my word and
believes him who sent me has eternal [everlasting union with him] life and will
not be condemned [separation from him]," it is clear that his command
cannot be broken. It can just as truly be said that unless the sun and earth
remain in their orbits, day will not follow night and spring will not follow
winter as to say, "Neither can you bear fruit unless you remain in
me." No-one would say that the sun and the earth must by their own power
remain in their orbits. No. They are kept there by the Creator's power. And so
is every saved person kept in Christ by the power of God.
The sixth verse is also used to prove that a saved person can
be lost. Those who so use it, overlook the statement that those spoken of are
gathered and cast into the fire by men. [orig. 'they are gathering them up'
etc., KJV 'gathered by men, and cast'.] To be lost is to be cast out by God, as
in the second verse. Anything which is said to be done by men cannot by any
stretch of the imagination be interpreted as meaning condemnation.
This same error is made by those who misinterpret Matthew 5:13,
as teaching that a saved person can be lost. When the salt has lost its
saltiness, it is trodden under foot by men. These verses deal only with an
earthly condition and have nothing to say regarding the eternal state. The
purpose of this passage as applied to believers is to warn them that their
influence for God among the unsaved can be lost, but not that they will lose
their eternal life.
The parable of the Ten Virgins (Matt. 25:1-13) is another
favorite passage used by those denying eternal security to prove their
contention. There are probably more different interpretations of this passage
than any other. To make such a passage contradict the clear teaching of the
doctrines of the grace of God is to explain the known by the unknown. It is to
interpret the clear by the vague and the result can only be confusion. The very
fact, that a disputed passage as this is used to deny the eternal security of
the believer is a confession of weakness on the part of those who so use it.
Additional misinterpreted passages that are quoted to prove
that someone who has been saved can be lost, might be quoted at considerable
length, but space does not permit, nor is it necessary. Those quoted ought to
be sufficient to point out that the purported scriptural support for the denial
of eternal security consists only in misinterpretations of Bible passages.
These interpretations deny the plain, fundamental truth of God's word. True
Bible exposition demands that obscure and difficult passages be carefully
studied in the light of plain teachings.
To misinterpret God's word is a strategy of Satan that started
in the garden of Eden and caused the first Adam to sin and become the head of a
sinful race. He used it also, though unsuccessfully, when he was permitted to
tempt the Son of Man, the last Adam. Though he cannot rob them of their eternal
life, he does it today to rob God's children of their assurance which brings
peace and joy and a fruitful life for God. And he does this through men who are
innocent of his activities.
If anyone who still rejects this precious truth feels that an
insufficient number of difficult passages have been explained, let him go back
and first harmonize his own position with the great doctrines of the grace of
God as explained in chapter 5 to 17. When that has been done, it is time to
seek explanations for any remaining difficult passages. In fact, many
difficulties will then of themselves have disappeared, just as do the
difficulties of the infidel, when he is willing to accept the essential truth
concerning God and His Christ.
Part Five
Evils of Arminianism
TWENTY-NINE
A Veil Over the Understanding
IN DISCUSSING the evils of Arminianism in this and the
following three chapters, the term is used in its popular sense which restricts
it to the single doctrine that "man may relapse from a state of
grace"; that is, one who has been saved may be lost. That's the only point
of that theological system this discussion is concerned with.
In this criticism of Arminianism, it is not the individuals
themselves who reject eternal security, to a greater or lesser degree, who are
being considered. With many of them, their rejection is largely a matter of
terminology. With others it is a lack of knowledge, for which they themselves
can hardly be held responsible because they have never been taught. The
criticism here is directed at the teaching itself.
Furthermore, what is here said must not be construed as meaning
that the good that has been accomplished by sincere and consecrated men and
women has no value because of their views on this question. Nothing that
follows must be taken to minimize in any way the work done for the Lord by many
who do not hold the views presented here.
It can be granted freely that there have been Arminian
Christians who have accomplished more for God's Kingdom than some Calvinistic
Christians, without refuting the statements made in these four chapters. The
question is; what is the influence of the teaching that one who has been saved
can be lost, upon those who are being taught?
Throughout the foregoing pages, references have been made to
evils resulting from the Arminian teaching. In order that the full significance
of these might be realized, even at the danger of repetition, these are brought
together and additional ones are mentioned in this section.
The teaching that a person who has been saved can be lost casts
a veil over the understanding in the reading of the great doctrinal letters.
More than one person will testify that the Pauline [by Paul] letters could not
be understood by them as long as they did not accept the doctrine of eternal
security. Why this is so can be made clear by a simple illustration.
BLEEDING THROUGH
Everyone familiar with painting knows how difficult it is to
cover with some other color that which has been painted red. The red always, in
the words of the painter, "bleeds through." Even the red in brown
paint will bleed through and change any color that is painted over it. So also
is it with the teaching that one who has been saved can be lost. To illustrate:
There are many who say that they believe that a person is saved by grace. But
what do they mean? Certainly it is something vastly different than explained in
chapter 6. To them, to be saved by grace means to have all sins committed up to
that moment, forgiven. The saved one is placed in a position so that if he
maintains the proper conduct (whatever that might be), he will receive eternal
life when the earthly life's journey is ended. They do not put it that clearly,
but that is a perfectly fair statement of their position. The requirements to
maintain the state of grace vary. One man said most emphatically, "One is
saved by grace, but one must keep the Sabbath." With others the
"musts" are quite different, but it is exactly the same principle.
The saved one must do something, be it this or that, or he will be lost.
This notion that a saved person can be lost, bleeds through the
statement: "Therefore he [Jesus] is able to save completely [or forever]
those who come to God through him, because he always lives to intercede for
them" (Heb. 7:25) and makes this passage mean that Christ is able to save
from the lowest depths of sin [KJV for "completely" is "to the
uttermost"]. The beautiful shade of meaning intended in this verse is the
continuing salvation because, "he always lives." God's color scheme
is therefore entirely destroyed.
One man who for years had listened to Arminian preaching
discovered that man is not justified by the works of the law. But instead of
seeing that it was by grace alone through faith, he came to the conclusion that
the one who has been saved by grace is justified by the works of faith which he
does. This was nothing but the "bleeding through" of the notion that
a Christian would be lost if he did not maintain good works.
And so all of the doctrines of grace are bled through so much
that they lost their beautiful color that God has given them.
There is a veil over the understanding so that the doctrines of
grace, as revealed in Paul's writings, are not understood. They cannot be
understood until the veil is removed. But when it has been removed, what a
glorious splendor these doctrines shine!
CANNOT BELIEVE
But the evil goes even further than to hinder the
understanding: it even becomes impossible to believe. In chapter 10 was the
story of someone who, on being told that eternal life is a present possession
of every believer, said: "I can't believe that we now have eternal life,
for that would be eternal security and I won't believe that." It is sadly
true that rejection of the doctrine of eternal security actually makes it
impossible for some to believe the doctrines of grace.
CAUSES CONFUSED TEACHING
The interpretation of the Bible from the Arminian viewpoint
leads to confusion rather than clarity. By interpreting warnings against the
loss of rewards as meaning the possible loss of eternal life, the two entirely
separate subjects of eternal life and rewards are sadly confused. In the same
way, what God's word teaches about those who are mere professors of
Christianity is confused as applying to true believers. By applying Old
Testament teachings and passages of a purely legal nature to saved persons of
this era, law and grace become hopelessly mixed in the thinking of vast numbers
of Christians. As Paul place much emphasis on the fact that believers are
"not under the law, but under grace" (Rom. 6:14), this confused
teaching is decidedly harmful.
People ask, "Why is the Bible written in such a way that
it is so hard to understand?" The difficulty is not with the Bible, but
with much teaching that causes the Bible to seem to be confused. The mistaken
idea that man must do something meritorious to get into heaven, which is
inherent in the Arminian teaching, is responsible for many of the difficulties
which are a hindrance to a clear understanding of the Bible.
INCONSISTENT POSITIONS
Those who reject eternal security often place themselves in
inconsistent positions.
A minister who, to a considerable extent, in his public
utterances has denounced eternal security, made the following statement in a
sermon: "God saved me and God keeps me. I don't know which is the more
important." By considering God's keeping work equal to his saving work, he
either admitted his own eternal security or otherwise he questioned his own
salvation. It is reasonable to assume that he did not question his own
salvation. If so, then he contradicted all his attacks on eternal security.
It is not uncommon for an unsaved person who is being begged to
"become saved" to answer, "I would like to be a Christian but I
feel I cannot hold out." To this many an Arminian has replied, "God
will keep you." Honestly, do they really mean that? If so, how then can
they deny eternal security? To press this matter just a little further, why
does the unsaved man make such a statement as he does? There is just one reason
for it - the Arminian teaching that one who has been saved can be lost. The
teaching of those who are begging him to become saved has created a state of
mind in the unsaved which hinders the acceptance of the gospel.
It is true that many who reject the doctrine of eternal
security are absolutely certain of their own eternal state. they are certain
that they will not be lost. How inconsistent! has God made a special provision
for them? Has the blood of Christ greater effectiveness for them than for
others? Or does Christ, the Advocate, plead their case better than that of
someone else? Possibly they have a stronger character than the weaker brother
who might be lost because he is addicted to alcohol or some other habit? Maybe
that's the thought unconsciously lurking in their minds. But then salvation
would be of works, and God says it is not.
If it is possible for anyone to become lost, the same
possibility exists for every saved person. To fell secure as to yourself, and
by your teaching rob others of their assurance is worse than being
inconsistent.
Thus the Arminian teaching that someone who has been saved can
be lost, casts a veil over the doctrines of grace so that they cannot be fully
understood; in fact at times cannot be believed. It also causes a confused
presentation of the gospel of the grace of God and often places its adherents
in inconsistent positions. If this were all that could be said against this
doctrine, it would be enough to condemn it, but there is more.
THIRTY
It Causes Spiritual Depression
IF THE TRUMPET does not sound a clear call, who will get ready
for battle?" (1 Cor. 14:8). If this challenge is true, and it is, then
what effect will the uncertain Arminian message that is both yea and nay have
upon those to whom it is given? What type of Christian life can be expected
from it?
The very possibility of being lost causes uncertainty as to
eternity.
The basic cause of the unprecedented economic depression of the
last few years is lack of confidence, or uncertainty as to the future. Men do
not invest money in enterprises from which returns are questionable. So also in
spiritual matters uncertainty causes a depression in the level of Christian
living.
IT ROBS BELIEVERS OF ASSURANCE
This uncertainty as to eternity first of all robs the believer
of his assurance. There seems to be those who go through life without ever a
moment of enjoyment of the anticipated glory that lies ahead. This is so
because they are not certain that they will ever reach that glory. With others,
the periods of doubt and questioning are broken by flashes of hope and joy at
special occasions.
The thought of the Lord's return, instead of being a blessed
hope that brings you joy and peace, becomes the cause of fear and trembling
that you might be left.
With some there seem to be times in their lives, especially
during periods of revival, when there is no question whatsoever about their
security. The promises of God are accepted without reservation. But when the
enthusiasm and emotions of the revival are over and temptations come, when
mistakes have been made, then the assurance is gone. There is nothing left to
carry them through the times of testing.
SELF-CENTERED INSTEAD OF CHRIST-CENTERED
When Christians are told that they might be lost, it is often
as a warning to desist from something they are doing, or to do that which is
being neglected. That type of preaching centers the believer's thoughts upon
himself. He begins to look into his life and compares it with the lives of
others. He sees his failures and checks them with what he has wrongly been told
is God's requirement for entrance into glory. The more honest he is, the more
despondent he becomes, and it doesn't take long before he dares not say that he
is saved. This is not theory. It has been the sad experience of altogether too
many young people within churches condoning the Arminian doctrine.
All of the believer's hope for eternity is centered in the
perfection of Christ and in his finished work. But whatever might be said of
that fact is largely lost by the repeated warnings that one might be lost.
Assurance, which is greatly lacking in many groups, is
indispensable to a consistent, happy and fruitful Christian life.
FEAR AS DYNAMIC FOR GODLY LIFE
One who for years has attended a church that hold the Arminian
view, once said, "It seems that our preachers think that they must
frighten us into being good." That man struck at the very heart of one of
the great evils of Arminian teaching. To threaten Christians with the
possibility of their being lost in order to arouse them from spiritual lethargy
is directly opposite to Paul's - "Christ's love compels us."
There is a real place for the fear of God in the life of a
Christian, but that is filial [befitting a son or daughter] fear and not that
servile fear which results from threats of condemnation.
Servile fear of God leads to attempts at self-justification.
And so the attempt to arouse from spiritual lethargy by the principle of fear
leads to a struggle to accomplish by one's own meritorious acts that which
Christ has already done.
Fear tears down, it destroys what already exists. It sends no
man into battle. It is a hindrance, not a help. And it has no place in the
Christian life: "For you did not receive a spirit that makes you a slave
again to fear, but you received the Spirit of son ship [ or 'adoption']. And by
him we cry, "Abba [Daddy], Father" (Rom. 8:15). "For God did not
give us a spirit of timidity ['fear' KJV], but a spirit of power, of love and
of self-discipline" (2 Tim. 1:7).
Love, not fear, is the true motive of the Christian life. These
two are contrary to each other. "There is no fear in love. But perfect
love drives out fear, because fear has to do with punishment. The one who fears
is not made perfect in love" (1 John 4:18).
How terrible it is then to teach the possible loss of eternal
life and instill fear in the lives of believers. It causes untold torment and
keeps people from becoming perfect in love.
DESTROYS REST THAT COMES FROM TRUST IN GOD
No Christian who is in fear of being lost can rest in the
promises of God. There is a constant struggling in self-effort to keep oneself
saved. Such cannot realize the meaning of Hebrews 4:10, "For anyone who
enters God's rest also rests from his own work, just as God did from his."
WEAKENS FAITH
As has previously been pointed out (see chapter 26, final
page), it is through lack of faith that the Christian fails to enter into rest.
Lack of faith also hinders and even interferes with the Lord's work. Therefore
that which weakens or destroys faith is clearly a hindrance to the furtherance
of the Kingdom of God.
To magnify the object of a person's faith is to increase his
faith in that object, but to detract from the value of such an object is to
lessen faith in it. Therefore, to magnify the work of the Triune [Threefold]
God in salvation, strengthens the believer's faith; but to minimize it weakens
his faith. To teach that one who has been saved through the operation of the
grace of God can be lost, is to minimize his work. either God is not able to
finish what he has begun, as is implied in the argument of the free moral
agency of man, or he does not hold himself responsible to do so. Whatever view
one might wish to take, it certainly discounts God. He is either not
omnipotent, or he ceases to love and exercise grace. Thus God becomes finite
instead of infinite. The one who teaches eternal security points to an
omnipotent God who loves with an everlasting love, and whose grace is
sovereign. Those who reject eternal security may contend that they believe in
an infinite God, but their arguments do not bear this out. See the next chapter
for more on this subject. Thus, by limiting God, the Arminian position weakens
the faith of the believer.
But that is not all. Only as an object attracts attention can
it inspire faith. By constantly speaking of the believer's condition, whether
it be the sufficiency of his faith or his conduct, attention is centered in the
believer instead of in God. Faith is thereby still further weakened. Certainly
the Arminian teaching does not help to strengthen faith in God and his Son and
the finished work on Calvary.
IT CAUSES CARELESS CHRISTIAN LIVING
In the third section of this book, it was shown that the denial
of the truth of eternal security discounts the mercies of God on which he bases
his appeal for a godly life and therefore the Arminian position causes
carelessness in Christian living. But that is not all that can be said to place
responsibility for low Christian standards of life upon those who contend for
that position.
There is a teaching that seems to go hand in hand with the
denial of eternal security., This can be stated as follows: our God is gracious
and long-suffering and will overlook our failures and shortcomings. Let the
reader judge for himself. Which is the most conducive to careless Christian
living: this teaching that small sins are overlooked by God, or the teaching on
which eternal security rests, that Christ suffered and died on Calvary's cross
as a propitiation [sacrifice of atonement] for even the smallest sin committed
by a believer?
It is here charged then that Arminianism by teaching
uncertainty as to eternity causes spiritual depression. It robs believers of
assurance; tends to make Christians self-centered instead of Christ-centered.
It makes fear the dynamic of godly life instead of love. It destroys the rest
and peace that come from trusting in the finished work of Christ. It weakens
faith and is conducive to careless Christian living.
THIRTY-ONE
Denies the Infiniteness of the Word, Work and Nature of God
HE [GOD] alone is my rock and my salvation" (Psa. 62:2).
The one who accepts this statement at its face value, but Arminianism does not.
It teaches: "Salvation is by God and myself." This is the fundamental
difference between the two positions. Many a person who rejects the truth of
eternal security will deny this statement, but the arguments that are presented
to support the Arminian position conclusively prove that this is true.
No argument has yet been offered to prove that a saved person
can be lost, which is not based on some human element. It is said, man can will
to go away from God; man can cease to believe; man can willfully sin and be
lost; if a saved man does not confess his sins, he is lost; man must remain in
Christ; et cetera. What are these but human increments which are added in order
to guarantee salvation? Surely it is nothing other than, "Salvation is by
God and man."
To insist on this human increment in order to remain saved, is
to teach that God cannot save without the assistance of man. Thus God is
limited in relation to man's salvation. Salvation, as far as has been revealed
to man, is the greatest work that God has undertaken. If he is limited in this,
his work is not infinite, nor is he himself infinite.
The purpose of this chapter is to show that the Arminian
position denies that God is infinite. Arminian will deny that this is so, but
the proof of the statement lies in comparing their arguments with God's word.
GOD'S WORD MADE FINITE
If the possibility of a single saved person being lost is
granted, then the following statements and others from God's word, as quoted in
chapter 4, are not absolute; they have only a relative meaning and therefore
they are finite. "All that the Father gives me will come to me" (John
6:37). "I give them [my sheep] eternal life, and they shall never
perish" (John 10:28). "Therefore, there is now no condemnation for
those who are in Christ Jesus" (Rom. 8:1). "The Lord will deliver me
from every evil attack and will bring me safely to his heavenly kingdom"
(2 Tim. 4:18). These statements are all made concerning those who are saved.
Everyone of them is being limited by the human (finite) interpretations of the
Arminian teachings and thus is made to partake of a finite nature.
GOD'S WORK IS MADE FINITE
In the doctrines of the grace of God, that which he has
accomplished through Christ on behalf of every saved person is revealed. If the
work that God has done is infinite, then there can be no failure; but if there
is possibility of failure, then the work cannot be infinite. To contend that
one who has been saved can be lost, is to say that there is possibility of
failure, and this in turn, is nothing less than to deny the absolute and
infinite nature of God's work in saving man.
This may be seen more clearly by considering separately some of
the things God has done.
In the first place, before God can work on the principle of
grace, it is necessary that there be no merit in man. There can be no place
whatsoever for human boasting. This is made clear in God's word. It is
"not by works, so that no-one can boast" (Eph. 2:9). And again,
"Where, then, is boasting? It is excluded. On what principle? On that of
observing the law? No, but on that of faith" (Rom. 3:27). God's program
excludes all human boasting. No-one may boast in his presence (1 Cor. 1:29).
But the Arminian view, by insisting on introducing a human
element into man's salvation, denies this position of absolute worthlessness on
the part of man. With them there is something in man that has value, and consequently
there is human boasting. Thus God's fundamental requirement to act in grace is
not absolute. If that is granted, it is impossible for God's work to be
infinite; because what he would then do is just to add to what is already in
man. However minute a particle of merit is conceded to be in man, it is
sufficient to keep God's work of salvation from being infinite.
By denying the absolute depravity of man, the absoluteness of
grace is also denied, for grace cannot operate when there is human merit.
"And if by grace, then it is no longer by works; if it were, grace would
no longer be grace. But if by works, then it is no longer grace, if it were,
work would no longer be work" (Rom. 11:6). Thus the grace of God by which
man is saved becomes finite.
Again, the argument that man is a free moral agent and can go
away from God limits grace and very definitely reduces the grace of of God from
being of an infinite nature to a finite thing.
The calling of God to sharing of the glory of our Lord Jesus
Christ (2 Thess. 2:14) becomes a limited calling, if it was possible for
someone who has been called to fall short of sharing in that glory. It too
becomes finite instead of infinite.
The gifts of God - his Son, eternal life, righteousness and the
Holy Spirit - are not gifts in the absolute sense of the word, if it is
possible to lose them through the failure to comply with some requirement as
the Armenians teach. According to man's finite thinking, things are called
gifts which would never have been given had not something else previously been
given. Man "exchanges" gifts with his fellow man. But with God a gift
is so in an unqualified sense. To teach otherwise is to make God's gifts finite
instead of infinite.
If one who has been saved by the substitutionary death of Christ,
can be lost, then the death of Christ does not have unlimited value. There must
be something that in some way neutralizes its value. Then the statement that he
has appeared to "do away with sin by the sacrifice of himself" (Heb.
9:26) does not have infinite value for everyone who bases his hope of glory on
that sacrifice.
Redemption is only finite if one who has been redeemed can
again be placed in a position of condemnation under the law. Then also, the
blood of Christ which is the redemption price does not have infinite value. The
Arminian teaching thus denies the infinite value of the blood of Christ as a
propitiation [sacrifice of atonement] for sin.
As justification is through the redemption that is in Christ
Jesus (Rom. 3:24), it also loses its infinite character if redemption is not of
an infinite nature.
The eternal life given through the new birth, the regeneration
by the imperishable word of God, is not infinite if it can die. (See chapter
10.)
If one who has been saved and is of the new creation in Christ
Jesus can be lost, then that creation is subject to death and cannot be
infinite in its nature.
And finally the Arminian position does not allow absolute glory
to God, for if the human element is recognized in salvation then not all the
glory belongs to God. He cannot accept glory for that which he has not done.
The Arminian teaching is most inconsistent with that scene
pictured in Revelation of infinite honor and glory being given to he "who
sits on the throne" (Rev. 4:9-11 and 5:9-13).
Thus by insisting on a human element in salvation, Arminianism
not only attacks the absoluteness of God's word, but also denies the infinite
nature of grace in salvation.
THE INFINITE NATURE OF GOD IS QUESTIONED
But the implications from their arguments are even more serious
if that is possible. These attack the very character and nature of God himself.
Jesus prayed, "Holy Father, keep through thine own name,
those whom thou hast given me" (John 17:11 KJV). That this is on behalf of
all believer is made perfectly clear by his words uttered later on in the same
prayer: "My prayer is not for them alone. I pray also for those who will
believe in me through their message" (v.20). In this prayer, then, Jesus
asks the Father to keep in his own name all who are saved through believing in
him. If a single saved person becomes lost, this prayer is not fully answered.
Therefore the Arminian, by saying that some are lost, says that the Father does
not completely answer the prayer of the Son. Such a condition would demand either
that the Father is unable to answer it or that the Son has not met the
requirements of the Father in order to to receive an answer. If the Father
cannot answer, he is not omnipotent and consequently he is not infinite. If the
Son has not met some condition necessary to receive answer to his prayer, then
he is not fully in the will of the Father. If not fully in the will of the
Father, he is not absolutely righteous and consequently not infinite.
Thus the very nature of the Godhead is attacked by the argument
that someone who has been saved can be lost. Both his righteousness and his
omnipotence are questioned, and either one or the other is denied.
The teaching mentioned in the preceding chapter, that god is
gracious and long-suffering and will overlook our failures and shortcomings,
denies the absolute righteousness and justice of God. Called by their Biblical
name, shortcomings and failures are sins. god's holy law demands the death
penalty for sin. For God to overlook a single sin would be for him to
compromise his own righteousness and justice. To contend that there is one
compromise is to say that he is finite. Thus God cannot be infinite in his
righteousness and justice and do as so many Armenians teach that he does.
In chapter 12, point 1, it was shown that the omniscience of
God is called into question by rejecting the truth of eternal security. Thus,
in still another of his attributes, is the infiniteness of God questioned.
It has been shown (chapter 15) that god loves those who are his
own with an everlasting love. If one who has become his very own should by
sinning be lost, then the eternal love would cease and be replaced by wrath.
Then God's love could be limited by an act of finite man and would not be
infinite.
Thus the infinite nature of God, which shows he is God, is
denied. This is all done by adding the human increment as necessary to that
salvation, which God claims is entirely for himself.
It must be apparent from this, that there is no room even for
the position: "It is not probable that a saved person will be lost, but
there is a possibility." If a single person can be lost, then God in all
of these attributes that have been mentioned is not infinite - there is some
limitation. If it were just one out of a billion it would be sufficient to
destroy the infinite nature of God's work in saving men.
There are many who contend for the infinite nature of God, of
his works and of his word, who teach that a saved person can be lost. This,
however, does not alter the claim that is made here, that the teaching that a
saved person can be lost attacks the very nature of God, of his works and of
his word.
THIRTY-TWO
Arminianism and Modernism
IT HAS already been stated that not a single argument is
offered against eternal security other than what is based on some human element
as necessary to salvation. Often this is in so subtle a manner and to such a
degree that it is not recognized. None the less the human element is present.
The arguments for eternal security are based on the sufficiency of God and his
work to the exclusion of every particle of the human element. The difference is
of tremendous importance, for the Arminian arguments establish the principle
that man must contribute to his salvation from the penalty of sin. The gulf
between these two is nothing less than the gulf that exists between the divine
and the human, the infinite and the finite.
After the principle has one been established, it is only a
matter of degrees to add more and more of the human, a little at a time, and
require less and less of the divine. By this process Modernism is soon reached.
The next step is Humanism, which rules God out entirely - man is sufficient in
himself, and this culminates in the Antichrist who sets himself up as God.
An illustration from the economic life of this country of ours
is illuminating in this connection.
About twenty years ago an amendment to the Constitution of the
United States was passed, giving the federal government power to levy taxes in
incomes. A great struggle had been waged for and against this for years and
years; but finally the amendment passed because, as has been reported, it was
agreed that the tax should be a very small per cent of the income. Nevertheless
the principle became established. Since then the matter income tax has been one
of degrees. At first only one per cent, then two, and gradually more and more
until at present (1936) on some incomes, it is sixty-three per cent. Even
higher rates have been suggested and will undoubtedly come. The all important
step in bringing about an income tax which can take almost all that a man earns
over a given amount was the establishment of the principle under which the
first extremely low rate was assessed.
A more specific presentation will be helpful. Modernism denies
the miraculous in the Bible. It tries to explain all miracles on a natural
basis. After this has been done, it is said that this does not take away from
the value of the Bible but improves it, because it is easier to understand. In
short, the Bible is lowered to the human, finite plane. The greatest miracle of
all recorded in the Bible is the salvation of man - taken from the position of
disobedience and rebellion against God and raised not to his original state,
but far higher, into the very image of the Son of God and made to the fullness
of Him. To introduce a human element as necessary in this miracle and thereby
limit the supernatural in the greatest of miracles, is to limit the
supernatural in all that is miraculous. It is just the beginning of Modernism
which denies all that is miraculous.
Modernism accepts part of the Bible as truth, but rejects
whatever its human reasoning can not explain. The stories of Genesis are
nothing but myths, and legend and figurative language. The great prophecies of
Daniel and others are said to be history, written after the events had taken
place. The truths of the Bible are changed to conform to the imaginations of
human minds. Human reason is more important than divine revelation. but isn't
this the same principle employed in the Arminian arguments? Jesus said "My
sheep hear my voice and follow me." The Arminian argument says: "My
sheep hear my voice and if they follow me." Jesus said: "He that
believes ... has eternal life." They say: "He that continues to
believe receives eternal life as long as he continues to believe." Here
also it is a matter of human reason opposed to God's clear revelation.
Modernism by questioning God's word undermines the foundation
of man's faith in God. It causes men to doubt. Anyone who knows anything about
university life knows of young men or women who have come back with their
spiritual foundation seriously shaken if not gone. Arminianism causes Christian
young people especially, but elders too, to doubt the promises of God. They too
have their foundations sadly disturbed and their doubts have a blighting effect
on their lives.
Modernism teaches a social gospel. follow the teachings of
Jesus and do good. Live up to the golden rule. That is all that is necessary.
It is purely a salvation by good works. Such teaching can never result from a
strict adherence to the position that nothing whatsoever in man can contribute
to his salvation as held by those who accept eternal security. On the other
hand it is but the natural result of the Arminian teachings that unless man
does this or does not do that, he will be lost. The principle in Arminianism
and Modernism is exactly the same. They differ only in degrees.
There is another similarity in these two, closely related to
that of salvation by works. Modernism says: "What is needed is practical
Christianity and not doctrinal teaching." Sad to say it is not uncommon to
hear the voice of Arminianism complain: "What we need is greater emphasis
on practical Christianity rather than doctrinal teaching." Furthermore, it
can hardly be denied that relatively little clear doctrinal teaching comes from
preachers who are doctrinally Arminian. This is only natural, for the denial of
eternal security contradicts in greater or less measure every doctrine of
grace. The clearest doctrinal teaching heard these days comes from the lips of
those who hold and cherish the truth of the eternal security of the believer.
Thus again, Arminianism by confusing the meaning of the
doctrines of grace and by neglecting the teaching of them has but started a
tendency which Modernism finishes by rejecting entirely.
THE VALUE OF THE DEATH OF CHRIST
The focal point of this whole discussion is the value of the
death of Christ. The doctrine of eternal security rests solidly on the absolute
and unlimited value of the shed blood of Jesus Christ. It is sufficient as a
propitiation for every sin committed during the entire life of the believer.
Because of the infiniteness of this propitiatory [atoning] work, the believer
has been eternally redeemed from the condemnation of the law and cannot be
lost.
Arminianism limits the effectiveness of the blood. If a single
"must" or "must not" is necessary to become saved or to
remain saved, then the shed blood does not have infinite value for salvation of
the one who believes. Thus the principle of a limited value of the blood is
established, and as this principle is in the realm of the relative, the value
given to the blood can be diminished until it reaches the vanishing point; as
it does in Modernism, where it is taught that the blood of Jesus was of as
great value in his veins as when it was shed on the cross. But there was no
atonement in his blood until it was shed.
Arminianism limits the substitutionary death and thereby says
that Christ died as a means of our salvation. "A means" signifies
that there are also other means. This is in perfect accord with the teaching
that one can be lost because of some human element.
The Modernist will also subscribe to the statement that the
death of Christ is a means of salvation. to him it means that Christ in dying
gave an example of supreme sacrifice for man to follow. to the Arminian "a
means of salvation" means much more than that, but just how much it means
one can hardly know. It all depends on what conditions are added to maintain
one's salvation, be it the observance of the Sabbath and the Old Testament
tithe, et cetera, or be it the matter of "holding out to the end."
Both Modernists and Armenians can use this same term, because it ascribes only
a relative value to the death of Christ.
How different is the value given to the death of Christ on
which eternal security rests! That value is infinite, for it is taught that the
shed blood of Christ is the only redemption price. It is the only means of
being saved from the penalty of sin. That position can never be confused with
Modernism, nor can it lead to it.
These are very grave charges. It would have been more
agreeable, had this chapter been left unwritten, but the Arminian denial of
eternal security is a subtle error that is boring into the very foundation on
which the Church is being built, and it is needful that this be known.
Conclusion
THIRTY-THREE
An Appeal
THE CONSIDERATION of the theme "... shall never
perish" would be incomplete without an earnest appeal for greater and
clearer teaching and preaching of those facts and promises of God which produce
assurance in the heart of the believer, and righteousness, godliness and
steadfastness in the outward life.
A crying need of the church today is the simple teaching of the
doctrines of the grace of God. This is needful both in order to reach the
unsaved and that those who are saved might grow in the grace and knowledge of
their Lord and Saviour.
When the representative of a firm offers the product of that
firm for sale, he is very careful, if he is properly qualified, to show the
prospective buyer all of the benefits that will accrue to him if he buys, and
what will be lost if the goods are not purchased. He will explain all of the
fine qualities of his merchandise and will not neglect to inform the buyer as
to the dependability of his own firm to stand behind every article sold.
Is this what is done when salvation is offered? In most cases,
no. One often wonders whether or not the unsaved know what it is all about.
Salvation is the greatest thing that any mortal has ever been
privileged to offer to another mortal, and yet what salvation is is seldom
explained. that which is being offered is a deliverance from the power of
Satan; redemption from condemnation of the law (the penalty for all of one's
own sins); justification, or a perfectly righteous standing in God's reckoning;
a new eternal spiritual life; a citizenship in heaven; the Holy Spirit as a
continually resident power in the life; the promise of eternal glory in the likeness
of God's own Son; and, in addition, the absolute guarantee that God is fully
responsible. What a proposition God's children and his ministers have to offer!
And in making a sale it is important that the consideration and
terms be clearly explained, for these are a part of the sale. The consideration
is "without money, and without price." It is all a gift of God in his
own absolute meaning of that word. And the terms? They are an unconditional
acknowledgement of one's own sinfulness and worthlessness and hopelessly lost
condition. "Nothing in my hands I bring. Simply to Thy cross I
cling."
One often wonders: what would be the result in evangelistic
meetings of a consistent setting forth of these things, to the exclusion of all
human emotional appeal and strategy? If the seller is sold on the proposition
which he offers there must be results.
Is the lack of this what Jesus meant when he said: "The
children of this world are more shrewd in dealing with their own kind than are
the people of the light." (Luke 16:8)?
And the good salesman, after he has made a sale, keeps his
customer "sold" on the house and the merchandise.
Isn't this also needed in the church? Don't those who have been
saved need to be taught more and more the meaning of God's wondrous work in
salvation, his power and faithfulness for the present, and his promises for the
future? Only in this way will the saved person remain an enthusiastic
"customer" of God.
The more a saved person is "sold" on the wonders of
salvation and God's faithfulness, the more fervently will he sing with the
psalmist, "My soul finds rest in God alone; my salvation comes from him.
He alone is my fortress, I shall never be shaken" (Psa. 62:1, 2).
How much need there is for awakening from the lethargy of the
present age! Here also the power to revive consists in what God has done, is
doing and shall do, as revealed in the doctrines of the grace of God. To urge
more practical Christian living without offering as a condition, the doctrines
of the grace of God, is to follow Satan's methods of reversing the order of
God's plan. God says, "I urge you, brothers, in view of God's mercy, to
offer your bodies" (Rom. 12:1). Is that the method being used to revive
spiritual life in churches? Is the mercy of God (the same doctrines of grace
that bring salvation) clearly taught as a basis for the appeal? If not, why
not? It is God's plan.
A few years ago, three men were emerging from a church where
they had listened to a simple and effective explanation of Ephesians 2:14-18,
by an internationally known Bible teacher. At the door, one man said: "I
agree with every word that was said; but our people would not be satisfied with
such a simple message."
It was the simplicity of the message that made it effective. If
it was good enough for that great Bible teacher to present his message in
simple terms, why isn't it good practice for all preachers and teachers to do
so? It is the teaching of God's word [message] in the simplest way possible
that many are longing for these days. It is God's word (not man's preaching) of
which he says: "It will not return to me empty, but will accomplish what I
desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it" (Isaiah 55:11)
The End
(A 10 Minute Video)
How
God Saves Men
Believing
Christ DIED, that’s HISTORY.
Believing
Christ DIED for YOU SINS and Rose again that’s SALVATION.
ead
Acts 16L31 Romans 1:16, and 1. Corinthians 15:1-4
(A 10 Minute Video)
Posted By Cecil and
Connie Spivey
https://www.facebook.com/cecil.spivey
https://www.facebook.com/cecil.spivey
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