I
am amazed at some of the things that
have been said and written in recent
years about the gospel. I fear that
in many circles a different message
is replacing the good news of
salvation. I'm not talking about the
attacks on the gospel from liberal
religion or the theology of the
cults, but a skewed message that has
sprouted from right within
conservative evangelicalism.
I
have a copy of a training film now
being used internationally to teach
Christians what they should and
should not say when leading someone
to Christ. A respected, conservative
organization produced the film, but
frankly, the warped view of the
gospel it presents is appalling.
In
the entire half-hour film, there is
not one mention of the resurrection.
It speaks of forgiveness without
defining sin, and it talks of
trusting Christ without describing
faith. Incredibly, the film counsels
believers never to speak to a
non-Christian about the lordship of
Christ, submission to Him, surrender
of the will, forsaking one's sin, or
obeying God. Those truths, according
to the film, have no place in the
gospel message but should be saved
for later, after someone becomes a
Christian.
That
sentiment reflects a viewpoint that
is rapidly gaining momentum within
evangelicalism. A handful of
outspoken and increasingly vocal
teachers are popularizing it. To
their credit, most of those men are
motivated by a passion to keep the
gospel of God's grace free from the
influence of human works. Their
desire, I'm sure, is to make clear
the biblical truth that salvation
may in no way be earned or obtained
by man's effort. Their approach,
however, has been to eliminate from
the gospel message anything that
sounds like a work of righteousness,
and to speak only of believing the
objective data. They have erased the
biblical words repentance,
obedience, and submission from
the vocabulary of evangelicalism.
Such
teaching has taken a heavy toll.
Faith has become merely an
intellectual exercise. Instead of
calling men and women to surrender
to Christ, modern evangelism asks
them only to accept some basic facts
about Him. A person can believe
without obeying. Thus faith is
robbed of any moral significance,
and righteousness becomes optional.
Even
the way we invite people to Christ
reveals this shift. "Make a
decision for Christ," we say.
When was the last time you heard an
evangelistic message that challenged
sinners to repent and follow Christ?
Yet isn't that the language Jesus
Himself used? (Matthew 4:17 "From
that time Jesus began to preach, and
to say, Repent: for the kingdom of
heaven is at hand." - Mark
8:34 "And when He had called
the people unto Him with His
disciples also, He said unto them,
Whosoever will come after Me, let
him deny himself, and take up his
cross, and follow Me.")
Those
were the questions that prompted me
to write The Gospel According to
Jesus—I wanted to study the
message Jesus preached to
unbelievers. How could any issue be
more important? The gospel we
present has eternal consequences. If
it is the true gospel, it can direct
men and women into the everlasting
kingdom. If it is a corrupted
message, it can give unsaved people
false hope while consigning them to
eternal damnation. This is not a
trivial matter for theologians to
speculate on. It is an issue every
lay person must understand and get
right.
Here
are some questions that need to be
answered biblically:
Do
we receive Jesus as Lord and Savior,
or as Savior only? Some say a person
who refuses to obey Christ can still
receive Him as Savior. They teach
that the gift of eternal life is
available by faith even to one who
rejects the moral and spiritual
demands of Christ. They accuse
others of teaching "lordship
salvation," implying that it is
novel to suggest that submission is
a characteristic of saving faith.
Until
relatively recently, however, no one
would have dared suggest a person
can be saved while stubbornly
refusing to bow to Christ's
authority. Nearly all the major
biblical passages calling for saving
faith refer to Jesus as lord (Acts
2:21 "And it shall come to
pass, that whosoever shall call on
the name of the Lord shall be
saved." "Therefore
let all the house of Israel know
assuredly, that God hath made that
same Jesus, whom ye have crucified,
both Lord and Christ."
Romans 10:9-10 "That if thou
shalt confess with thy mouth the
Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in
thine heart that God hath raised him
from the dead, thou shalt be
saved".).
Is
repentance from sin essential to
salvation? Some say that turning
from sin is a human work and
therefore cannot be part of
salvation. To accommodate the
biblical call to repentance, they
redefine repentance as nothing more
than a change of mind about who
Jesus is.
Biblically,
however, repentance is a total about
face—turning away from sin and
self and unto God (1 Thessalonians
1:9 "For they themselves
shew of us what manner of entering
in we had unto you, and how ye
turned to God from idols to serve
the living and true God; And to wait
for His Son from heaven, whom He
raised from the dead, even Jesus,
which delivered us from the wrath to
come".). That is no more a
result of human effort than faith
itself. Nor is it in any sense a
pre-salvation work required to
prepare a sinner for salvation. Real
repentance is inseparable from faith
and, like faith, is the work of God
in a human heart. It is the response
God inevitably generates in the
heart of one He is redeeming.
What
is faith? Some say faith is merely
believing certain facts. One popular
Bible teacher says saving faith is
nothing more than confidence in the
divine offer of eternal life.
Biblically,
however, the object of faith is not
the divine offer; it is the Person
of Jesus Christ. Faith in Him
is what saves, not just believing
His promises or accepting facts
about Him. Saving faith has to be
more than accepting facts. Even
demons have that kind of faith
(James 2:19, "Thou believest
that there is one God; thou doest
well: the devils also believe, and
tremble. ").
Believing
in Jesus means receiving Him for all
that He is (John 1:12, "But
as many as received Him, to them
gave He power to become the sons of
God, even to them that believe on
His name:). It means both
confessing Him as Savior and
yielding to Him as Lord. In fact,
Scripture often uses the word obedience
as a synonym for faith (John
3:36 "He that believeth on
the Son hath everlasting life: and
he that believeth not the Son shall
not see life; but the wrath of God
abideth on him." Acts
6:7;"And the word of God
increased; and the number of the
disciples multiplied in Jerusalem
greatly; and a great company of the
priests were obedient to the
faith." Hebrews 5:9 "And
being made perfect, He became the
author of eternal salvation unto all
them that obey Him."). What
is a disciple? In the past hundred
years or so, it has become popular
to speak of discipleship as a higher
level of Christian experience. In
the new terminology, a person
becomes a believer at salvation; he
becomes a disciple later,
when he moves past faith to
obedience.
Such
a view conveniently relegates the
difficult demands of Jesus to a
post-salvation experience. It
maintains that when He challenged
the multitudes to deny self, to take
up a cross and follow Him (Mark 8:34
"And when He had called the
people unto Him with His disciples
also, He said unto them, Whosoever
will come after Me, let him deny
himself, and take up his cross, and
follow Me.); to forsake all
(Luke 14:33 "So likewise,
whosoever he be of you that
forsaketh not all that he hath, he
cannot be My disciple.");
and to leave father and mother
(Matthew 19:29 "And every
one that hath forsaken houses, or
brethren, or sisters, or father, or
mother, or wife, or children, or
lands, for My name's sake, shall
receive an hundredfold, and shall
inherit everlasting life."),
He was simply asking believers to
step up to the second level and
become disciples.
But
how does that square with Jesus' own
words? "I did not come to
call the righteous, but
sinners" (Matt 9:13 "
for I am not come to call the
righteous, but sinners to repentance.")
The heart of His ministry was
evangelism, and those difficult
demands are evangelistic appeals.
Every
believer is a disciple and vice
versa. A careful reading of Acts
shows that the word disciple
has been a synonym for Christian from
the earliest days of the church
(Acts 1- 2, 7 "And in those
days, when the number of the
disciples was multiplied. .
." "Then the
twelve called the multitude of the
disciples unto them", Acts 11:26
"And it came to pass, that a
whole year they assembled themselves
with the church, and taught much
people. And the disciples were
called Christians first in
Antioch." Acts 14:20,
"Howbeit, as the disciples
stood round about him. . ., Acts
22:15 "For thou shalt be his
witness unto all men of what thou
hast seen and heard".:Acts
22: 0 And I said, What shall I
do, Lord? And the Lord said unto me,
Arise, and go. . .).
What
is the evidence of salvation? In
their zeal to eliminate good works
as a requirement for
salvation, some have gone to the
extreme of arguing that good works
are not even a valid evidence
of salvation. They teach that a
person may be genuinely saved yet
never manifest the fruit of
salvation—a changed life.
A
few have even taken the absurd
position that a born-again person
may ultimately turn away from Christ
into unbelief, deny God, and become
an atheist—yet still possess
eternal life. One writer invented a
term for such people:
"unbelieving believers"!
Scripture
is clear that a saved person can
never be lost. It is equally clear
that a genuine Christian will never
fall back into total unbelief. That
kind of apostasy proves an
individual was never really born
again (1 John 2:19 "They
went out from us, but they were not
of us; for if they had been of us,
they would no doubt have continued
with us: but they went out, that
they might be made manifest that
they were not all of us.").
Furthermore,
if a person is genuinely saved, his
life will change for the better (2
Corinthians 5:17 "Therefore
if any man be in Christ, he is a new
creature: old things are passed
away; behold, all things are become
new."). He is saved
"for good works"
(Ephesians 2:10 "For we are
His workmanship, created in Christ
Jesus unto good works, which God
hath before ordained that we should
walk in them."), and there
is no way he can fail to bring forth
at least some of the fruit
that characterizes the redeemed
(Matthew 7:17 "Even so every
good tree bringeth forth good fruit;
but a corrupt tree bringeth forth
evil fruit."). His desires
are transformed; he begins to hate
sin and love righteousness. He will
not be sinless, but the pattern of
his life will be decreasing sin and
increasing righteousness.
You
need to settle these critical
questions in your own heart. Study
the gospel Scripture presents.
Listen with discernment to every
speaker you hear. Measure everything
by the Word of God. Above all, make
sure that the message you share with
unbelievers is truly the gospel of
Christ.
©
Copyright 2006 by Grace to You. All
rights reserved. • Grace to You
(Monday,
September 25, 2006) Used
by permission.
www.gty.org