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:: Teaching Booklets - Why I Don't Believe in a Pre-Trib Rapture :: |
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Eternal Security or Once-Saved Always-Saved
ETERNAL SECURITY
A question that arises occasionally in
Christian circles is the issue of losing one's salvation. It is obviously
an important issue and one that needs to have a clear biblical answer. The
Bible must be out guide for all issues of faith and doctrine, so it is to
the pages of the Bible that we will look to find our answers to this
question also.
THE ETERNAL PURPOSES OF GOD
Before we can answer the question "Can a
person ever lose their salvation?", we must understand something about the
eternal purposes of God. Is God's whole purpose in the universe just to
get people into heaven? Is being "born again" the end of God's plan
or just the beginning? Is God concerned with us overcoming sin, or just
being delivered from its penalty? Are there any clear pictures in the
Bible that show us God's plan for his people?
These are questions that must be answered
first before we can properly understand the issue. A major problem arises
when we look at "salvation" or the "born-again" experience as the end of
God's dealing with a person.
To understand God's plan and to answer the
question at hand, we need only look at the Old Testament picture of the
Jewish exodus from Egyptian slavery.
In this story we have the complete picture of
salvation by faith in the blood of the Lamb, deliverance from bondage,
water baptism, the baptism in the Holy Ghost, being led by the Spirit of
God and the complete plan of God for His people. We will also find the
answer to our questions.
God's plan for Israel was greater than simply
delivering them from Egypt. He wanted more than a simple born-again
experience. His perfect plan also included blessing them with a new
Promised Land they could call their own.
But God's purpose didn't stop there. He wanted
His chosen people in their own land so that he could show His loving
kindness through a particular people. Israel was to be a light in the
midst of pagan darkness to declare the reality and glory of God.
Deliverance from Egypt was simply the first
step in the plan of God. The newly freed captives would have to pass
through the wilderness and go through a variety of experiences teaching
them to trust the Lord. All this with purpose of preparing them for the
day they would have to make a decision about entering the Promised Land
where the plan of God was to be fulfilled.
We will see that the Bible plainly says that
those who came out of Egypt never fulfilled the complete plan of God and
the reason was unbelief. They had enough faith to leave Egypt, but not
enough to enter into the Promised Land, or the complete purposes of God.
The Bible says that everything that happened
to them were examples to us about our New Testament salvation (I Cor.
10:6; 10:11). We shall see how three New Testament passages specifically
refer to the exodus story and relate to the question of losing one's
salvation.
ETERNAL SECURITY VERSUS
ONCE-SAVED-ALWAYS-SAVED
I believe the Bible teaches that we are
eternally secure in Jesus, but the Bible does not teach
once-saved-always-saved. Let me explain. Jesus said,
"And I give unto them eternal life and they
shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand."
Some have made this verse to mean that a
person who accepts Jesus as Savior can never, ever, under any circumstance
lose that salvation. That is a tremendous thought if indeed it is true,
but a closer examination of the scriptures reveals another thought.
Indeed, "no man" can pluck you out of God's hand. That is, no person or
devil can rob you of your salvation. That is eternal security.
To know that I do not have to worry from day
to day if God is going to change His mind and damn me to hell, is
security. I stand secure today in that which God has wrought for me.
However, salvation has always been contingent
on our believing God. Maintaining our salvation is also contingent on our
continuing faith.
SAVED BY FAITH
"For by grace you are saved, through faith;
and that not of yourselves: it is a gift of God, not of works, lest any
man should boast" Ephesians 2:8-9
The issue of salvation is an issue of faith or
believing. We do not become saved by doing enough good works or by
quitting enough sins. We are saved when we place our faith in Jesus
Christ.
Likewise we cannot lose our salvation by not
doing enough works or by sinning too much.
There are two extremes we need to watch out
for. Those that say we can never lose our salvation and those that think
that if I die with some unconfessed sin in my life I'll be lost eternally.
Both views are equally wrong.
The only way a person could ever lose that
which was a gift from God is if he were to personally reject it by
unbelief after he had received it by faith. Do people lose their faith?
Yes! And if faith is required for salvation, then salvation is lost too.
Here someone might say (and truthfully) that
God will never leave us or forsake us. How great a truth this is. How
comforting to know that God is ever faithful. But that scripture doesn't
say that we can't forsake God.
BACKSLIDING VERSUS LOSING ONE'S SALVATION
Here we need to clarify a point. It is
possible for a person to backslide and miss out on the best that God has
for him, yet still be saved and go to heaven. The Bible tells us,
"If any man's work be burned, he shall
suffer loss; but he himself shall be saved; yet so as by fire." I
Corinthians 3:15
Paul uses the illustration of a man going
through a fire and escaping with nothing but his own life - everything
else burned up. How awesome is God. How loving and gracious, but how
awesomely just He is and will always be.
Backsliding can cause us to lose everything we
have labored for in the Kingdom of God, but backsliding is also the first
step for those that ultimately lose their salvation. The Bible is plain
when it tells us that repeated, willful, unconfessed sin hardens our heart
against the grace of God. The possibility of it causing a person to lose
hope and faith and thus reject God and His salvation is real.
THE EXODUS EXAMPLE
Is there clear teaching in the Bible
concerning the issue? Yes. The Bible says in the mouth of two or three
witnesses let everything be established.
I offer four witnesses.
(For the sake of space I cannot repeat all the
verses here, so I encourage you to read these passages.)
Exodus chapters 12-17; I Cor.10:1-12;
Hebrews chapter 3:6 - 4:11; Jude 4-5.
God painted a picture of our New Testament
salvation in the story of the exodus of the Jewish nation from slavery in
Egypt.
The Israelites had a lot going for them. They
were God's chosen people. They had a covenant relationship with God. When
God finally delivered them He told them to kill a lamb and place the blood
on the doorposts of their houses. When the death angel passed through
Egypt that night the blood of the lamb would be a token in God's eyes that
a substitutionary death had already taken place in that home. God called
that His "Passover" because his judgment would pass over any house that
had the blood over it.
Paul tells us in the New Testament that
"Christ our Passover is slain for us." I Cor. 5:7 Three days later,
the Israelites went through the Red Sea and again Paul relates it to our
New Testament experience by calling it a baptism (I Cor. 10:2). They were
also led by the cloud of God's presence. In the same verse Paul relates
this to the baptism of the Holy Spirit. Romans 8:14 says,
"For as many as are led by the Spirit of God,
they are the sons of God."
I Corinthians chapter 10 goes on to tell us
that they all ate the same
spiritual meat and drank of the same spiritual Rock... and that Rock was
Christ.
Here we find an illustration of a covenant
people who had experienced the Passover, been baptized, led by God and had
eaten and drank spiritual things. It might be well to note that these
people are still under a covenant of grace, because the 10 commandments
had not yet been given.
However, verse 5 tells us something else. God
wasn't pleased with many of them. To prove his point, Paul reminds us that
they were "overthrown in the wilderness." Or to put it another way, they
never made it to the Promised Land. They made it out of Egypt. They were
saved from the slavery of religion, but God had much more in mind than
that. He had promised them a special place. Nearly all that came out of
Egypt died without making the Promised Land. Why? Unbelief, which was
generated by sin.
Consider two passages here, then we will move
on.
"Now these things were our examples, to the
intent we should not lust after evil things, as they also lusted." I Cor.
10:16
"Now all these things happened unto them for
examples: and they are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of
the world are come. Wherefore let him that thinks he stands take heed lest
he fall." I Corinthians 10:11-12
The book of Jude repeats the example and
warning, stating that some turn the grace of God into a license to sin.
"I will put you in remembrance, though you
once knew this, how that the Lord, having saved the people out of the land
of Egypt, afterward destroyed them that believed not." Jude 5
You'll note here again that the issue wasn't
the sinfulness of the people, but their unbelief.
In the book of Hebrews, Paul takes much time
to expand on this example. (I encourage you to read the whole passage from
3:6-4:11 as I cannot repeat it here.)
Paul warned them repeatedly not to allow their
hearts to be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin verses 7 & 8;
13; 15; 4:7).
He warned them repeatedly of the danger of
unbelief.
"Take heed brothers, lest there be in any of
you an evil heart of UNBELIEF, in departing from the living God."
Hebrews 3:12
Notice the issue again was unbelief!
Here Paul addresses "brothers." And how is it possible to "depart" from
someone or something that you have never come to in the first place?
Notice the IF in verse 14.
"For we are made partakers of Christ IF we
hold the beginning of our confidence steadfast unto the end."
"And to whom did He swear that they should not
enter into his rest, but to them that believed not? So we see that they
could not enter in because of unbelief." Hebrews 3:18-19
Another warning comes in verse one of chapter
four:
"Let us therefore fear, lest, a promise being
left us of entering into His rest, any of you should seem to come short of
it."
In verse 2 he states emphatically that the
"gospel" was preached to them and to us, but they didn't mix it with
faith, so it was of no profit to them.
"Seeing therefore it remains that some must
enter in, and those to whom it was first preached entered not in because
of unbelief." Hebrews 4:6
And finally Paul sums up the entire passage
with a warning,
"Let us labor therefore to enter into that
rest, lest any man should fall after the SAME EXAMPLE OF UNBELIEF."
THE EXAMPLE OF THE FIG TREE
In Romans 11:17-23, Paul warns the Gentile
Christians against bragging about how they are in Christ while many Jews
rejected Jesus. Again we find clear teaching that a saved person could be
"removed from the tree."
"Well; because of unbelief they were broken
off, and you stand by faith. Be not high-minded, but fear: For if
God spared not the natural branches, take heed lest he also spare not
you... if you continue in His goodness: otherwise you also shall be cut
off." Romans 11:20-21
Notice again, the issue of unbelief versus
abiding faith.
ENTANGLED AGAIN
Peter also sides with Paul on the issues. In
II Peter 2:20 Peter tells us,
"For if after they have escaped the pollution
of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ,
they are again entangled therein, and overcome, the latter end is worse
with them than at the beginning. For it had been better for them not to
have known the way of righteousness, then after they have known it, to
turn from the holy commandment delivered unto them"
Again we are warned of allowing ourselves to
become entangled in the same old sins that we were delivered from. Notice
it wasn't just returning to the old sins that worried Peter, but that some
would be overcome.
Peter states it would have been better never
to know than to have known and turned back. This isn't just head
knowledge of Christ, but an experiential knowledge. Peter is speaking of
someone who had known Jesus as Lord and Savior, then turned away.
THE HEBREWS 6 PROBLEM
In Hebrews chapter 6, Paul makes a very strong
statement.
"For it is impossible for those who were once
enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers
of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted of the good word of God, and the powers
of the world to come, If they shall fall away, to renew them again unto
repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and
put Him to an open shame." Heb. 6:4-6.
A problem arises here for those who claim
"once saved always saved." Paul does say that it is impossible for
somebody to reject Christ then change their mind and accept him. If we
are to accept the idea that it could not be a saved person that Paul is
talking about, then we are left with the conclusion that he indeed is
speaking of a lost person who has not yet accepted Christ. If that is the
case, then how could a lost person "crucify Jesus afresh?" Seeing how he
had never accepted the crucifixion in the first place.
To say that it is a lost person is to say that
once a person hears and rejects he has no further opportunity. That isn't
true, for few people accept Christ the first time they hear the message.
The language Paul uses here to describe who he
is referring to is important. He wants no misunderstanding, so he makes it
plain. He declares them to have been, "once enlightened, having tasted
of the heavenly gift, made partakers of the Holy Ghost, tasted of the good
word of God and the powers of the world to come." If language means
anything, Paul was trying to convey to us the fact that these were people
who had an experience with God.
We are forced to conclude that Paul is talking
about a person who was once a believer, but then turned and rejected
Christ, renouncing his faith. Only a person who knew and believed could
bring such open shame on Christ.
PAUL'S CONCERN ABOUT HIS OWN MINISTRY
Paul was concerned about his own life. Not
fearful mind you, but concerned. Read his won thoughts on the matter.
"But like a boxer I buffet my body, handle it
roughly, discipline it by hardships, and subdue it, for fear that after
proclaiming to others the Gospel and the things pertaining to it, I myself
should be unfit (not stand the test and be unapproved) and rejected (as a
counterfeit). I Corinthians 9:27
Amplified Bible
It is interesting to note that this thought
leads directly to the examples in I Corinthians 10 that we have already
discussed.
In the King James Version the word castaway
is used. Paul was concerned that he himself could be a castaway.
That word is translated reprobate 6 times in the New Testament.
Paul was literally saying that he knew it was possible to preach the
gospel as an apostle and still wind up as a reprobate if he didn't
discipline himself.
ANOTHER GOSPEL?
We have concentrated up to this point on
someone who gets discouraged or overcome by sin to the point of losing his
faith. But there is another issue concerning unbelief. Those that turn
from the truth to lies. All the new testament writers urged and warned
their followers to beware of false teaching, lest they end up believing in
vain.
"But I fear, lest by any means, as the serpent
beguiled Eve through his subtlety, so your minds should be corrupted from
the simplicity that is in Christ." II Corinthians 11:3
THEY BELIEVED NOT THE TRUTH
In the book of II Thessalonians, Paul tells us
that there will come a great falling away before the Antichrist is
finally revealed.
This phrase falling away is the Greek
word Apostasia, which means defection or apostasy. Only
those who once believed can properly be said to apostasies. The word is
the feminine version of the word Apostasion, which means "a
divorcement, a writing of divorce, or a repudiation." It is not God
who divorces us, but we who divorce God by unbelief.
Once again we see the issue is one of losing
faith, whether through sin and discouragement or false doctrine.
We know that false doctrine abounds today and
that it is a major trap used by satan to snare the faithful. Many have
overcome the sin issue and are not as vulnerable to that ploy. Satan has
another trick for the more mature; To get us caught in some doctrine that
ultimately takes us away from simple faith in Christ.
In verses 9-13 of II Thessalonians 2, Paul
addresses the key issue again. He warns us that in the last days satan
would come with all kinds of lying signs and wonders to deceive. Those
that fell for the lies did so
"because they did not receive the love of the truth that they might be
saved."
Elsewhere in the Bible we find the same
warnings to be on guard for the subtlety of false doctrine. (Galatians
3:1 and following; Jude 3-4; I John 4:1-3; Ephesians 4:11, just to
name a few.)
We must diligently guard against the many
popular, flesh-pleasing doctrines that are being trumpeted in this day and
hour. Our eternal souls are at stake.
While there are some other scattered
scriptures we could look at, these should suffice to answer the question,
"Can a person lose their salvation?" Both the Old Testament example and
the witness and teaching of the New Testament writers confirm that it is
possible.
POSSIBLE BUT NOT NECESSARY
It is possible to lose one's salvation through
unbelief, but it certainly isn't necessary to do so.
God is gracious! I do not think one need be
overly concerned about losing his/her salvation. As I stated early on,
there is eternal security in Christ. The issue is faith and
confidence in Christ. If you know that dividing line you can be more
careful to stay away from it.
Know this. It is your faith that satan wants
to rob you of. He will engineer his traps and snares with the goal of
causing you to lose your faith, but you don't have to fear or lose sleep
worrying about it. To be forewarned is sufficient.
A HISTORICAL EXAMPLE
Both in the early days of the church during
the roman persecution and during the Dark Ages when the Catholic
inquisition took place, the emphasis of the persecutors was the same.
"Renounce Christ or we will torture you to death." It is obvious that
satan was behind the persecution of the church.
What was his point of attack? The renunciation
of salvation by faith. Was satan operating on the scriptural principle,
"Whosoever shall seek to save his life shall lose it; and whosoever
shall lose his life shall preserve it?" Luke 17:33
NOW THE GOOD NEWS!
It was necessary to concentrate for a time on
the bad news in order to lay a biblical foundation for the issue of
eternal security. Now the good news.
"Now unto him that is able to keep you from
falling, and to present you faultless before the presence of his glory
with exceeding joy, to the only wise God our Savior, be glory and majesty,
dominion and power, both now and ever. Amen"
Jude 24-25
We don't have to fear. God is faithful, but we
need to be diligent. We can live our lives in confident trust in the
saving power of Jesus Christ. The problem occurs when we allow
discouragement and sin to harden our hearts and bring about the situation
and circumstances that make it possible to fall away from Christ.
Hear Paul again in II Timothy 1:12:
"For the which cause I also suffer these
things: nevertheless I am ashamed; for I know whom I have believed, and am
persuaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him
against that day."
We, too can have the same confidence Paul had
as we commit the keeping of our souls to God as unto a faithful creator.
The biblical fact that we can lose our
salvation should be a motivating factor to overcome every difficulty and
trial that comes our way. It is too easy to give in and slide by when
things get tough or the battle is hot.
The danger isn't in committing some sin and
"dying with sin in our lives." The real danger is in allowing that sin to
so overcome us with shame and discouragement that we stop trusting Christ
and thus fall away, or else to et deceived by a false doctrine and allow
it to rob us of our faith in Christ.
DON'T GET DISCOURAGED!
Dear brother or sister in Christ, don't be
discouraged. Maybe you are struggling in your Christian life right now. It
is easy to feel as if you are failing and God doesn't love you; easy to
feel as if you'll never make it, but your salvation really doesn't depend
on how well you're doing this minute. It rests in your faith to trust
Jesus to get the job done in your life.
God had already promised His people the land
before they ever left Egypt. It was His plan to bring them in. The only
reason they didn't make it was unbelief. Do you have some "giants" in your
life today? God said that if we would trust and obey, He would fight the
battles for us. Ask God to increase your faith.
"If you are suffering according to God's will,
keep on doing what is right and trust yourself to the God who made you,
for He will never fail you." I
Peter 4:19 (TLB)
"I have fought a good fight, I have finished
my course, I have kept the faith: Henceforth there is laid up for me a
crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall give me
at that day: and not to me only, but unto all that love His appearing."
II Timothy 4:7-8
Copyright 2000 - 2009
Steve Highlander & C3M Ministries. All rights reserved.
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