Question 1 – Man:
A Free Moral Agent?
“Is not man an
absolutely free moral agent?” as one objector insists. He
says, “We can quote no Scripture on unconditional eternal
security, because there is none.”
I do not know what he
means, but of course there is no eternal security that is not
based on personal faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. But this
writer goes on to say, “When a man is saved, he is on God’s
altar to live or die, for service or sacrifice, and neither
the devil nor demons can pull him off so long as he chooses by
God’s grace to keep himself in that place.”
The fact of the
matter is that man is not an “absolutely free moral agent.” In
his unsaved state he is the slave of sin “led by the devil
captive at his will.” When regenerated he is the servant of
Christ, delighting in holiness and indwelt by the Spirit of
the loving God. I was not saved by placing my all on the
altar. I was saved when I trusted Christ who gave Himself as
the offering for my sin. I am not keeping saved by my
surrendered life. I am “kept by the power of God.” The same
grace that saved is the grace that keeps.
I do not simply
“choose” to keep myself in the place where I am secure. God
has chosen me, and I say amen to His choice. But if it were
possible for me to choose to abandon Christ, would I not
perish? Yet the Word tells me that Christ’s sheep shall never
perish. Let us look again at the words of the Lord Jesus in
John 10:27-29: “My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and
they follow Me: and I give unto them eternal life; and they
shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of My
Father’s hand.”
I wish you would look
at verse 27. Who is a sheep of Christ? He is one who hears His
voice and follows Him. If a man says, “I am a Christian,” but
does not hear the voice of the Good Shepherd and does not
follow Him, that man is a hypocrite; he is not a Christian.
Jesus says, “My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they
follow Me.” Notice the expression, “I know them.” I pointed
out in my former address that in Matthew 7:22-23, the Lord
Jesus says, “Many will say to Me in that day, Lord, Lord, have
we not prophesied in Thy name? And in Thy name have cast out
devils? And in Thy name done many wonderful works? And then
will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from Me, ye
that work iniquity.” Observe that according to Scripture He
never says to any soul in the day of judgment, “I used to know
you, but I do not know you now.” He says, “I never knew you.”
That ought to clear up the whole question. He says of His
sheep, “My sheep hear My voice, and I know them.” Therefore,
if one has ever been a sheep of Christ, the Lord Jesus knows
him. Now if by some strange metamorphosis that sheep of Christ
were changed into a goat, one of the devil’s goats, and
appeared at the day of judgment among the goats, Jesus could
not say to that goat, “I never knew you.” He would have to
say, “I used to know you but I do not know you now.” But He
says, “I never knew you,” because He gives His sheep eternal
life. What is eternal life? One asks, “If the spiritual life
of Adam were conditional, how could the life of a believer be
secure? Adam must have been eternal in nature.” This shows how
little well-meaning people distinguish between the life that
God gave to Adam by creation and the life that He gives to us
by regeneration. Adam’s life was simply natural life and he
forfeited that when he sinned, but God gives to believers
eternal life, and that can never be forfeited. It would not be
eternal life if it could. So He says, “I give unto them
eternal life, and they shall never perish.” He puts no
conditions around that promise, “They shall never perish.” The
word “perish” is in the middle voice, so that if rendered
literally in English, you would have to make two words of it,
because we do not have a middle voice. The words “perish” and
“destroy” are the same in Greek. “I give unto them eternal
life, and they shall never destroy themselves.”
Sheep so easily
destroy themselves. I was going over the desert when out among
the Indians, and as we passed a bridge over a deep chasm, we
heard the pitiable bleating of a lamb. We went to the edge of
the bridge and saw the lamb about fifty feet down on a little
ledge. It was a sheer descent of nearly two hundred feet to
the creek below that. We looked to see whether there was any
possible way to get down there, and we could not find any.
That lamb had been eating and had come to the edge and had
looked down. There was that little ledge all green, and so
down he went and ate all the green that was there before he
found that he could not get back. We tried to lasso him, but
were not expert enough to do that. We looked up, and already
there were three great buzzards flying around, just waiting
for the time when the little animal would give up. That lamb
was destroying himself. Jesus says, “My sheep will never
destroy themselves. I give unto them eternal life and they
shall never perish” (in the middle voice, “never perish
themselves”). Why not? Because they have the Holy Spirit
dwelling in them.
The Word of God says,
“Being confident of this very thing, that He who hath begun a
good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus
Christ.” Jesus first says, “I give unto them eternal life,”
and then, “They shall never perish, neither shall any man
pluck them out of My hand.” Some may say, “Well, I know a
devil cannot pluck me out, no angel would want to, and man
could not, but I might pluck myself out.” Then you would
perish, would you not? And He says “They shall never perish,”
before He tells you, “neither shall any pluck them out of My
hand.” Is man an absolutely free moral agent? He was when God
created him, but is he now? Is the sinner a free moral agent?
What does Scripture say? “Ye are led by the devil captive at
his will.” What? A man led by the devil captive at his will is
a free agent? “Know ye not, that he to whom ye yield
yourselves servants to obey, his slaves ye are?” (Romans
6:16). Man is a slave to sin and Satan; he is not free. But
now the gospel comes to the man, and he does have the power of
decision, and when he decides for Christ he gets eternal life
with all that that implies, and that life is the same life
that is in the blessed Son of God. It is communicated to him,
and now he is led captive in the chains of love to the
Savior’s feet, and he does not want to be a free agent. He is
glad to be a bondman, as Paul puts it, of Jesus Christ.
Question 2 –
Matthew 24:13
What about Matthew
24:13? “But he that shall endure unto the end, the same shall
be saved.” Weymouth says, “He who stands firm unto the end.”
The writer of this
question recognizes that primarily this refers to the great
tribulation, but it is a principle that I believe every
preacher of the Word should insist on. There is no use in
people professing conversion, going forward, raising their
hands, going to an inquiry room, joining the church, getting
baptized, taking communion, teaching a Sunday school class,
doing missionary work, giving their money for Christ’s work,
and going on like this for years, and then by-and-by drifting
away, turning from it all, denying the Lord that bought them,
refusing absolutely the authority of Jesus Christ, and yet
professing to be saved. It is endurance that proves the
reality of a work of grace within the soul. That is the
difference between one who is merely reformed by the teaching
of Christianity and one who has been born again. You see this
very clearly when you contrast Peter and Judas.
Peter slipped and
sinned grievously, but in spite of it all he endured to the
end. Jesus said, “I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail
not,” and though his outward life for a brief period was not
what it should be, his faith remained, and Jesus restored him,
and he went on to the end of his life until crucified for his
Savior. Judas was one of the chosen, he was with the apostolic
band but never was regenerated, and so when he sinned and sold
his Lord, he turned away an apostate and died a suicidal
death. Jesus said of him long before, “Have not I chosen you
twelve, and one of you is a devil?” Not, “One of you is in
danger of becoming a devil,” but “One of you is a devil.” And
we are told: “Judas by transgression fell, that he might go to
his own place” (Acts 1:25). Peter was a backslider, Judas was
an apostate, and there is a great difference between the two.
If a man says, “I am saved,” let him prove it by going on.
That is why I say we should not be afraid of the doctrine of
the eternal security of the believer. Some say, “But I knew a
man who was a wonderful Christian, and now he has given it all
up and says he is still saved.” He is only deceiving himself.
The next time you see him you tell him that the Bible says,
“He that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved.”
There is no use your carrying on a profession if your life
does not prove it to be real. Men can misuse any doctrine.
Question 3 – John
8:31
What about the
Scripture found in John 8:31? “Then said Jesus to those Jews
which believed on Him, If ye continue in My word, then are ye
My disciples indeed.” Is not the condition for permanent
discipleship “if ye continue in My word?”
Certainly. Every man
who knows the truth of eternal security believes it. There is
no use for a person to profess to be a disciple of Jesus if he
does not continue. It is this that proves there is a genuine
work of the Spirit of God in his soul.
Question 4 – John
6:66
What about John 6:66?
“From that time many of His disciples went back, and walked no
more with Him.”
That has happened
down through the centuries. Jesus distinguishes between a
disciple and “a disciple indeed,” or between one who is only a
disciple and one who is a true believer. The Greek word
translated “disciple” means “a pupil” or “a learner.” There
were many who up to a certain point learned of Jesus, and they
were learning more and more every day as they listened to Him.
But when He declared, “Whoso eateth My flesh, and drinketh My
blood, hath eternal life” (John 6:54), they said, “That is too
much for us; we are not going on with this man,” and they went
back. It was not a question there of whether people were born
again and lost, but whether they who had been numbered among
the learners would go on learning and let Him be their
teacher, or whether they would refuse further instruction and
turn back. We are not told that even those who turned back
ever again returned.
Question 5 – John
6:67
John 6:67, “Will ye
also go away?” What about this question?
The question and the
answer bring out the very thing I am speaking of. He turned
now to the apostles, that little group who had accompanied Him
so long, and said, “Will ye also go away?” and Peter said what
every truly converted soul always says, “Lord to whom shall we
go? Thou hast the words of eternal life” (John 6:68). If you
are really born again, that is always the answer. I remember
reasoning on this subject with a dear good brother for
something like two hours one day, and he was insisting that a
man could take himself out of the Lord’s hand. I said, “Why do
you keep insisting on this? Are you sure that you are saved?”
He said, “Absolutely.” “How long?” I asked him. “Forty years,”
he replied. “And you have been kept for forty years? Do you
want to take yourself out of the Lord’s hand that you are
talking like that?” “Certainly not,” he answered. “Well,” I
said, “you are better than your creed.”
That is just the
point. If a man is born again, he never wants to take himself
out of Christ’s hand even if he could. Christ alone is the one
who satisfies the soul.
Question 6 – 2
Thessalonians 2:3
How about 2
Thessalonians 2:3? “Let no man deceive you by any means: for
that day shall not come, except there come a falling away
first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition.”
The word translated
“falling away” is “apostasy” in the original. That has nothing
to do with the question of individual salvation. It does not
touch this doctrine. Can you not see that it is a prophecy of
what is happening all about us at the present time? Recently,
we were told that seventy-five per cent of the ministers in
the church federation in the city of Chicago signed a
questionnaire saying that they did not believe in some of the
great fundamental truths of the Bible. There you have
apostasy. Does that mean that these ministers were all
Christians once and now are not saved? My dear friends, I am
afraid the whole trouble is that most of them have never been
born again at all. They do not know anything of regenerating
grace and therefore are quite ready to apostatize from the
doctrines held sacred by the great evangelical denominations.
I remember when a certain preacher came out with a blatant
attack on the doctrine of blood atonement. It shocked a lot of
people who had been reading his books, and they said, “Isn’t
it strange that a man who was once such a fine Christian now
denies the blood of Christ?” I sat down and read every one of
his books and found that he never mentioned in any of them the
blood of Christ or Christ’s death on the cross, except in one
when he spoke of the example of humiliation Jesus set by going
to the cross. But there was never one other reference to the
death, the blood, or the atonement. Later he stated: “They
charge me with giving up the doctrine of blood atonement; I
never believed it.” He showed that he was simply an apostate.
These things had no place in his heart or life. The apostasy
is coming; it is coming fast. The great professing church is
going into it, but not one born again person will ever bow to
the Antichrist.
Question 7 –
Hebrews 12:14
What about Hebrews
12:14? “Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which
no man shall see the Lord.”
That is exactly what
we stand for. Anyone who says “I am a Christian” and does not
follow peace and holiness will never see the Lord. But I
remember how that used to trouble me. When a young Christian,
I was taught that when I was converted all my sins up to that
moment were put away, and then it was as though God said, “I
have wiped off the past and have put you back where Adam was
before he fell: if you can keep the record clear from now to
the end, you will be saved and you will get to heaven.” I
started out and soon began to fail, and then they said to me,
“The trouble with you is you have not gotten holiness yet. If
you get that you will be able to live the right kind of a
life.” I asked, “What is this blessing of holiness?” and was
told, “When God saved you, He only justified you.” Only
justified you? “He forgave your past sin, but now you have to
get sanctified, and that means you must have all your inbred
sin rooted out, and you will get true holiness.” I thought,
“But it didn’t work very well with Adam,” and it rather
bothered me. Yet they assured me that was the thing, and so I
went in for it and for six years I struggled. (For a more
thorough treatment of this subject, see Holiness: The False
and the True, Loizeaux Brothers.)
I was working on a
text that is not in the Bible: “Without holiness no man shall
see the Lord.” I heard many sermons preached on it, and
sometimes I preached on it myself. I had a large red banner
with that text in white letters, and I tried to get holiness.
Sometimes I thought I had it, and then something would go
wrong and I would have to try to get it all over again. I
shall never forget the first time I read, “Follow peace with
all men, and holiness, without which no man shall see the
Lord.” I thought it said, “Without holiness it is impossible
to see God.” I thought I had to get perfect holiness in this
life, but what it says there is, if you do not follow holiness
you will not see the Lord. Every Christian follows holiness. A
man who says “I am a Christian” and does not follow holiness
is either self-deceived or a hypocrite. I maintain this with
all my heart.
Question 8 –
Romans 6:16
What about Romans
6:16? “Know ye not, that to whom ye yield yourselves servants
to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey; whether of sin
unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness?”
I have already spoken
of that. Romans 6 is like the book of Exodus. When the
children of Israel were in Egypt they obeyed Pharaoh because
they had to; when they were brought to God in the wilderness,
Pharaoh’s power was broken and they became the servants of
God. We, in our unsaved days, were servants to sin; now, as
Christians, we are servants of God and we are to walk before
God in holiness and righteousness.
Question 9 –
Ezekiel 18:24
Ezekiel 18:24: “But
when the righteous turneth away from his righteousness, and
committeth iniquity, and doth according to all the
abominations that the wicked man doeth, shall he live?”
Is it not strange for
anyone in this dispensation of grace to quote a passage like
that, as though it had anything to do with the question of the
soul’s salvation? Go back and read Ezekiel 18. Of what is it
treating? We read in verse 21: “If the wicked will turn from
all his sins that he hath committed, and keep all My statutes,
and do that which is lawful and right, he shall surely live,
he shall not die.” Is that grace? No, that is law. That is
just the quintessence of law. Do you believe that if a wicked
man turns from his wickedness he will live? If this is true,
why did Jesus die? Would you preach that to sinners? Would you
have me stand up and say, “You wicked people, you have been
doing wickedness; you start in tonight to do righteousness and
you will live”? Would you have me preach that? I would be
deliberately deceiving people if I told them that. But you
see, here God was testing people under law and said, ”The man
that doeth these things shall live. . . .But when the
righteous turneth away from his righteousness, and committeth
iniquity, and doeth according to all the abominations that the
wicked man doeth, shall he live? All his righteousness that he
hath done shall not be mentioned in his trespass that he hath
trespassed, and in his sin that he hath sinned, in them shall
he die” And what has happened? Not one man ever continued in
all the things that are written in the book of the law to do
them. Therefore, they were all under sentence of death. How
then were they to be saved? By turning over a new leaf? Oh,
no--but by confessing that they had no righteousness. If they
had, it would only be filthy rags. But now they find all their
righteousness in the Lord Jesus Christ, “who of God is made
unto us wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and
redemption.” Do not ever quote Ezekiel 18 as though it were
gospel; it is law. And remember the “life” spoken of in
Ezekiel is not eternal life in Christ. It is life here on
earth prolonged under the divine government, because of
obedience, or cut short because of sin.
Question 10 – 2
Peter 2:20-22
What about 2 Peter
2:20-22? “For if after they have escaped the pollutions 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 the beginning. For it had
been better for them not to have known the way of
righteousness, than, after they have known it, to turn from
the holy commandment delivered unto them. But it is happened
unto them according to the true proverb, The dog is turned to
his own vomit again; and the sow that was washed to her
wallowing in the mire.”
Does it say, “But it
is happened unto them according to the true proverb, The sheep
is turned to its own vomit again”? No, it does not. It says,
“The dog is turned to his own vomit again.” How many of these
dogs there are! They escape the pollution of the world
temporarily by the knowledge that comes through the Lord Jesus
Christ. If you were brought up in a Christian home and taught
the knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ from your youth, you
escaped a great deal of the pollution of the world. But after
you have known all these things, you can turn aside; you can
take your own way into the world and live in its filth and
pollutions. What does that prove? That you used to be a
Christian and are not now? That you used to be one of Christ’s
sheep but are no longer? Oh, no. What then? It proves that
“the dog has gone back to his own vomit again, and the sow
that was washed to her wallowing in the mire.” The remarkable
thing about this doctrine of the eternal security of the
believer is that many of the greatest men of God who have ever
lived have believed in it. C. H. Spurgeon, D. L. Moody, Dr. R.
A. Torrey, Dr. A. C. Dixon, and scores of others whom we
revere believed in it. C. H. Spurgeon said very beautifully,
“If this dog had ever been born again and gotten a sheep’s
nature, it never would have gone back to its own vomit; and if
this sow had ever been regenerated and had the heart of a lamb
put in it, it never would have gone back to its wallowing in
the mire.” It is not a question of a sheep of Christ
perishing. The devil has a lot of washed sows, but they are
not, and never have been, Christ’s sheep.
Question 11 –
Hebrews 6:4-6
Now we come to the
crucial text, Hebrews 6:4-6. “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 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.”
Watch this carefully.
See if I read it correctly. “For it is quite possible for
those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the
heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, and
have tasted 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.” Is that what it says?
You believe that a man can be once enlightened, made a
partaker of the Holy Ghost, can taste the good Word of God and
the powers of the world to come, but fall away and then
repent--don’t you? That is what all the folk believe who do
not believe in the eternal security of the believer. What are
you going to do with your backslider? If backsliding and
apostasy are the same, don’t you see this passage is the worst
possible passage in all the Bible for their favorite doctrine?
If those who hold
that a man can be saved over and over again will ponder this
passage, I am sure they will see how fatally it knifes their
theory.
This is the way it
reads: “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.” If this passage teaches that a man once
saved can be lost again, then it also teaches that if that man
is lost again, he can never repent and be saved. In other
words, if that passage teaches that a man once saved can be
lost again, it teaches that if you have ever been saved and
you are now lost, you have a one-way ticket for hell, and
there is no turning back. But what is the real question here?
It is almost impossible to explain it in a minute or two, for
you need to study the entire fifth and sixth chapters of
Hebrews together.
The apostle is
speaking to people who have the Old Testament and have been
intellectually convinced that Jesus is the Messiah but who are
exposed to persecution if they confess His name. Even if not
genuine, they know that Jesus is the Messiah, and they must
have felt the power and seen the evidence of His authority in
the miracles wrought. Yet they can turn their backs upon it
all and go back to Judaism, and go into the synagogue again
and say, “We do not believe Jesus Christ is the Messiah, the
Son of God; we refuse the authority of this man. He should be
crucified.” “They crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh,
and put Him to an open shame.” The apostle says, “Do not try
to do anything there; you cannot, for they have gone too far.
They are apostate.” It proves that they are not real
Christians. In verse 9 we read, “But, beloved, we are
persuaded better things of you, and things that accompany
salvation, though we thus speak.” That is, you could have all
these things and not have salvation. You say, “I don’t think
so.” But look at it: “It is impossible for those who were once
enlightened.” What does that mean? Born again? No one could
listen to a gospel address without being enlightened. “The
entrance of Thy words giveth light, it giveth understanding
unto the simple” (Psalm 119:130).
“. . .and have tasted
of the heavenly gift.” It is one thing to taste; it is another
thing to eat. Many a person has gone that far and never been
saved. The angel said to Ezekiel, “Son of man, eat this roll.”
But the angel saw that Ezekiel had only tasted it, so he
commanded, “Son of man, cause thy belly to eat it.” It was in
his mouth, and if his head had been cut off all the truth
would be gone, but “God desires truth in the inward parts.”
“. . .and were made
partakers of the Holy Ghost.” They were neither sealed, nor
indwelt, nor baptized, nor filled with the Spirit. He does not
use one of the terms that refer to the Spirit’s great offices,
but says, “and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost.” Did you
ever see a man in a meeting where the Spirit of God was
working in power, and have you ever gone over and talked to
him and said, “Don’t you want to come to Christ?” And he has
answered, “I know I ought to come, I can feel the power of the
Spirit of God in this meeting. I know this thing is right and
I ought to yield, but I don’t want to, and I won’t.” And he
goes away resisting the Spirit although he was a partaker. So
these people described in Hebrews 6 had been in this way
outwardly acquainted with Christianity, but they now denied it
all. For such there could be no repentance.
Now in order to prove
that this is the correct interpretation of the passage, let me
draw your attention to Hebrews 6:7-9: “For the earth which
drinketh in the rain that cometh oft upon it, and bringeth
forth herbs meet for them by whom it is dressed, receiveth
blessing from God: but that which beareth thorns and briers is
rejected, and is nigh unto cursing; whose end is to be burned.
But, beloved, we are persuaded better things of you; you have
gone farther than these apostates ever did, you have been
saved; and so do not think we are confounding you with people
like these.” He uses this little parable to make clear what he
means. Here are two pieces of grass growing side by side, we
will say, just separated by a fence. The earth is the same,
the same sun shines on them both, the same kind of rainfall
waters them both. When the time of harvest comes, one of these
plots brings forth herbs, but the other only thorns and
briers. What is he teaching here? This is a message to the
Jews, trying to make them see the reality of Christ’s
messiahship and His fulfillment of all the types of old. These
two plots of ground are two men, they are the hearts of two
men. We may think of them in this way to make it all more
graphic. They grow up side by side; they both are taught the
Bible; they both go to the same synagogue; both wait for the
Messiah; both go down and listen to John the Baptist preach;
perhaps both were baptized by John the Baptist, confessing
their sins. John’s baptism was not salvation; it was just
looking forward to the coming of a Savior. Both of them hear
the Lord Jesus; both of them see Him do His works of power;
both are in that crowd watching when He dies; both are there
when the throngs go out to see the open tomb; both are near
when He ascends to heaven; both see the mighty work of the
Spirit on the day of Pentecost; both of them move in and out
among the apostles; and outwardly you could not see any
difference between them. But by-and-by persecution breaks out.
One of them is arrested, and they say to him, “Deny Jesus
Christ, or you will die.” He says, “I cannot deny Him; He is
my Savior.” “Then you will die,” the first one declares. “I am
ready to die, but I cannot deny Him,” the second man replies.
The other one is arrested and they say, “You must deny Christ
or die.” He says, “I will deny Him rather than die. I will go
back and be a good Jew again rather than die.” “Come out here,
then,” they command him.
They had a terrible
way of taking him back. I remember reading how in such a case,
they took him to an unclean place where a man slew a sow, and
this one going back to Judaism, in order to prove his denial,
spits on the blood of the sow and says, “So count I the blood
of Jesus the Nazarene.” And then they purify him and take him
back. Could any real believer in Jesus do that? What made the
difference between the two?
Those plots of ground
had the same rain, the same sunshine, but there were different
crops. What was the difference? One of them had the good seed
and brought forth good fruit; the other did not have the good
seed and brought forth thorns and briers. These two men were
both familiar with the truth, but one received the
incorruptible seed, the Word of life, and brought forth fruit
unto God. The other has never received the good seed, and the
day comes when he is an apostate.
If you will keep in
mind the difference between an apostate and a backslider, it
will save you a lot of trouble over many Scriptures. The
apostate knows all about Christianity but never has been a
real Christian. The backslider is a person who has known
Christ, who did love Him, but became cold in his soul, lost
out in his spiritual life. There is not a Christian who has
not often been guilty of backsliding. That is why we need the
Lord as our advocate to restore our souls. When backslidden,
it is not our union with Him that is destroyed, but it is our
communion. You may say, “Why are you so sure that a real
Christian does not apostatize?” Because God says so in His
Word. 1 John 2:18: “Little children, it is the last time: and
as ye have heard that antichrist shall come, even now are
there many antichrists; whereby we know that it is the last
time.” Antichrist means “opposed to Christ.” The apostate is
always a man opposed to Christ. A man says, “I have tried it
all, and there is nothing in it,” and so denounces Christ.
“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.” The words “no doubt” are in italics and really
cast a doubt. Leave those words out for they do not belong in
the Greek text, and read it, “They went out from us, but they
were not of us: for if they had been of us, they would have
continued with us.” And then he adds, “They went out, that
they might be made manifest that they were not altogether
(that is the literal rendering) of us” (1 John 2:19). In other
words, they were with us in profession, in outward fellowship,
but not altogether of us, because they had never really been
born of God. This also explains Hebrews 10 which is the next
passage brought up here as an objection.
Question 12 –
Hebrews 10:28-29
Explain Hebrews
10:28-29: “He that despised Moses’ law died without mercy
under two or three witnesses: of how much sorer punishment,
suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who hath trodden under
foot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of the
covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing, and
hath done despite unto the Spirit of grace?” People are
troubled here, for they say, “Well, this man was surely a
Christian, because it says that he was sanctified.”
That does not
necessarily prove that he was a Christian. The whole nation of
Israel was sanctified by the blood of the covenant; in a
certain sense the whole world has been sanctified by the blood
of the cross. If it were not for that blood shed on Calvary’s
cross the whole world would be doomed to eternal judgment, but
because Jesus died for the entire world God says, “Now, I can
deal with all men on the ground of the blood of the cross,”
and, as we often put it, the great question between God and
man today is not primarily the sin question. Why? Because the
blood of Christ answers for sin. What is the great question?
It is the Son question: How are you treating God’s Son who
died to save you? Christ has died for all men, His blood is
shed for the salvation of all men, and it will avail for every
sinner in all the world if they trust Him. (See John 3:18-19.)
Here is this Hebrew
who has followed along to a certain point, and now the
question comes, “Will you confess this Christ as your one
great sin offering no matter what it means?” And he answers,
“No, I cannot do that. I am going back to the temple. There is
a sin offering there, and I will not have to suffer as I may
if I confess Jesus Christ.” But he cannot do that. God does
not accept any more that “there remaineth no more sacrifice
for sins.” “If we sin willfully after that we have received
the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice
for sins.” “There remaineth no other sacrifice for sins: is
the true meaning. This sacrifice at the altar was commanded by
God. He said, “If you sin, you must bring a sacrifice, and I
will accept you.” “The life of the flesh is in the blood: and
I have given it to you upon the altar to make an atonement for
your souls: for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for
the soul” (Leviticus 17:11). “All right,” this Jew says, “I
have a sin offering.” But he has met Jesus Christ or heard of
Him as the great sin offering; he knows that God accepted Him
and raise Him from the dead; he has all this knowledge, but
having it all he is afraid to come out definitely and confess
Christ as his Savior. He says, “I do not need this sin
offering; I will go back and be content with the sin offering
of the temple.” Before Jesus came, that was acceptable because
it pointed to Him, but now He has come. If you reject Him,
there remains no other offering. This passage, you see, has
nothing to do with a real Christian turning from Christ, but
with a man thoroughly instructed who refuses to accept Him.
And how many people there are, not only among the Jews but in
Christendom, who are refusing this sin offering.
Question 13 – Luke
9:61-62
The next passage
brought up is Luke 9:61-62: “And another also said, Lord, I
will follow Thee; but let me first go bid them farewell, which
are at home at my house. And Jesus said unto him, No man,
having put his hand to the plough, and looking back, is fit
for the kingdom of God.”
What a terrible thing
it would be if this were the way into heaven! How many
thousands of earnest Christian people there are who have
allowed what they thought was their responsibility to their
friends to keep them from fully following Christ. Suppose they
went to heaven only on the ground of fully following Him. You
see, these Jews were looking for the kingdom, and many said,
“I will follow Thee, but my friends have a claim on me.” “No,
the Lord says, “I must come first. No man, having put his hand
to the plough, and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of
God” That is the test of discipleship. But it is necessary to
distinguish between salvation by grace and reward for faithful
discipleship. The rewards are connected with the kingdom. No
matter how faithful I may be as a Christian, it does not give
me any better place in heaven than if I were taken there the
moment I was saved. Suppose the very instant you were
converted you dropped dead--would you have gone to heaven?
Yes, you would have gone there on the ground of God’s delight
in the work of His Son. Suppose you were converted fifty years
ago. There have been ups-and-downs in your life, but you have
been saved all those years. Where would you go if you died
suddenly? You would go to heaven. On what ground? On the
ground of God’s delight in the work of His Son. There is not a
bit of change in fifty years. “But,” you say, “I have been a
wonderfully faithful Christian.” Have you, indeed? I am
surprised that you should think so. The more we serve Him, the
more most of us feel how unfaithful we have been. But you
insist, “I have been a very faithful Christian.” Does that
make you any more fit for heaven than you were the moment you
trusted Jesus? You ask, “Does faithfulness as a disciple go
for nothing?” It goes for a great deal, but it has no saving
merit. You have a place in the Father’s house on the ground of
pure grace, but the Father’s house is not the only thing
before us. There is also the kingdom of God. “Then shall the
righteous shine forth in the kingdom of their Father.” And
here there are different rewards according to the measure of
faithfulness in this life.
Here was one to whom
the Lord said, “I want you to follow Me to Africa or India,”
and he said, “O Lord, suffer me first to go and bury my
father. I have an old father here and cannot bear to leave him
as long as he lives. After he is dead, I am willing to follow
Thee.” And the Lord says, “Let the dead bury their dead.” Of
course, if he had the responsibility of providing for his
father, that would be a different thing. Because that man has
not the faith and courage to make that break, does he cease to
be a Christian? He may stay at home, he may be of great value
and great use, but when he comes to the judgment seat of
Christ there is a reward he might have had that he will not
have, because he did not go the whole way with the Lord Jesus
Christ. If going the whole way entitled men to heaven, none of
us would ever get there. But as we go the whole way, as far as
we understand, He is going to reward us. If people could learn
to see the difference between salvation by grace and reward
for service, this question would settle itself. From this
point on, most of these objections really have to do with this
very fact.
Question 14 –
Hebrews 3:12-14
The next passage is
Hebrews 3:12-14: “Take heed, brethren, lest there be in any of
you an evil heart of unbelief, in departing from the living
God. But exhort one another daily, while it is called Today;
lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin.
For we are made partakers of Christ if we hold the beginning
of our confidence steadfast unto the end.” That is one of the
“if” verses. Another one is found in I Corinthians 15:1-2:
“Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you the gospel which I
preached unto you, which also ye have received, and wherein ye
stand; by which also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory what I
preached unto you, unless ye have believed in vain.” Another
one is found in Colossians 1:21-23: “And you, that were
sometime alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works,
yet now hath He reconciled in the body of His flesh through
death, to present you holy and unblameable and unreproveable
in His sight: if ye continue in the faith grounded and
settled, and be not moved away from the hope of the gospel,
which ye have heard, and which was preached to every creature
which is under heaven; whereof I Paul am made a minister.” I
might add others to these, but here are three “ifs.”
What does the Spirit
of God mean by bringing these “ifs” in? In every one of these
instances He is addressing bodies of people. I stand here to
address you as a body of people. If I were to ask everybody
who professes to be a Christian to stand, I suppose nearly
everybody would rise. Would that prove that you are all
Christians? It would show that you profess to be Christians.
What would prove that you really are? “If ye continue in the
faith grounded and settled, and be not moved away from the
hope of the gospel.” You profess to have received the gospel;
you are saved if you keep in memory what has been preached
unto you. If you do not, it just shows that there is no
reality.
The faith here is not
the faith by which you are saved, it is not the faith by which
you believe; but it is that which you believe. Jude says,
“Earnestly contend for the faith which was once delivered unto
the saints” (Jude 3). That is the body of Christian doctrine,
and, if a real Christian, you will stand for that Christian
doctrine to the end; but if not, you may become a Mormon, or a
Christian Scientist, or a theosophist, or something like that.
Then you simply show there is no reality. It is a very easy
thing to say, “I am saved”; it is another thing to prove it.
Question 15 – 2
Peter 3:17
What of 2 Peter 3:17?
“Ye therefore, beloved, seeing ye how these things before,
beware lest ye also, being led away with the error of the
wicked, fall from your own steadfastness.”
We come back to what
we were speaking of a few minutes ago. There is always a
possibility of a real Christian falling, and we need to be
warned again and again. How many we have known who at one time
had a bright Christian testimony but fell? They were not
watchful, they were not prayerful, and they stumbled and fell.
Does that mean they are lost? No, not if really born again. If
born again, they have received eternal life; and if people
thus fall, that is where the restoring work of the Spirit of
God comes in. David fell in a most terrible way but he says,
“He restoreth my soul”; and sometimes in restoring His
people’s souls, God has to put them through very bitter
experiences. He loves them too much to let them be happy when
away from Him.
Question 16 – 2
Timothy 2:18
Explain this passage.
“Who concerning the truth have erred, saying that the
resurrection is past already; and overthrow the faith of some”
(2 Timothy 2:18). A writer says, “We see here the possibility
of having our faith overthrown.”
That’s not what Paul
is talking about. He is speaking of the faith. Again you must
make the distinction. Our faith is that by which we believe.
We believe God; that is faith. But we believe the truth that
God has revealed to us, and that truth is the faith, and that
is what has been overthrown in the mind of the professed
believer in this instance. That is the same thing that you get
in 1 Timothy 5:15: “For some are already turned aside after
Satan.” Some real Christians do that, but what a blessed thing
to know the Lord goes after them and never gives them up.
Question 17 –
Hebrews 2:1
May we not let the
things of God slip away from us? “Therefore we ought to give
the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard, lest
at any time we should let them slip” (Hebrews 2:1),
or, in other words, “Lest at any time we should drift away
from them.”
This is the same
warning again. You have listened to precious ministry from men
of God who have preached the Word to you. You have had such
instruction as many never have had. You will be terribly
guilty if you drift away from it. You need to “continue in the
things which you have learned.” But if we were all to lose our
salvation every time we drifted into some erroneous thing, how
serious it would be! Is there anyone here who has never done a
little bit of drifting?
If sin will separate
me from Christ, how much sin? How can I ever be sure how much
sin? Is there a Christian here who has not sinned today? Is it
not a fact that every one of us sins in thought, or word, or
in deed, probably every day of our lives? Is there ever a
night that you can kneel before God and say, “Lord, I thank
You that I have not sinned in thought or word or deed today?”
I am sure no honest Christian can say that. How far do you
have to sin in order to break the link that binds you to
Christ? You never could be sure that you are saved from one
day to another and you would not leave any room for the
restoring work of God if your salvation depended upon your
personal faithfulness.
Question 18 –
Revelation 2:10
What about such a
Scripture as this? “Be thou faithful unto death and I, will
give thee a crown of life?” (Revelation 2:10). How can you say
that a man is saved for eternity when the Lord says you must
be faithful to the end?
A crown of life is
not salvation; it is reward. There are five crowns: the
incorruptible crown for faithfully running the course; the
crown of rejoicing for winning souls; the crown of
righteousness for those who love His appearing; the crown of
life for those who suffer for Christ; the crown of glory for
those who feed the sheep and lambs of Christ’s flock. I might
lose all of those crowns and yet not lose my salvation. The
Word says, “If any man’s work shall be burned. . . .he himself
shall be saved; yet so as by fire” (1 Corinthians 3:15) But I
do not want to be saved that way. I want to win the crown of
life. “Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee a
crown of life.”
Question 19 –
Hebrews 10:37-39
Explain Hebrews
10:37-39: “For yet a little while, and He that shall come will
come, and will not tarry. . . .If any man draw back, My soul
shall have no pleasure in him.”
Look at the next
verse, “But we (who? real Christians) are not of them who draw
back unto perdition; but of them that believe to the saving of
the soul.” If a person has believed to the saving of the soul,
there is no danger of his “drawing back unto perdition.” It is
a terrible thing to be intellectually convinced and stop
there.
Question 20 –
Revelation 3:15-16
Now I am referred to
Revelation 3:15-16, where the Lord, speaking to the church at
Laodicea, says, “I know thy works, that thou art neither cold
nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot. So then because thou
art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out
of My mouth.”
Is this an individual
who has once been saved and is so no longer? The Lord is
talking to a church. Did you ever see a church like the one at
Laodicea, a church neither hot nor cold, one where you could
not tell whether it was for Christ or against Him? And then
the Lord says to that church, “Because you are just
lukewarm--there is profession--but you are neither hot or
cold, I will spit you out of My mouth. I won’t own you as a
church at all.” That does not say that there may not be
individuals in the church who are children of God, just as in
the church at Ephesus. He said to them, “If you do not repent,
I will remove your candlestick.” A candle, you know, is to
give light.
Every time I go
downtown I pass a church that D. L. Moody used to belong to.
It was an evangelistic center in the city in his day, but
today it is a very center of modernism and the gospel is never
preached there. Every time I look at it I think of the time
Moody was there and it stood firmly for the truth, and I say,
“Their candlestick is removed.” There may be some true
Christians in that church, some of the dear old people who
were in it years ago, and maybe their membership is still
there. It does not say that they are not Christians because
the church as such has lost its witness for Christ.
Question 21 – 1
Peter 4:18
Here is a verse I am
surprised to find used to prove the “falling away” doctrine.
“If the righteous scarcely be saved where shall the ungodly
and the sinner appear?” (1 Peter 4:18).
What has that to do
with the question? What is Peter saying? “The time is come
that judgment must begin at the house of God: and if it first
begin at us, what shall the end be of them that obey not the
gospel of God?” (1 Peter 4:17). I suppose that God’s children
have faults. I know they have to be judged for their faults by
the Father in correction, and God will deal very solemnly and
seriously with them about their failures. There would be no
need of judgment if they were all perfect Christians, but if
God heals with His own people in this way and if the righteous
be saved through difficulty, “Where shall the ungodly and the
sinner appear?” That has nothing to do with the question of
whether the Christian is saved for eternity or not.
Question 22 – John
15:1-6
John 15:1-6 is the
next passage questioned. “I am the true vine, and my Father is
the husbandman. Every branch in me that beareth not fruit he
taketh away: and every branch that beareth fruit, he purgeth
it, that it may bring forth more fruit. Now ye are clean
through the word which I have spoken unto you. Abide in me,
and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself,
except it abide in the vine; no more can ye, except ye abide
in me. I am the vine, ye are the branches: He that abideth in
me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit: for
without me ye can do nothing. If a man abide not in me, he is
cast forth as a branch, and is withered; and men gather them,
and cast them into the fire, and they are burned.”
This chapter is not
discussing the question of eternal life but of fruit bearing.
There are a great many believers who bear very little fruit
for God, but all bear some fruit for Him. There are many
people in the vine (and the vine speaks of profession here on
earth) who bear no fruit for Him and will eventually be cut
out altogether when Jesus comes. There will be no place with
Him because there is no union with Him. There are no natural
branches in the living vine. We are grafted in by faith. I do
not know much about grafting, but I do know that it is one
thing to put a graft in, and it is another thing for a graft
to strike. It is one thing for a person to be outwardly linked
with Him and quite another for that person to have life in
Christ. What is the test that proves whether he is really in
the vine? The test is if he bears fruit. All who have life
bear some fruit for God. If there is no fruit, you can be sure
there is no life, no real union with Christ.
Question 23 –
Unconfessed Sin
Will any Christian
who passes away with unconfessed sin have an opportunity to
make things right after death? Is the judgment seat of Christ
the time when all misunderstandings and discords among
Christians will be made right?
It is questionable if
any Christian ever died who did not have some unconfessed sin
to his record. While sin might be confessed in a general way,
who of us has ever definitely confessed all his sins? But the
precious blood of Christ answers for every sin a believer has
ever committed. At the judgment seat of Christ, the Lord will
go over the entire life since regeneration, giving His mind
about every thing, and the believer will then for the first
time see each detail in the light of God’s infinite holiness.
Everything there will be dealt with so that the believer’s
failures will never be referred to again for all eternity.
Question 24 – The
Book of Life
Is
there any difference between the book of life and the Lamb’s
book of life?
Yes, the book of life
is the book of the living. It is the record too, of
profession. From this book names may be blotted out. The
Lamb’s book of life is the record of the eternal purpose of
God. Names inscribed there are written from the foundation of
the world. In other words, one book speaks of responsibility,
the other of pure grace.
No Christian will
ever have his name blotted out of the Lamb’s book of life, for
all such have eternal life--which is unforfeitable and
everlasting.