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What Has Become of Salvation?

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Wednesday, October 23, 2024 @ 12:20 PM What Has Become of Salvation? Dr. Ray Rooney, Jr. Digital Media Editor MORE

I wonder what the apostles would think if we were given the opportunity to share our understanding of salvation with them. If Peter and John said, “What do you think it means to be saved?” what kind of looks would they give us if we regurgitated the pat answers? You know, if we talked about being in a personal relationship with God, going to heaven where we will be in a perpetual state of bliss, reuniting with our deceased loved ones, and having all the answers to our questions revealed. My guess is that they would display either a confused or disappointed look on their faces.

If they asked us how we think we are saved many would probably talk about attending church, accepting Christ, answering an altar call, praying a sinner’s prayer, being baptized, and joining the church. They would probably ask, “What’s an altar call and a ‘sinner’s prayer?” When we told them there would be either the furrowing of brows or outright eye rolls followed by, “Where did you get that from?”

Finally, if they asked how we are living out our salvation many might say by attending church, putting money in the offering plate, serving on a church committee or two when asked to do so, and living as best we can by the Ten Commandments and the Golden Rule. It’s here that a look of dawning horror might reveal itself on their countenances. “You mean that you live out your salvation by trying to be a good person? That’s why you think you are being saved? We noticed you didn’t say much of anything about sin, repentance, Jesus, redemption, blood-bought, Spirit-filled, power, obedience, discipling, or transformation when talking to us about salvation. What happened?”

Indeed. What happened?

Perhaps it is the innate desire in mankind to modernize and improve. You know, get the latest update/version. So, rather than cite the Scripture and expound on how it is affecting our lives today (as Peter did in his sermon on Pentecost [citing Joel and multiple Psalms]) and trusting the Holy Spirit to bring about conviction (which He did), we like to help God along in this modern age. I mean, the Bible is an old book. It needs something extra for those sitting in pews today.

So, many a preacher will read that verse from the Bible (because they are expected to) and then set it aside spending half an hour on personal reflections, illustrations, and jokes trying to make people feel at ease. And then because they don't rely on the Holy Spirit anymore, tell people what they want them to do and when to do it. And since they can't even trust people to talk to God right they tell them what they need to pray.

Not at all the way the apostles did it. Peter ended his sermon on the day of Pentecost by telling the “congregation” that they were responsible for killing the Son of God. Yet despite this horrible fact, God had made Jesus both Lord and Christ (Acts 2:36). Mike drop. That was it. End of sermon. No tearful plea from Peter. No “Just As I Am” played by the temple musicians. No altar call. Sergeant Friday would have been pleased. “Just the facts, ma’am.” But that was then and we know a better way now, right?

Peter left it up to the Holy Spirit and sure enough, He convicted hearts and the crowd cried out: “Brethren, what shall we do?” Peter told them to [r]epent and be baptized and about three thousand people heeded what he said.

Jesus framed salvation in a short but simple statement:

Whoever is not with me is against me, and whoever does not gather with me scatters (Matthew 12:30).

It seems to me that salvation is choosing to side with Jesus (in everything) and living the rest of our lives doing what He says (John 14:15). The tension in salvation is not implied, it is said out loud: “with me,” “against me,” “gather,” and “scatters.”

Everything about biblical salvation is both glorious and brutal.

  • It is glorious in that it reveals God’s unfathomable love for mankind (John 3:16; Romans 5:6; Colossians 2:13-14). It is brutal because it also reveals what our sin cost Him (the rejection, torture, and murder of the Son).
  • It is glorious because God is willing to drop all charges against anyone who chooses to side with Christ. It is brutal because everyone who makes that choice must first acknowledge that all charges against them are in fact true. We are guilty (Psalm 14:1-3; Romans 3:23).
  • It is glorious because the Creator of everything is willing to deal with us individually. It is brutal because the Creator of everything is willing to deal with us individually.

Paul says in Romans 10:9,

[I]f you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.

Why does anyone need a prefabricated ‘say after me’ prayer to say “Jesus is Lord”? And that part about believing He has been raised from the dead…means that you acknowledge that you (and everyone else) will answer to Him. That means that your opinions, your will, and your version of truth must be subjugated to Him. You don’t really believe He’s been raised from the dead if you still have your own version of truth.

Revelation 12 begins with the words,

And a great sign appeared in heaven…

Part of that “sign” was the vision of Satan’s ouster from the presence of God. Five times in Revelation 12 we are told that Satan and his followers were “thrown down.” Perhaps the most important and exciting of these is verse 10:

Now the salvation and the power and the kingdom of our God and the authority of His Christ have come, for the accuser of our brethren has been thrown down…

Salvation cannot be separated from the throwing down of Satan. And no one can throw Satan down in their lives except by “the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony” (Revelation 12:11).

There is no improving perfection. That which is perfect needs no adjustment, rebranding, or updating.

Before he was transformed through salvation into Paul the Apostle, Saul of Tarsus had a phrase for the people who were with Jesus and gathering His harvest. He called them people of “the Way” (Acts 9:2). Salvation is not merely a profession of faith in God and a promise to try to live for Him as best we can. It is an embrace of godliness made possible only through Jesus Christ. It is an ongoing battle of throwing Satan down in our own lives and those around us in the power and under the auspices of Jesus Christ. It is yielding to God and resisting the Devil. It is choosing sides. Every single day.

Godliness and holiness do not fit in with this fallen world. So salvation isn’t about fitting in and being liked. There is a reason why James warns,

Friendship with the world is hostility toward God (James 4:4).

It makes perfect sense when you realize it was Jesus who said,

Whoever is not with me is against me.

Choosing sides. Calling out to Jesus. Walking obediently with Him. Speaking the truth. Throwing Satan down. Calling on others to do the same.

Are you saved? Do we even know what that means anymore?

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