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| Copyright © 2001 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| January 17, 2001 |
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ONCE SAVED, ALMOST ALWAYS SAVED
#3
IS YOUR SALVATION LOCKED IN, OR ARE YOU LOCKED IN? It has one of the most recognizable pop-music openings
in history, and then at the close, a long, classic guitar solo that goes
for a couple of minutes. In a recent national tour, Don Henley did the
song again, but had four trombonists play the closing solo medley with
its rather inventive slide triplets. Very interesting . . . and what a
lot of memories. Probably a good number of you can easily “name that tune”
if I give you the opening line: “On a dark desert highway, cool wind in
my hair.” Of course it’s “Welcome to the Hotel California. Such a lovely
place, Such a lovely face. Plenty of room at the Hotel California. Any
time of year, you can find it here.” “God’s justification,” they write, “takes place at the point of time at which a man believes. It is a once-for-all divine act, God’s final judgment, brought into the present.” Now listen to this: “Once passed, God’s justifying sentence about the sinner is irrevocable. To say God justifies is to say God has issued a verdict of acquittal concerning the sinner. It is a legal pronouncement that forever excludes the sinner from receiving any punishment for the sins he has committed during his lifetime.” “Whoever believes in Him” — Jesus is referring to Himself here, the Son of God — “Whoever believes in Him is not condemned.” The crux of the Protestant position, then, is this: if and when a person honestly and truthfully does accept Calvary as his or her only salvation, and begins a genuine faith relationship with Jesus at that point . . . they are saved. They have it then — at that moment. And — we studied this yesterday — since we are receiving salvation from a loving Jesus whose mercy is unlimited and whose mind never changes, that salvation is irrevocable. It can’t be taken away. Which is why these two earnest Christian writers, Ankerberg and Weldon, keep using the word “irrevocable.” Here’s another line from the same book: “The Bible teaches that any person who simply and truly believes in Jesus Christ as his or her personal Savior from sin is at that moment irrevocably and eternally justified.” Well, friend, this is good news. As an evangelical Protestant
Christian, I want to embrace it. I’m sure you noticed, though, that our
radio series title is this: ONCE SAVED, ALMOST ALWAYS SAVED. Why is that
fifth word inserted there? “Up ahead in the distance, I saw a shimmering light. My head grew heavy and my sight grew dim. I had to stop for the night. There she stood in the doorway; I heard the mission bell. And I was thinking to myself, ‘This could be Heaven or this could be Hell.’” And at the end of the experience, this visitor finds out that he doesn’t really want to stay at the Hotel California. Even if there’s pink champagne on ice. Because “we are all prisoners here, of our own device.” But when he runs for the door, trying to find the passage back to the place he was before, he meets someone who says he has to stay. His visit there is irrevocable. “‘Relax,’ said the night man, ‘We are programmed to receive. You can check out any time you like. BUT YOU CAN NEVER LEAVE.’” And after those chilling words, the guitar begins to
play. But friend, it’s not playing the chorus of heaven, because — listen
to me here — we serve a God who believes in free will. God does not force
people to be saved. God does not force people to be His friends. God does
not force people to stay in a heaven they no longer wish to have as their
permanent address. I don’t know if “lose” is really the right word to use here; perhaps “give it back” would be better. But they finish the thought this way, and I agree with their conclusion: “Since God’s gift of forgiveness of sins and eternal life was appropriated by faith, if a man decided not to rest his eternal destiny in Christ, and totally turned against Him, Luther believed that only then would a man lose his salvation. In other words, the only sin that Luther thought would cause a man to lose his salvation was the sin of unrepentant apostasy.” That’s a sad, sad picture, isn’t it . . . and yet one which preserves the priceless divine gift of free will. “You can check out any time, but you can never leave”? Friend, God will never hold you and me as moral prisoners in a heaven we don’t want. The gift is secure and eternal and instant and irrevocable on His side, but on our side, we always have a choice. The door to heaven is always open . . . going both ways. |