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Getting the Gospel Right...Continued from page 1

John MacArthur

Grace to You

Biblically, however, repentance is a total about face — turning away from sin and self and unto God (cf. 1 Thessalonians 1:9). 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). 

Believing in Jesus means receiving Him for all that He is (John 1:12). 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 (cf. John 3:36; Acts 6:7; Hebrews 5:9). 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); to forsake all (Luke 14:33); and to leave father and mother (Matthew 19:29), 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)? 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 (cf. 6:1-2, 7; 11:26; 14:20, 22; 15:10). 

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). 

Furthermore, if a person is genuinely saved, his life will change for the better (2 Corinthians 5:17). He is saved "for good works" (Ephesians 2:10), and there is no way he can fail to bring forth at least some of the fruit that characterizes the redeemed (cf. Matthew 7:17). 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.

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Most Recent User Comments
uphoffapuppyachowski
6/5/2008 12:33 PM
Luke warm Heard it all before. True,but...??
noligasilan
3/20/2008 11:13 PM
People need to hear the Gospel. The Bible says, "Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the Word of God." But if the presentation of the Gospel is dependent upon what the audience want to hear rather than what God wants us to proclaim,then, how would the people hear the Word of God. As God's people it is our duty to proclaim the Gospel and proclaim it faithfully according to the teachings given by our Lord and His disciples and apostles. It is our responsibility to bring to sinners the pure Word of God. There must be repentance there, there must be both the lordship and saviorship of Christ there; people must know why they need to trust Jesus Christ. The problem with our evangelism today is that it is man-centered not Christ-centered. It is time to go back to the biblical point if we want people to come to Christ for the biblical reasons and not just for the sake of numbers.
Sagcofc
8/1/2007 9:47 AM
I think the gospel has been degraded by years of watering down of the metaphors and clear descriptions that God used to give impact and power to it. Romans 15 clearly tells us that the gospel is the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus. Acts 2:38 gives us a call to repentance and baptism to respond to the gospel message, and Romans 6 tells us that our old man was crucified in baptism so that we are no longer slaves of sin. So many individuals recall a moment of giving their life to Jesus, but they had no real change or turning around as you pointed out. Nor do they recall the importance God places in baptism that brings us in line with the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus so that we have a death, a burial, and a resurrection ourselves that we can look back to and say, "I was joined with Jesus Christ by obeying the gospel." We've been so preoccupied with grace that we neglect the fact that God also calls us to action. Grace is free, but God requires our obedience.
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