Blessed Assurance: A Know-So
Salvation
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How would
you respond if I asked you right now, "Are you saved?"
You ought to be able to
say, "Praise God! Glory to God! I know that I'm saved!"
Yet many Christians
don't know they're saved. They go around with their shoulders all bent over--drooping,
wondering, and worrying. They remind me of question marks with their heads
bent over, rather than exclamation points standing straight and tall and
saying, "I know whom I have believed!"
Rather than being
shouting Christians, they're doubting Christians. Rather than having a "know-so"
salvation, they have a "hope-so" salvation.
Somebody once said,
if you could have it and not know it, you could lose it and not miss it. But
the truth is, if you have salvation, you know it; and if you have it and know
it, you can never lose it.
I met a young man
once in a hospital room. I had just led his dying mother-in-law to the Lord
Jesus Christ, and I turned to him and said, "Isn't it wonderful that she
has been saved?"
"Oh, no one can
know that they are saved," he said.
Now this man was
not an unbeliever; that is, he did not repudiate Christianity. He simply held
some doctrinal stance that would not allow him to accept the assurance of salvation.
But the Apostle
John wrote an entire chapter to assure God's people that they are indeed God's
people. "These things have I written unto you that believe on the name of
the Son of God: that ye may know that ye have eternal life . . ." (1
John 5:13).
The word know
means absolute assurance. According to verse 13, it is possible to be saved
and know it. But the very fact that John wrote this verse shows that it is also
possible to be saved and doubt it.
Is doubt good?
No. Doubt is to your spirit what pain is to your body. Pain is a warning, a
signal that something is wrong. It does not mean you are dead. It just means
that something is wrong.
If you have doubts
and you are truly a born again child of God, you are suffering from some spiritual
sickness. All Christians doubt from time to time. A woman once told Dwight
L. Moody she had been saved for 25 years and never had a doubt. He said, "I
doubt you're saved."
But while we may
all be bothered by an occasional doubt, it is a problem that must and can be
overcome. John said he wrote chapter five to us as God's children so that we
may know that we have been saved. The words know, knoweth, or known appear 38
times in this epistle on assurance.
The next logical
question, then, is "How can I know?" I know, not because of any confidence
that I have in myself, but by two infallible proofs.
The
Root of Our Belief
What is it we believe? Are Christians just gullible? Do we believe in fairy
tales, or is there a basis for our belief? Why do we believe what we believe?
Faith is the root
of our belief. But faith is not walking on eggshells and Jello. It is evidence
and substance (Hebrews 11:1). It has some spiritual
steel and concrete in it. It is real, and God has given us some authentic, bona
fide witnesses, a testimony that we might know we are saved and going to heaven.
John says these
witnesses are the eternal work of the Savior, the internal witness of the Spirit,
and the external Word of Scripture.
1 John
5:6 says, "This is He that came by water and blood, even Jesus Christ; not by water only,
but by water and blood." When the Lord Jesus Christ was crucified, a soldier
put a spear in His side, "and forthwith came there out blood and water" (John
19:34). This is the eternal work of the Savior, that we are saved by
blood and sanctified by water.
The tabernacle
is an Old Testament picture of Christ. When you entered, you came first to the
brazen altar upon which the bloody sacrifice was made. Next was a laver, or
great basin, in which the priests would wash. First the blood, then the water.
The blood of Jesus Christ pays the price for our sins, and the sanctifying water
keeps us clean.
Sound familiar?
In "Rock of Ages," we sing "Let the water and the blood / from Thy wounded
side which flowed / be of sin the double cure / save from wrath and make me
pure."
I know I am saved
because Jesus Christ, the Son of God, died to purchase my salvation. That is
a historical fact. That is the saving work of Christ.
I also know I
am saved because of the internal witness of the Spirit:
It is the Spirit
that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth. For there are three that
bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost: and these
three are one. And there are three that bear witness in earth, the spirit,
and the water, and the blood: and these three agree in one (1
John 5:6-8).
How do I know
there was a man named Jesus Christ? How do I know He was the sinless
Son of God? How do I know that God sent Him? How do I know that
He actually died on that cross and took my sin?
Thank God I don't
have to depend on somebody's argument. The Holy Spirit of God is here to make
that real in my heart. You see, God gave us the work of Christ. But to make
the work of Christ--the water and the blood--real to us, He gave us the Spirit.
"If we receive
the witness of men," John says in 1 John 5:9, "the witness
of God is greater: for this is the witness of God which He hath testified of
His Son." The word if may also be translated since. Since we believe
the witness of men. All of us believe the witness of men.
One night I was
in Augusta, Georgia, preaching at a missions conference. The next morning I
went to the airport and flew back to Memphis. In order to do this, I had to
exercise faith in an airplane pilot I didn't know. I never saw his credentials.
I never saw him fly before. But Delta Airlines put its stamp of approval on
this man, so I just got on the plane and never thought too much about it. We
accept the witness of men.
Before I went to
the airport, I had breakfast in a restaurant. How did I know the food was not
poisoned? I had faith in that lady who served it. We receive the witness of
men.
When your doctor
writes you a prescription, you look at it, and although you can't read it, pronounce
it, or understand it, you give it to a pharmacist who puts pills in a bottle.
Then, without a second thought, you take them home and swallow them. Why? We
receive the witness of men.
In the same way,
through faith we receive the witness of God through the Spirit that Christ died
for our sins and rose from the dead for our sanctification. There is, therefore,
no excuse for not believing. The Bible promises that the Holy Spirit will help
anyone to believe who wants to believe. First the Spirit witnesses to
us; then He witnesses in us.
"He that believeth
on the Son of God hath the witness in himself" (1 John 5:10).
Before I got saved, He witnessed to me. He told me what Christ did is true.
Now He witnesses in me. I have the witness in myself.
Suppose I am enjoying
myself by eating a piece of apple pie, and you come to me and say, "There is
no such thing as apple pie. I don't believe in apple pie. And if there is apple
pie, it is no good."
Despite your arguments,
I have the witness within me. I have the witness on the inside. A Christian
with a testimony is never at the mercy of an unbeliever with an argument, because
he has the witness in himself.
Finally, the external
Word of Scripture assures me that I am saved:
He that believeth
not God hath made Him a liar; because he believeth not the record that God
gave of His Son. And this is the record, that God hath given to us eternal
life, and this life is in His Son. He that hath the Son hath life; and
he that hath not the Son of God hath not life. These things have I written
unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God, that ye may know that
ye have eternal life" (1 John 5:10-13).
Here is the basis
of our belief. Here is the reason for our certainty. We are not just gullible
fools. Jesus Christ died. He came by water and blood. The Holy Spirit of God
says yes, that is true. It is all attested by the Word of God.
To doubt the Bible
is to call God a liar. Some say, "Well, I'm trying to believe." But they have
called God a liar, plain and simple. Either this is His Word--His inerrant,
infallible Word--or it is not. And the work of Christ, the witness of the Spirit,
and the Word of God all say it is. It is fact, a matter of record.
Let me give you
another example. Suppose I am in a courtroom, and the judge says to me, "Mr.
Rogers, are you married?"
I say, "Yes I am."
"Well can you prove
you are married, Mr. Rogers?"
"Yes, I can. You
see, I was there in the church, and I saw Joyce coming down the aisle. My heart
got all twitterpated, and I was so happy. Your honor, it's the most wonderful
feeling in the world to be married."
When I'm finished,
the judge will say, "I'm sorry. While I am glad you feel that way, your feelings
are not evidence in this courtroom. Do you have some proof?"
Then I go down
to the courthouse. And I get that document, notarized, signed, and sealed, and
I bring it before the judge. And he accepts my marriage as proven fact.
My salvation does
not hinge on my emotions. I have an official record. I have the Word of God: "These
things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God:
that ye may know that ye have eternal life" (1 John 5:13).
One night while
out soul-winning, I asked a man if he wanted to receive Christ as his personal
Lord and Savior. After we prayed together, I said, "Now, sir, I want to give
you your spiritual birth certificate." And I turned to John 5:24 and read, "Verily,
verily, I say unto you, He that heareth My word, and believeth on Him that
sent Me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is
passed from death unto life."
We started to read
it through again. "Verily, verily, I say unto you," I read. Then I told him,
"It's Jesus who is speaking. Do you believe this?"
"Yes," he said.
"'He that heareth My word. . . .' Have you heard His Word?"
"Yes."
"'. . . and believeth on Him that sent Me. . . .' Have you believed on the God
that sent the Lord Jesus?"
"Yes."
"'. . . hath everlasting life. . . .' Do you have everlasting life?"
"Well, I hope so," he said.
I said, "Let's read it again." And we did. Again, he answered yes to every question
except the last. Again, he said,
"Well, I hope so."
"Let's read it again," I said. This time, when I asked him if he had everlasting
life, the light went on inside.
"Why, yes! Yes!" he shouted.
"Who says so?"
"God says so! God says so!"
That is the basis
of your belief. That's the source of your certainty. Isn't it better to have
God's Word than Adrian's or your neighbor's or your opinions, emotions, wishes,
or whims?
The
Fruit of Our Behavior
In addition to the root of our belief, we need only look at the fruit of our
behavior to know whether or not we are truly saved. What has Jesus done in me?
Is this all just some intellectual exercise, or has there been a change? The
Apostle John is very practical here. He shows us how our salvation ought to
show up in our behavior, and he gives three tests.
The
Commandment Test
And hereby we
do know that we know Him, if we keep His commandments. He that saith, I know
Him, and keepeth not His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in
him. But whoso keepeth His word, in him verily is the love of God perfected:
hereby know we that we are in Him. He that saith he abideth in Him ought himself
also so to walk, even as He walked (1 John 2:3-6).
I wonder if John
had been in a testimony meeting where somebody was bragging about being saved--saying
he was, but his walk and his talk did not get together. If you say you are saved,
it is absolutely going to show up in your life. You are going to be keeping
the commandments of God. You do not keep the commandments of God in order to
be saved; you keep the commandments of God because you are saved.
This presents a
serious problem, because not one of us has always kept all of God's commandments.
I haven't since I've been saved, and you haven't since you've been saved. Yet
the Bible says that we know we are in Him in that we keep His commandments.
Both the problem
and the solution are found in the word keep. It is actually a mariner's
word. In the apostles' day, sailors navigated by the stars. And a sailor setting
his course by the stars was said to be "keeping the stars." It was his intention
to sail by the stars.
To keep
God's commandments, then, means to use the Word of God as the Guide for our
lives. It is the desire of every child of God to live by His Word. While we
may be blown off course, distracted, or confused, the goal of our lives is to
keep the commandments of God.
Ever since I gave
my heart to Jesus, there has been a deep, divine, radical change; and there
is in me a burning desire to live for God. And there should be in you, too,
if you are saved.
This is not to
say that I don't sin anymore. The difference is that before I got saved I was
running to sin; now I am running from it. And if I fail, I turn right
around and start running away again.
The commandment
test says: if you can willfully and knowingly sin against the will of God with
no conviction, no compunction, and no remorse, you need to get saved. A lot
of people say, "Well, I walked down an aisle somewhere, and I got saved.
I know I'm just an old backslider now, but I'm still saved and going to heaven."
No, you are not.
If you are living that way--high, wide, and handsome--and it does not break
your heart, then you do not know the God of the Bible.
The
Companion Test
"We know that we have passed from death unto life, because we love the
brethren"
(1 John 3:14). When I am saved, I want to be right with
my Father, and I want to be right with my brother.
But there are some
who would say, "Well, I'm saved, but I have no use for the church." But the
Bible says if we love Jesus, we are going to love what Jesus loves; and Jesus
loves the church.
The word saint
(singular) appears in the Bible only five times. The plural appears nearly 100
times. Now, going to church will not make you a Christian any more than going
to the garage will make you an automobile. But when you realize that you have
been bought by the blood of Christ, when the Spirit of God comes into you, you
receive a new nature, and you are going to keep His commandments and love the
brethren.
The
Commitment Test
The greatest and strongest test is the commitment test. All of the others
grow out of it. "He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself.
. . . These things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the
Son of God" (1 John 5:10, 13).
In the Bible, the
words believe and commit are the same word. Concerning Jesus,
it says, "Many believed in His name, when they saw the miracles which He did.
But Jesus did not commit Himself unto them, because He knew all men" (John
2:23-24). They said they believed in Him, but He did not believe in them.
He knew that they were just miracle-mongers. He knew that they were not true
believers.
Biblical faith
is not just an intellectual exercise. You do not believe about Jesus,
you believe in Jesus. You commit yourself to Jesus.
I did not believe
about the plane that flew me from Augusta to Memphis; I believed in it.
I committed myself to that airplane. I did not just say, "Those things can
fly. I'm going to Memphis. I believe it can fly. I believe that man is a good
pilot. I have confidence in the airline." No, I got on board and entrusted
that pilot and that aircraft with my life. He who commits himself to that plane
flies to Memphis. And he who commits himself to the Son of God lives forever
with Him. I committed myself to that plane. He who commits himself to the Son
of God is the one who is saved. Have you done this?
Notice it doesn't
say, he who has believed; it says He who believes. It is always
present tense. Have you ever asked someone, "Are you saved?"
They say, "Yes,
I'm saved. I remember walking down the aisle when I was nine years old, giving
my hand to my pastor and my heart to Jesus Christ. Now, I may not be living
for God right now, I'll admit. But I know I'm saved, because I remember what
I did when I was a nine-year-old boy. I remember believing on Jesus Christ." The
Bible never uses such an experience as proof of salvation. It never points
back to some time when you believed on Jesus Christ.
I even hear people
say, "If you cannot show me the place and the moment when you received Jesus
Christ, you are not saved." That is not biblical. The Bible never says you know
when or if you are saved by something you remember in the past. It says, "He
that believes."
I am not saying
there is not a time when you received Christ. There was a day. Absolutely. But
that is not the test. The test is, do you believe in Jesus Christ now? Are you
trusting in Him today? Is there evidence in your life today that you are the
offspring of the living God? That is the proof of your salvation.
A
Closing Plea
My friend, have you given your life to the Lord? Do you have the assurance that
if you were to die right now, you would go straight to heaven? If not, please
let me tell you how you can be saved.
Admit
Your Sin
First, you must understand that you are a sinner. The Bible says, "All have
sinned, and come short of the glory of God" (Romans 3:23).
Abandon
Self-Effort
Second, you must understand that you cannot save yourself by your efforts.
The Bible is very clear that it's "not by works of righteousness which we have
done, but according to His mercy He saved us" (Titus 3:5).
Again, "By grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it
is the gift of God: not of works, lest any man should boast" (Ephesians
2:8-9).
Acknowledge
Christ's Payment
Third, you must believe that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, died for your sins.
The Bible says, "God commendeth His love toward us, in that, while we were
yet sinners, Christ died for us" (Romans 5:8). That
means He died in your place. Your sin debt has been paid by the blood of Jesus
Christ, which "cleanseth us from all sin" (1 John 1:7).
Accept
Him as Savior
Fourth, you must put your faith in Jesus Christ and Him alone for your salvation.
The blood of Christ does you no good until you receive Him by faith. The Bible
says, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved"
(Acts 16:31).
Have you ever taken
this all-important step of faith? If not, I urge you to do it right now. Why?
Because Jesus is the only way to heaven!
Speaking of Jesus,
the Apostle Peter said in Acts 4:12, "Neither is there
salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among
men, whereby we must be saved."
Jesus Himself said, "I am the way, the truth, and
the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by Me" (John 14:6). It couldn't be any clearer than that.
Are you willing
to offer the following prayer to God today?
"Oh, God, I'm a
sinner, I'm lost, and I need to be saved. I know I can't save myself, so right
now, once and for all, I trust You to save me. Come into my heart, forgive
my sin, and make me Your child. I give You my life. I will live for You as
You give me strength."
If you will make
this your heartfelt prayer, God will hear and save you! Jesus has promised that
He will not turn away anyone who comes to Him in faith (John
6:37). He will make you a child of God, if you will turn to Him (John
1:12).
Please write to
us at Love Worth Finding to let us know of your decision. We want to rejoice
with you and send you some literature to help you get started in your Christian
life.
Also, your decision
can be an encouragement to others.
Share your decision with others here.
Love Worth Finding
Ministries
P.O. Box 38300
Memphis, TN 38183
Phone: (901)
382-7900
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