No 10
(The Security of the Believer)
Salvation is a gift of God (John 3 :16) and He sovereignly bestows it on whom He chooses (2 Thess 2 : 13). Therefore,
it stands to reason that this gift cannot be lost; to lose it would be to say
that God made a mistake and chose the wrong person or He is incapable of “keeping
us” saved. When Jude began writing
his epistle, he addresses “them that are sanctified by God the Father and
preserved in Jesus Christ, and called” (Jude 1). Some versions of the Bible use the word “kept”
instead of preserved; in other words, once a person is saved, he or she is kept
or preserved by Jesus Christ. Sounds
pretty good to me…..then why is there so much controversy about losing or
keeping our salvation? Personally, I believe
that this stems from either ignorance of the Scriptures or from a desire to
deliberately confuse believers when it comes to this foundational doctrine of
the Christian faith. The former comes
from laziness to understand the Word of God and the latter is the work of
Satan. There are two main schools of
thought when we speak of losing salvation : 1) One group believes that a person can be
saved but can lose his or her salvation if he or she continues in sin; 2) Another group believes that if a Christian
turns from God and continues in sin, it’s probably because he or she was never
saved in the first place. I have a major
problem with both these points of view – the first is unscriptural and the
second is a cop-out. I sincerely believe
that a person can be saved and fall into sin so deeply that he or she are of no
use to God; as a matter of fact, they can even be a hindrance to His work. In John’s first epistle, a provision is given
for confession and forgiveness; this passage is addressed to believers. “If we confess our sins, He is faithful
and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness”
(1 John 1: 9). When God saves someone,
it is forever.