
If
you aren't a churchy person, you might be
asking, "saved from what?" You may have
heard a street preacher shouting "Jesus Saves" and
thought to yourself, "Is Jesus a soccer goalie
now?" Thankfully, the Bible answers these
questions by not only telling us to get saved.
It describes in detail why we need to be saved
and what it is we need to be saved from.
Reading the following verses will show that
"saved" isn't just a churchy word, it is a
thoroughly biblical word (I Thessalonians 1:10,
II Thessalonians 1:5-10, Colossians 3:5-6, II
Peter 3:10-13). These verses seem to spell
out in bold terms that we are in grave need of
being saved from God's wrath. So before we
begin talking about how to be saved, you need to
realize that you cannot pick up the Bible and
read it long without being told why you need to
be saved. Contrary to what a lot of
preachers may tell you, not wanting to offend
anyone in our politically correct climate,
"It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of
the living God" (Hebrews 10:31).
I
like to
call the following explanation of how to be
saved: The Radical Romans Road to
Salvation because most of the verses come
from the book of Romans. Even when they do
not you will notice that every point is derived
from the Bible. For this reason you ought
to read it with a Bible in hand so that you can
look up these verses and read them in their
original context. This way you won't have
to take my word for it (If you are too lazy to
go find a Bible, just go to
www.gnpcb.org,
and read the Bible online. Then go to "browse"
and type in any verse you want to look up).
Let
us say
your neighbor started yelling outside your
front door claiming that a hurricane was coming.
You wouldn't just jump in the car and evacuate
would you? No! You would check it
out first to see if he had his facts straight
via the news, the internet, reliable friends etc. In the
same way, I am telling you that you need to be
saved from the hurricane of God's righteous
wrath. That is a serious claim.
Don't just accept it, and more importantly,
don't just reject it as the claim of some
fanatical preacher. Take the time to read
the verses I am giving you and corroborate it
with God's Word.
Remember the simple acrostic:
S.A.V.E.D.
"S" is for SIN
The
Bible says that
"All have sinned and fallen short of God's
glory" (Romans 3:23). This verse
is telling us plainly that we have all messed
up. We have fallen short of the standard
God has set for
us. So you might ask, "What does God
expect from someone like me?" Jesus
answers this question by
saying that to break just one of God's
commandments is to fall short of God's glory.
God demands nothing short of perfection (Matthew
5:19-20, 48, James 2:10). This puts all of
us in a pretty tight spot because all of us have
broken God's commandments at some point in our
lives. However, our situation is much
worse than simply breaking one of God's commands
because the Bible tells us that we have a sinful
human nature that impulsively breaks God's
commands (Jeremiah 13:23, Matthew 15:19-21).
To prove this, let's just line your life up to
the Ten Commandments and see how well you do:
"Honor thy father and thy mother"
(Exodus
20:12). Sure, you can say that you have
always honored your father and mother, just list
their phone number as a reference first.
If you say that you have always honored
everything your father and mother ever said,
you've also broken the ninth commandment:
"Thou shalt not lie" (Exodus 20:16).
If you have ever dishonored what your father or
mother have said at any point in your life you
are guilty of breaking the fifth commandment.
You might call someone who dishonors their
parents "rebellious."
"Thou shalt not murder" (Exodus 20:13).
Jesus interpreted this by saying that to be
angry with your brother was to murder him in
your heart. He also follows this up by
telling us that to verbally insult someone was
to murder them with our words (Matthew 5:21-22).
We even talk of character assassination.
So if you can admit that you have ever been
angry with someone without immediately going to
him to be reconciled; or if you will admit that
you have chewed somebody out, you are admittedly
guilty of breaking the sixth commandment.
What do we call someone who commits murder; even
just one murder? A murderer, right?
So far we have proven you to be a rebellious
murderer.
"Thou shalt not commit adultery" (Exodus
20:14). Jesus interpreted this by saying
that to look upon a woman in lust was to commit
adultery with her already in your heart (Matthew
5:27-28). I may not be able to speak for
my female members of the human race with much
authority. But I am pretty confident that
if you are a fellow man, you have at some point
fallen flat on your face when it comes to this
one. What do we call someone who commits
adultery? An adulterer, right? So
now we have proven you to be a rebellious
murdering adulterer.
That is just three out of the Ten Commandments
and already, every one of us is shamefully
exposed as guilty. But just in case you
have any doubt as to whether anyone alive today
can escape the verdict of "guilty", Romans 3:19
clearly affirms that God's law was given so that the whole
world would be proven to be "guilty."
What is even more tough is that God not only
demands perfection, but the consequences of not
measuring up to perfection is death (Romans
6:23). Ironically, most people think God
will somehow overlook the fact that they are
worthy of death and slip them a Get Out of Jail
Free card. But God's law isn't a Monopoly
game; He takes it serious. Only when you humble yourself to
understand that you are deserving of death will
you ever appreciate God's gift of life.
You might use the excuse that "God made me this
way. God created me with this desire to
sin, therefore he cannot hold me accountable for
sin." The Bible, however, removes this
excuse by teaching that when God created Adam
and placed him in the Garden, his nature was
beautiful and upright in the sight of God: "God
looked upon the man he had made and said,
Behold, it is very good" (Genesis 1:31).
However, when tempted to eat of the forbidden
fruit, man willfully chose to reject God's law
in order to set up his own law. Solomon
explained this saddening event well, "Behold, I
have found only this, that God made men upright,
but they have sought out many devices"
(Ecclesiastes 7:29). This verse tells us
that God's creation of man was not flawed.
God's design for man was perfect and beautiful.
Yet, it was man that turned that beauty into
ugliness the moment he sinned in the Garden of
Eden.
Because Adam was the first man and the father of
the human race, his sin was accounted as the sin
of all humanity. So inevitably All have sinned
and fall short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23,
also 5:12). No one can exclude themselves
from this group; we all bear the curse of sin.
The surest evidence of how widespread the
epidemic of sin has become is death.
Statistics tell us that 100 out of every 100
people die. Romans 5:12 tells us why this is the
case, "Therefore, just as through one man sin
entered into the world, and death through sin,
and so death spread to all men, because (in
Adam) all sinned."
However, as bad as physical death is, our
physical death is only an foretaste of a greater
spiritual death to come. You might ask, "How can
someone die when he has already died once?"
Revelation 21:8 answers this question well:
"But for the cowardly and unbelieving and
abominable and murderers and immoral persons and
sorcerers and idolaters and all liars, their
part will be in the lake that burns with fire
and brimstone, which is the second death."
The second death according to the Bible is
none other than Hell.
"A"
is for ASLEEP
Sin
has lulled us all
into a comatose sleep leaving us unable to
respond to God's voice according to Romans
8:7-8. The Bible not only speaks of this
condition as a sleep (Ephesians 5:14), but it
also describes it as "death" because of the fact
that we are out of touch with the reality
of our sinful condition and prevented from
being able to respond obediently to God's law
(Ephesians 2:1-3). Romans 3:11 tells us
just how out of touch we are when it says:
"There is none who understands, there is none
who seeks for God" (Romans 3:11).
Contrary to this, we
often hear people claim that they are seeking to
find God. But this verse tells us we are
completely oblivious to God until He intervenes
by waking us out of sleep and raising us from
the dead. For this reason the Bible says says,
"Awake, sleeper, And arise from the dead, And
Christ will shine on you" (Ephesians 5:14).
Notice that this verse speaks of sleep as
synonymous with death. To be spiritually dead
means that we have no ability to please God,
much less the ability to save ourselves.
Romans 8:7-8
tells us that we are in such a comatose state
that none of us have the ability to rouse
ourselves to understanding the reality of God;
we are hopelessly unable to respond to God in
the same way that a dead man is hopelessly
unable to respond to you no matter how loudly
you may shout.
So
before
we come to know Christ, we must humbly admit our
inability to save ourselves and confess that the
only way for us to be saved is for God to
resurrect us from the dead (Ephesians 2:1,
Colossians 2:13, Romans 6:4). What I am
saying may go against every bone of pride in
your body because you have always thought that
somehow you can be good enough for God.
But in light of all we have mentioned, your only
hope of salvation is to know that God does not
accept the proud;"God resists the proud, but
gives grace to the lowly" (Psalm 138:6).
"V" is for VITALITY
Anyone can receive vitality by turning to
Christ. We have all been given the death
sentence because of our sin according to Romans
6:23. But the same verse goes on to tell
us that the gift of God is vitality. That
is: "eternal life through Jesus Christ our
Lord."
Jesus once said: "I am the resurrection and
the life: he that believeth in me, though he
were dead, yet shall he live" (John 11:25).
When we believe in Jesus this promise stands
true. He resurrects us from the dead and
gives us new life so that we can live that life
for Him. The Bible says: "For the love
of Christ controls us, having concluded this,
that one died for all, therefore all died; and
He died for all, that they who live should no
longer live for themselves, but for Him who died
and rose again on their behalf" (2
Corinthians 5:14-15).
"E" is for EXCHANGE
Salvation is really a barter or exchange.
You must
exchange your sin for the righteousness of
Christ (Romans 5:17): The fact that Christ died
on a cross is the supreme example of the fact
that God could not overlook sin. The sin
that all of us have committed must be punished
according to Scripture (Hebrews 9:22).
Sin is such a big deal to God that He cannot
simply forgive it, wipe it under the rug, and
let bygones be bygones. When God's law is broken
the glory of His name is at stake. The
bible says that His name must be vindicated
(Hebrews 10:29-30).
Somebody has to suffer the punishment that for
our disregard for His law That is why Jesus died
on the Cross. He literally paid the penalty for
sin that we all deserved. Think about how
amazing this is: Instead of us dying on a Cross,
or in Hell, Christ died in our place. This
is exactly what the Bible tells us: "But he
was wounded for our transgressions, he was
bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of
our peace was upon him; and with His stripes we
are healed" (Isaiah 53:5).
The burden of sin is a weight that none of us
can bear; we will inevitably be crushed and
spend eternity in Hell if we insist on keeping
it in our possession (Luke 20:18). But
thank God Christ bore that weight of sin for us
when He died upon the Cross.
When you believe on His name, your sins do not
just disappear; they are not swept under the
rug. They nailed Christ to the Cross.
Christ taking your sin on the Cross is only the
first part of the exchange in salvation.
The exchange isn't complete until He gives you
His own righteousness. Jesus lived on the
earth for thirty three years and never sinned
because He made it His joy to glorify the father
(John 17:5). Such righteousness is a gift
we could never earn; it is a gift only Christ
can give because only Christ lived a perfect
life (Hebrews 4:15, 7:25).
Once Christ completes the exchange by giving you
his own righteousness,
God no longer sees the shame of your sin and
nakedness. He no longer sees the ugliness of
your law-breaking heart; He sees only the
perfect righteousness of His son Jesus Christ.
There is one person in the universe that God
accepts; His son, Jesus. And when you
trust Christ, God accepts you just as He accepts
the Son.
Romans 5:17 explains well this gift of
righteousness: "For if by the transgression
of the one, death reigned through the one, much
more those who receive the abundance of grace
and of the gift of righteousness will reign in
life through the One, Jesus Christ."
Sin once reigned in all of our hearts, but sin
is dethroned and righteousness reigns when we
receive His gift of life.
"D"
is for DECIDE
All must decide (Romans 8:6). You must
decide who you will serve. Jesus once
said, "No man can serve two masters; for
either he will hate the one and love the other,
or he will hold to one and despise the other . .
." (Matthew 6:24). You cannot continue to
cherish your sin and embrace Christ.
Are
you going to trust Christ and reject your sin.
Or are you going to reject Christ to embrace
your sin?
You might be thinking to yourself, "I love my
sin. I don't know how I'll ever stop doing
it." Certainly, when we come to Christ
there is a cost, and that cost is everything.
"If any man will come after me, let him deny
himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me"
(Matthew 16:24). To deny yourself means that you
are willing to give up everything to have a
relationship with Him. It means we will
view Christ and His kingdom as a treasure hidden
in a field, which a man found and hid; and from
joy over it he goes and sells all that he has,
and buys that field (Matthew 13:44). All
must decide; and the decision is not only
between Christ and sin, it is between life and
death: "For to be carnally minded is death;
but to be spiritually minded is life and peace"
(Romans 8:6). This verse is simply telling
us that if we continue to live a life of sin our
end will be death.
You
can pray
now and ask God to save you:
1. Admit to God that you are a sinner.
2. Confess to God that you have been asleep, and
are unable to save yourself.
3. Ask God to give you new life and vitality
just as He gave Christ new vitality when He
raised Him from the
dead.
4. Ask God to take away your sin in exchange for
Christ's perfect righteousness.
5. Explain to God that you have decided to turn
from your sin and to live for Him. (You
cannot turn from your
sin by your own power. But the Holy Spirit will empower
you the moment you believe. Read Acts
1:8).
If you just prayed and asked God to forgive you
of your sins, send me an email so that I can
thank God for your decision:
jeremy@TrueNorthBaptistChurch.org.
I would like to contact you and encourage
you in the faith. You should know that
while it is important that you pray and ask God
to save you, no prayer is going to be proof that
you are saved. Rather, the proof will be
found in a changed life because when God enters
your life, you will never be the same.
Go to the menu button that says: "Am I Saved?"
It will give you several tests to determine
whether your life is truly changed and may serve
as a guide as you grow in Christ. Below is
a good book I would recommend to any new
believer. It is by one of my favorite
teachers, John MacArthur:
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