IS IT POSSIBLE FOR TRUE FOLLOWERS OF JESUS, PEOPLE WHO HAVE GENUINELY PUT THEIR TRUST IN JESUS, TO LOSE THEIR SALVATION?
Many of us have fear that we will
lost our salvation. Some people fear strongly because they've committed “the
unpardonable sin” or they want to know the meaning of an admittedly confusing
passage like Hebrews (Heb. 6:1-8 and 10:26). The main issue always revolves
around the possibility that genuine believers can lose their salvation.
If this is your concern, rest assured. The Bible teaches that we are absolutely secure in our salvation, and we need never be worried or concerned about losing our redeemed relationship with God through Jesus the Messiah. The simple reason you can know that your salvation is secure is that it is based solidly on the unified work of the God-head—Father, Son and Holy Spirit. The saving work of each Person of the one true God allows us to be assured of our security in the Lord.
GOD THE FATHER
God Is Holy
We know that our salvation is
protected through God the Father’s work of gracious forgiveness. This is based
on three simple truths. First, we need to remember that God is completely holy
(see Lev. 11:44 and Isa. 6:3). In 1 John 1:5 it says, “God is Light, and in Him
there is no darkness at all.” This means God is completely righteous and there
is no evil in Him whatsoever. It shows the high standard we have to meet in order
to have a relationship with God. Imagine what it would be like to stand before
a judge who never has and never will sin. In fact, our God is One who only does
what is good and righteous.
We Are Sinful
This leads to a second biblical
truth: Humanity is utterly sinful. For example, Ecclesiastes 7:20 says,
“Indeed, there is not a righteous man on earth who continually does good and
who never sins.’ The Hebrew prophet Isaiah says “For all of us have become like
one who is unclean, and all our righteous deeds are like a filthy garment; and
all of us wither like a leaf, and our iniquities, like the wind, take us away”
(Isa. 64:6). He is saying that even the good that we do is not good enough for
God. This is why Paul says that we all sin and fall short of God's glory (Rom.
3:23). As a result, we are spiritually “dead in... trespasses and sins” (Eph.
2:1). How could any of us fallen and broken people ever expect to enter into a
relation-ship with a holy God?
Salvation Is by Grace Alone
The good news is that there is a
third simple truth: Salva-tion is entirely by God’s grace. One of the clearest
teachings of Scripture is that God’s forgiveness is a gift from Him. Ephesians
2:8—9 says, “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of
yourselves, it is the gift of God; not as a result of works, so that no one may
boast.” God the Father forgives because of His undeserved kindness. His gift of
salvation does not come from anything we do, but comes entirely from Him. How
can a holy God give such a gift?
The Bible reminds us that God’s
forgiveness is based entirely on His work and not ours. An important passage
that discusses this is Romans 3:24-28. It teaches that we are declared
righteous before God only by God’s grace through the redemption that is
available through the death and resurrection of the Lord Jesus. God
demonstrated that He is a just judge, a Holy God, who wouldn't overlook sin but
required a satisfying punishment for sin, a punishment paid for by God the Son,
the Lord Jesus. By forgiving us in this way, God would both be “righteous and
declare righteous the one who has faith in Jesus” (Rom. 3:26). Our
forgiveness and deliverance from the penalty of sin is entirely God's gracious
gift and God’s gracious work. Again, it is not from our effort or our individual
level of goodness.
So how does all of this result in
our security in the Lord? It’s simple. We did nothing to achieve our salvation.
In ourselves, we have no good works, no righteous deeds, no balancing act of
trying to do good more than bad. Our righteousness is all from God. Here is the
encouraging part: if we can do nothing good enough to obtain salvation, then we
can do nothing bad enough to lose it. Did you get that? It means that if we
can't earn our salvation by doing good, we cannot lose it by sinning. Our salvation
is entirely a work of God and therefore no human action can undo it.
GOD THE SON
Besides the work of the Father, we
are also spiritually protected because of God the Son's work in securing our
salvation. These biblical passages teach that the Lord Jesus keeps us safe in
God’s family in four ways.
The Messiah’s Obedience
First, the obedience of the Messiah
Jesus keeps us secure. In John 6:37-—40, the Lord Jesus said He will receive
us, keep us, and ultimately raise us in the last day. But let’s focus on what
He said of doing the Father’s will. “For I have come down from heaven, not to
do My will, but the will of Him who sent Me. This is the will of Him who sent
Me: that I should lose none of those He has given Me” (John 6:38-39). The
Son of God became a man in order to do the will of His Father. If just one time
the Lord Jesus failed to do His Father's will, then He would not be who He
claimed to be. The Lord Jesus staked His entire identity on always doing the
Father’s will. And what is one specific desire of His Father? Jesus tells us:
“that I should lose none of those He has given Me.” Our confidence in the
Messiah Jesus’ obedience to the Father should give us absolute certainty that
if we have come to Him, He will keep us absolutely safe.
The Messiah’s Grip
Second, the strong grip of the
Messiah Jesus keeps us secure. The Good Shepherd made this promise to those who
truly trust in Him: “No one will snatch them out of My hand. My Father, who has
given them to Me, is greater than all; and no one is able to snatch them out of
the Father’s hand” (John 10:28-29). The image the Lord uses is clear: He is
holding us in His hand, and we are safe in that. In fact, we are even more
secure because the Father guarantees His protection as well.
Example, when our son was a
toddler, and if we lived in a massive eight-lane street. When we crossed that
street with our little boy, we would grasp each of our son little hands, so
there was no way he could get away from us. Some have objected that while no
one can snatch us from our Savior’s hand, maybe we can escape ourselves. Well,
we can't snatch ourselves out of the Messiah's hand any more than my toddler
could have gotten away from his parents. If we have come to know Jesus, we are
held tightly in His grip.
The Messiah’s Love
A third way we're safe with the
Lord is the love of Messiah Jesus. Paul makes this abundantly clear in Romans
8:38-39: “For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor
principalities, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height,
nor depth, nor any other created thing, will be able to separate us from the
love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord” Nothing can separate us from
the Lord Jesus! Some may object saying, “Although nothing outside can separate
me from the Lord, I can separate myself from Him!” Just remember, we too are
created beings, and even we don't have the power to separate ourselves from the
love of God found in the Messiah Jesus.
The Messiah’s Intercession
Fourth, we are secure in the
intercession of our Messiah Jesus. If you're like me, you might think, I’m so
sinful and mess up so frequently, I certainly should be able to lose my
salvation. But no, Hebrews 7:25 says Jesus “always lives to make intercession
for” us to the Father. And in 1 John 2:1-2, we are told that even when we sin,
“we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous; and He
Himself is the propitiation [or satisfaction] for our sins.” Yes, we fail, but
we have a living Messiah Jesus, who is our intercessor and advocate with the
Father, who assures us we are forgiven. God the Son secures our salvation
through His obedience, grip, love, and intercession.
GOD THE HOLY SPIRIT
Yet a third reason for our security
is found in God the Holy Spirit's supernatural protection. The Holy Spirit’s
work begins at the moment of salvation when the Holy Spirit baptizes every
individual believer into the body of Christ. Paul writes, “For by one Spirit we
were all baptized into one body...” (1 Cor. 12:13). The word “baptize” here
means to “immerse” and this is saying that all believers are immersed or placed
into the universal body of all believers. Since this refers to all believers,
we know it must happen at the moment someone receives the Lord Jesus. The Holy
Spirit also indwells every believer at the moment of salvation. In Romans 8:9,
Paul says “the Spirit of God dwells in you” and that “if anyone does not have
the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him.”
Additionally, Paul reminds
believers that each believer is “a temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you” (1
Cor. 6:19). In addition, the Holy Spirit seals every believer. Paul writes,
“Having also believed, you were sealed in Him with the Holy Spirit of promise”
(Eph. 1:13). Furthermore, this sealing is “for the day of redemption” (Eph.
4:30). The idea of a seal is two-fold: identification and security. First, a
seal was used as an identifying mark on a letter or a package. Second, a seal
was put in place to provide security until the letter or package arrived, only
to be opened by the recipient. These verses in Ephesians say that the Holy
Spirit seals all believers to identify them as belonging to the Messiah Jesus
and to keep them safe ard secure until their day of redemption, when they stand
in the presence of their Lord. For anyone to lose his or her salvation, it
would be necessary to remove them from the universal body of believers, to
expel the Holy Spirit from His indwelling presence, and to break the
unbreakable seal of God on the believer.
FINAL THOUGHTS
The work of the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit, the triune God, assures us that we are secure in our salvation.
How should that affect our lives?
First, we can relax! That’s the
great news for anyone who feels like a spiritual failure or unworthy of
salvation. We are right in our assessment of ourselves but mistaken in our view
of God. We don’t become God's children by being good; we become His children
by entering into a forgiven relationship with God because of what the Lord has
done for us. He’s redeemed us by grace that is greater than all our sin.
Second, we can draw great comfort
from knowing we are safe in the hands of the Lord Jesus. As a dad, I always
assured my boys that I would always love them, always care for them, and they
would always be mine. Even if they abandoned every-thing I ever taught them and
did something terrible, I would still love them. Now as adults, they tell me
what a tremendous encouragement it was to know they were unconditionally loved.
How much more reassuring is it to
know that the Lord Jesus will always keep us secure in His love? Third, we need
to respond to God's gift of gracious security by living holy lives, reflecting
that we are sons and daughters of the King.
We won't choose to sin more and
more to get more and more of His grace (Rom. 6:1-4). Rather, we recognize what
He has done for us in redeeming us and so we'll live for the Lord Jesus, to
bring honor to His name.

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