SALVATION-ASSURANCE-FALSE
We all know
so many who "know" they are Christians, because they were baptized as
infants or as adults for that matter. The same is true of countless people who
have "walked the aisle." They were assured that if they would
"come forward" and "make a decision" they could be saved.
They came, and there some well-intentioned personal worker convinced them that
because they came and answered "yes" to the various questions and
then prayed "the sinner's prayer" that now they are saved and no one
should ever make them doubt it! Then they left. And
they went back to the same old life they had. They made no real public
profession of Christ, but because they did as they were instructed they
"know" they are safe. This is a needless problem which we have created.
Fred G. Zaspel
The
"Altar Call" - Is it helpful or harmful? Published by Word of Life
Baptist Church, Pottsville, PA, 1998, All rights
reserved.
The vague and
tenuous hope that God is too kind to punish the ungodly has become a deadly
opiate for the consciences of millions.
A.W. Tozer
There is
nothing in the world that works such satanic, profound, God-defiant pride as
false assurance; nothing works such utter humility, or brings to such utter
self-emptiness, as the child-like spirit of true assurance.
A.A. Hodge
Assurance
There is a
kind of cavalier attitude toward our security today. There is little trembling.
Little vigilance and earnestness and caution and watchfulness
over our souls. There is a kind of casual, slack, careless attitude
toward the possibility that we might make shipwreck of our faith and fail to
lay hold on eternal life. We have the notion that security is a kind of
mechanical, automatic thing. We prayed once to receive Jesus. We are safe and
there is not place for "working out your
salvation with fear and trembling" (Philippians 2:12).
John Piper
When Is It Dangerous to Look at Jesus? June 15, 2005, Fresh Words, Used by Permission, www.DesiringGod.org.
It is crystal clear that a mental assent to the Gospel will
save no one, nor will a mere empty profession of faith in Christ. So many
flatter themselves that they are born again because they have been baptized,
joined some “church of their choice” received the Lord’s supper who do not have
a keen and humbling sense of sin. Professing to be Christians, they are filled
with a vain and presumptuous confidence that all is well with their souls,
deluding themselves with hopes of mercy while continuing to live in a course of
self-will and self-pleasing.
I.C. Herendeen
Accepting Christ.
Many
professed Christians – and even many true Christians – hold a false doctrine of
assurance. Often it is because the person who witnessed to them told them that
all they had to do was make a profession of faith, walk an aisle, raise a hand,
say a prayer, and never doubt what the Lord had done in their lives. Perhaps
they have been taught that to ever doubt their salvation is to doubt God’s Word
and integrity. Unfortunately, many evangelists, pastors, and personal workers
attempt to certify a person’s salvation apart from the convicting work of the
Holy Spirit and the evidence of fruit with continuance in obedience to the Word
(John 8:31). But we have no right to assure a person of something we cannot be
certain is true. God’s own Holy Spirit will witness His reality to those who
truly belong to Him (Rom. 8:14-16). Peter makes clear that one’s calling and
choosing are made secure by increasing qualities of fruitfulness that
demonstrate the genuineness of salvation and eliminate stumbling over doubt (2
Pet. 1:3-11). And our Lord teaches that some people appear saved, but are not
(see Matt. 13: 20-21). Quick and easy assurance can deceive.
John MacArthur
Matthew
1-7, Moody, 1985, p. 475-476.