Saturday, September 6, 2014

The Genuine & the False



The Genuine & the False
By Pastor Timothy S. Adkins

In some circles every profession of belief in Jesus is regarded as transformative and saving. Even if there is more evidence that a person’s encounter with Jesus did neither of those things, a profession of belief is just not something to be questioned. No matter how little of the essential gospel a person has heard and understood and believed, his declaration of faith in Jesus is beyond question. It is thought rude at the very least to doubt the genuineness of another person’s professed belief. After all, who are we to say? So the thinking goes.

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2 Peter 1
But also for this very reason, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue, to virtue knowledge, to knowledge self-control, to self-control perseverance, to perseverance godliness, to godliness brotherly kindness, and to brotherly kindness love. For if these things are yours and abound, you will be neither barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. For he who lacks these things is shortsighted, even to blindness, and has forgotten that he was cleansed from his old sins. 10 Therefore, brethren, be even more diligent to make your call and election sure, for if you do these things you will never stumble; 11 for so an entrance will be supplied to you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
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Is it possible for someone to be fatally mistaken? Does it ever happen that loved ones and friends assure us that we are fine when, truth is, we are dying? Imagine a young man has developed a certainly-fatal disease. There is a cure, but only one. Instead, he takes two aspirin and declares that he feels much better and everything will be just fine. Friends and loved ones assume he has taken the one proven treatment; he said he did. But he continues to manifest the same symptoms and appears to be getting worse and none the better. Because they love him and hope for the best, and so as to not discourage him, no one points out the obvious—he is still gravely ill and is visibly declining at a rapid pace. He has not been cured. His belief that all will be well is a delusion. He will die soon. Is it love to maintain silence? Is it love to quietly repose while our friend slumbers in a burning house? Now, if you can, think spiritually…

Consider. Once a lady told me of the night when her son, not yet ten, asked her to pray with him at his bedside. With glistening eyes she told of her precious little boy praying to accept Jesus and how he was soon after baptized and received as a member of the church. It is not something in the man’s life now that comforts her about his spiritual state, it is the memory of his praying when he was a little boy.

Now in his forties, at least once-married, once-divorced and the father of two little boys, at the time I heard this account he was living with a woman not his wife. A nice-enough fellow for sure, but his life provides no sound evidence of a saving belief in Jesus or an evident love for Him. The evidence of his life suggests that his childhood prayer, while quite sincere at the time, was not a transforming, saving encounter with the living Christ. The evidence more than suggests that he is yet a stranger to the saving power of Jesus.

One sad thing is that it never occurs to this woman that her precious son, who lives the life of a worldly man and not the life of a Christian man, might actually be a worldly man who does not know or love Jesus Christ. Sadder still, because she so fondly recalls the night when her sweet little boy prayed, she comforts herself by the memory. But she never calls on her son to cease his sinful rebellion against God and to turn to Christ in humble repentance and be saved by believing the gospel—she is convinced he is already a once-saved-always-saved man who is just not living it at the moment. His life seems pretty normal as lives go these days, but there is nothing that should cause anyone to seriously think that this man loves Jesus Christ and wants to please Him. And if that is true, the reality is that the young man is a never-has-been-saved man who is still perishing in his sins, a nice fellow though he be.

This story is no isolated incident. Untold multitudes are perishing in their sins, having once prayed at their bedsides or elsewhere, having been baptized and become members of a church. If only we truly believed the gospel, we would know that when one actually comes to know and love Christ as Savior and Lord, he will begin to live as a believer lives—imperfectly, yes, but as a believer and not as a worldly man.

When anyone, young or old, professes to believe the gospel, we must look for gospel fruit in their lives. We must look for it in our own lives. Our Lord once said, “You will know them by their fruits.” No gospel fruit means no spiritual life is present to produce it. The presence of consistently bad fruit means the bad fruit grows on a bad tree. The presence of consistently good fruit indicates that the fruit is produced by a good tree. Real and saving belief in Jesus Christ, the Son of God, the only Savior produces definite results.

Is it possible for someone to think he has obeyed the gospel when he hasn’t? Is it possible for a person to think he is a real Christian and be fatally mistaken? The answer is yes. Jesus once said, “Many will say to Me in that day, ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?’ And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness!’” (Matthew 7:22-23).

Could someone assume that he is one of God’s elect without a biblical reason for believing so? Again, the answer is yes. The only biblically sure reason for anyone to believe that he is one of God’s elect is that he has come to Christ, believing in Him with heart and soul. How do we correctly distinguish the elect from the non-elect? The elect come to Jesus. The non-elect do not come to Jesus. But here we must be careful. Here we must be sure. We must ask, “Have I been born of God?”

The Apostle Simeon Peter addressed people who, all of them, professed to belong to God’s church, Christ’s called-out-assembly: “Therefore, brethren, be even more diligent to make your call and election sure…” (2 Peter 1:10a). People may wrongly assume that they are true Christians when they are not, so this is something about which we all need to be absolutely sure! And the only way to be sure is to examine ourselves.

Do you know for certain that you have given your entire self to Jesus Christ—trusting only in His saving merits, relying entirely on His grace through a naked, empty-handed belief? Augustas Toplady once wrote in the hymn Rock of Ages, “Nothing in my hand I bring, simply to Thy cross I cling.” Do you know what that means? Be sure you do. Your eternity depends on it. –TSA