Secure Forever! God’s Promise or Our
Perseverance?. By Thomas M. Cucuzza.
I love the title. Is being secure forever contingent merely on God being faithful to His promise, or on us faithfully persevering to the end of our lives?
Cucuzza, a Free Grace Pastor in
After laying out the difference in the two positions in the first chapter, the book essentially covers two issues: the eternality of salvation once received by faith alone apart from works (Chapter 2) and the dangers associated with teaching salvation by perseverance (Chapters 3-6).
Chapter 2 is excellent. Covering thirty pages, it is also one of the longest chapters in the book.
Cucuzza mentions Lordship Salvation on a number of occasions and shows why it is unbiblical and dangerous. He quotes from some of the leaders of that movement including MacArthur, Sproul, and Piper.
I wish the author had been a bit clearer on one point.
Cucuzza’s favorite statement for the condition of eternal life is
trusting in Jesus as Savior (e.g.,
pp. 22, 26, 27, 31, 33, 40, 49). What he means by this is not clearly developed,
though this statement suggests an answer: “When we believe in what Christ die
for us on the cross, we are baptized by the Holy Spirit into the body of Christ”
(p. 38). Yet a page later he says something different, “We need to trust Him
and believe what He says about our
eternal home” (p. 40, italics added). In light of the title of the book, and
the discussion on pages 40-41 (“Is it [the promise of everlasting life that
can’t be lost] true or not?”), Cucuzza seems to be saying that if we trust that
Jesus dealt with our sin problem at Calvary, then we are eternally saved since
such trust necessarily includes believe Jesus’ promise of a secure eternal home.
I recommend this book.
Robert N.
Wilkin
Editor
Journal of the
Grace Evangelical Society