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Believers Who Play With Fire Get Burned
John 15:6
by Bob Wilkin
If anyone does not abide in Me, he is cast out as a branch and
is withered; and they gather them and throw them into the fire,
and they are burned.
In this section of the Upper Room Discourse (15:1-8), Jesus
illustrates discipleship using the metaphor of growing grapes.
Jesus presents Himself as the true vine (v 1). Believers are
likened to the branches on the vine. God the Father is compared
to the one who cultivates the branches so that they produce much
fruit.
Abiding in Christ results in bearing spiritual fruit (v 5).
There is no such thing as one who abides in Him who doesn't bear
fruit. And, there is no way to bear fruit without abiding in Him.
The language of v 6 is indeed frightening. The non-abiding
person is "cast out as a branch," and then gathered and
"thrown into the fire, and . . . burned"!
Three of the main interpretations of this verse are: (1)
Unfruitful believers lose their salvation and they spend eternity
in hell. (2) Unfruitful believers prove that they are merely
professing believers and not true believers and
they spend eternity in hell. (3) Unfruitful believers experience
temporal judgment.
The Loss of Salvation View
The loss of salvation view contradicts John 10:27-29, Rom
8:38-39, and many other passages which teach that believers
cannot lose their salvation. It is thus an impossible view.
The Lack of Salvation View
While the lack of salvation view does not contradict eternal
security--at least not explicitly--it does not match up with the
particulars of the passage. For one thing, there were no
unbelievers present to hear what Jesus was saying (cf. 13:30). He
was talking only to believers, to those whom He had just said
were clean (v 4; cf. 13:10).
In addition, only believers are commanded (or able) to abide
in Christ (v 4). Unbelievers do not have that which is necessary
to abide: spiritual life.
Finally, the second view is also contradicted by other
passages which assert that failure is possible in the Christian
life (cf. 1 Cor 3:3; 11:30; Gal 6:1ff.; James 5:19-20). The idea
that genuine Christians always abide in Christ is something
foreign to Scripture.
The Temporal Judgment View
The temporal judgment view fits the particulars of the passage,
is consistent with the rest of Scripture, and upholds the
doctrine of eternal security.
Jesus was speaking to and about believers, ones who are clean
(v 4). It is such people who are commanded to abide and yet may
fail to do so.
Fire is a common metaphorin Scripture for both temporal and
eternal judgment. Of course, since genuine believers are in view
as we have seen, then temporal judgment must be meant here.
Believers have passed from death to life and will never come into
judgment (John 5:24; cf. John 3:18).
That fire can refer to the temporal judgment of genuine
believers is beyond question (cf. Lev 10:2; 1 Cor 3:10-15; Heb
6:7-8; 10:27; Jude 23). In fact, even some Lordship Salvation
advocates take this interpretation of our verse. James Montgomery
Boice writes, "Burning is not always used of hell, as the
passage in 1 Corinthians about works [1 Cor 3:10-15] proves. And
it is its association with the destruction of useless works
rather than with the loss of salvation that is most appropriate
in this passage" (The Gospel of John, 5 vols, vol 4,
p. 238).
A common practice of viticulture then and now is the pruning
and burning of unproductive branches. Its application to
unproductive believers can be easily seen. God chastens those
believers who persist in willful disobedience. There are many
biblical examples of this very thing (Lev 10:1-7; Ps 32:3-5; Acts
5:111; 1 Cor 11:30; see also, Heb 12:3-11; James 5:20).
It is probably wrong to conclude that the expression
"they are burned" refers specifically to physical
death. That expression is a translation of the last word in the
Greek sentence, kaietai. Had the Lord unequivocally meant
that unfruitful believers experience premature physical death, a
related Greek verb could easily have been employed by John. If
the text had read katakaietai, the meaning would have
been, "they are burned up." Since John chose the
softer verb, it is probable that the Lord was referring generally
to temporal judgment (which could ultimately result in premature
physical death).
We must remember, of course, that not all suffering is because
one is under God's chastening hand. There are many reasons,
including persecution as in the case of our Lord and the
Apostles, character-production (cf. James 1:2-12), testimony to
the unsaved, and revelation of the glory of God (John 9:1-2ff).
There is no biblical formula telling us how to determine if we
are under God's chastening hand or not. However, a good rule to
follow is this: if you are suffering, and you are aware of
unconfessed sin in your life, then confess and forsake it
immediately. On the other hand, if you are unaware of any such
sin in your life and you are, to the best of your knowledge,
walking with Christ, then pray and ask the Lord to show you if
you are overlooking something. Unless something comes to your
attention, you can reasonably conclude that your difficulties are
not due to some sin in your life.
Conclusion
The grace of God is not a license to sin. Rather, it is a
powerful motivation to please God by bearing much fruit.
Believers who play with fire will get burned. Sin is fire. Fiery
judgment awaits the unfruitful, non-abiding believer.
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