Do You Know Our View on Assurance of Salvation?
By Bob Wilkin
Pastor
We notified our readership of this clarification in several ways. First,
we posted our new Affirmations online and indicated that they were revised.
Second, we sent a copy of the revised Affirmations to all of the churches, over
300 at the time, on our Grace Church Tracker list. Third, we published a number
of articles in our journal and in this newsletter which clearly explained the
major point of clarification on assurance. Fourth, we spoke on this
clarification in our regional and national conferences.
However, Fred has recently expressed concerns to the
Here is the key clarification we made: “Assurance is
of the essence of believing in Jesus
for everlasting life. That is, as long as a person believes in Jesus for
everlasting life, he knows he has everlasting life (John
In other words, until a person believes that what he has received from
the Lord Jesus is permanent and cannot be lost, whether he understands that as
eternal life, salvation, or living forever with Him in His kingdom, he is not
yet born again. A person
cannot believe in Christ alone for his eternal destiny and also believe that he
must do something to keep it.
Let’s say that you are witnessing to someone and he indicates that he
has come to faith in Christ as a result of what you’ve said. To make sure he
really got it, you ask him this diagnostic question: “What if you leave here and
you fail to live your life for Christ; you don’t join and attend a church; you
don’t read the Bible; and instead you become an alcoholic and a womanizer and
then next year you commit suicide? What would your eternal destiny be then?” If
the person said, “Oh, well then I’d go to hell,” you would know that the person
didn’t understand. By His death on the cross the Lord Jesus took away the sins
of the world (John
Of course, this is, in some ways, a radical doctrine
today. It means that there are lots of
very religious “Christians” who are unregenerate and who need to be born again.
It means that we should be witnessing to people who are active church members.
We ought to even be witnessing to seminary students, missionaries,
This wasn’t a radical thought in the early 70s when I came to faith. At
that time everyone I knew who was involved in Campus Crusade was concerned for
and witnessed to Roman Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, and all flavors of
Protestants. We never assumed that because someone was religious or a member of
a church that they were born again.
It should be noted that someone may have believed Jesus’ promise of
eternal life at some point earlier in their life and then become confused. So
when I hear a person give an answer that indicates they feel they must live a
good life to stay saved, I conclude there are either unregenerate or they are a
born-again person who has become confused. Either way, I share the saving
message with them.
A friend of mine, Pastor Hugh Crowder of
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