
The Perseverance of the Saints
Part Two
John G. Reisinger
In our first article we mentioned that the doctrine of the
Perseverance of the Saints as it was taught by our forefathers and the
doctrine of Eternal Security as taught by most evangelicals today are two
radically different things. We insisted that we must begin any discussion
of perseverance by defining what it means to be a true child of God. It is
impossible to discuss whether one can be saved and then lost if we are not
agreed on what it means to be saved in the first place. One cannot lose
something one never possessed in the first place.
Several things should be obvious by this time. When we ask a person if
he is a Christian, we are not asking him if he is a Baptist, Presbyterian,
Catholic, Methodist, etc. It is possible that a person can be any one
these and be a truly converted person, and likewise it is also possible to
be any one of these and be as lost as the Devil. No one is a Christian
because he is a Baptist or Catholic nor is anyone excluded from
heaven only because they are a Presbyterian or a Methodist. The question,
"Are you a Christian" is the same as asking, "Are you in Christ." We know
that not all Presbyterians are saved nor are all Baptists. Not everyone
who goes forward in an evangelistic meeting and prays 'the sinners prayer'
truly receives Christ in saving faith. We keep insisting that the three
elements of Romans 6:17 must be present in some degree before there
is true conversion.
We are not just insisting on correct doctrine as if mentally believing
the true gospel brought you into Christ. Paul's words in 1 Thessalonians
1:4, 5 should be written in golden letters across every pulpit.
Knowing, brethren beloved, your election of God. For our gospel
came not unto you in word only, but also in power, and in the Holy
Ghost, and in much assurance; as ye know what manner of men we were
among you for your sake (1 Thes. 1:4, 5).
In verse four Paul expresses his assurance that these people are truly
part of God's elect. What made him so sure? Some would think he had seen
their baptismal certificate; others would suggest they saw these people
walk down the aisle to the altar; and still others might say, "These
people are all Calvinists who understand sovereign grace." Paul was sure
these people were part of the elect because of the gracious and powerful
effect that the gospel had on them. There are several truths in this
passage that demand a clear understanding.
First of all, Paul said the "gospel came not in word only." It
is vital that we realize that the gospel always comes in words. It does
not come in dreams, dramas, visions, or through the waters of baptism or
communion cups. The gospel always comes in words or clear facts of
history. The gospel is a story and must come to us in words that teach us
the true story. However, the intellect can sincerely receive the
information in the words and never receive the person of Christ Himself.
That is why Paul adds to "not only in words" the truth that the gospel
words declared were accompanied by the power of the Holy Spirit. Stated
another way not only was the mind illuminated by the truth, the Holy
Spirit also applied that truth to the heart and affections. The result was
assurance and a wholehearted desire to follow the disciple's teaching.
One of the key texts is 1 Peter 1:5, "Who are kept by the power of God
through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time."
Notice the following:
God's people are kept persevering in faith and none of them
will ever be lost.
They are kept in this good work by God's power, not their own
efforts.
They are kept through, signifying the means used, not
because of their faith.
This is not inconsistent with the exhortations in verses 13–16.
The whole process begins with sovereign election in verse
2.
I mentioned earlier that until recently there were only two views on
the subject of perseverance and now there is a third view. Perhaps it
would be good to spell these views out clearly. I remember preaching a
sermon entitled, "You are saved as long as you believe." I was with a
group of university students and a young lady come up after the message
and said, "Mr. Reisinger, you don't believe the Bible." I don't know why
people are always saying that. Just because you don't agree with my
interpretation does not mean that I don't believe the Bible. Most of the
time when people say, "You don't believe the Bible," what they really mean
is "you don't believe my interpretation of the Bible." There is a man in
Tennessee who is convinced I am not saved because I speak of "our Arminian
brethren." He writes long letters warning me of my lost estate. He cannot
see that he has placed his particular understanding of truth on the same
level as inspiration. The poor man's entire theology is, in his eyes, just
as verbally inspired as the Bible itself.
The young lady mentioned above said, "You don't believe in eternal
security." I replied, "I do not know what that phrase means to you." I
learned a long time ago that labels mean ten different things to ten
different people so I'm not about to say yes or no to any label until one
tells me what that specific label means to them. I asked, "What do you
mean by 'eternal security'"? She opened her Bible and ran her finger over
John 10:27–28. When she reached the "eternal life/never perish" part, she
thumped the Bible with her finger and asked, "Do you believe that?" In
response I asked, "Are you telling me that this verse means that not one
of Christ's sheep can ever perish because they are all guaranteed eternal
life?" She replied quite emphatically, "That's exactly what the verse is
saying!" I replied, "Do you mean God gives everyone of His sheep,
without a single exception. eternal life and it is absolutely
impossible for even one of them to perish." The young lady said,
"That's what the text says."
I looked at the text for a few moments in silence and then asked her,
"Who are His sheep?" She said, "What do you mean?" I asked again, "Who are
these sheep who can never perish? Is everybody who comes down the aisle
and comes forward in a church meeting a sheep with eternal life? Is
everybody that has been baptized a sheep? Is everybody who has ever been
led to make a confession of faith certain of never perishing because they
have everlasting life?" To each of these questions she slowly answered,
"No." I repeated, "Alright then, exactly who are these sheep that have
everlasting life and cannot possibly ever perish?" She was looking a bit
confused and I pressed her again with the same question and received no
answer. I then took my finger and ran it over another part of John 10:27.
I said, "Jesus said that these sheep who have everlasting life and can
never perish have two distinct marks that identifies them as sheep. They
all have a mark on their ear—they keep on hearing, and they have a mark on
their feet—they keep on following. The text says, "My sheep hear
(literally keep on hearing) my voice and I know them and they follow
me." You cannot put that sheep label on every outward professor and
then assure that professor that he is 'eternally secure.'
The young lady asked, "But what if they don't follow?" I said, "What if
Christ doesn't give them eternal life?" You can't take the one part of the
verse without the rest of it. If you are going to attach the label of
"sheep" to every person that you run through your particular ritual or
"soul winning system," whatever it might be, (and every church has its own
ritual of manufacturing confessions of faith) you are really going to run
into trouble. You will indeed need a 'carnal Christian' doctrine to
explain why your converts do not act differently than lost people. We must
insist that we take all of John 10:27–28 and when we do that we will be
teaching the biblical doctrine of the perseverance of the saints. We must
never deny the eternal security of the saints, but that is totally
different from the eternal security of every person who merely makes a
profession of faith. We dare not preach the eternal security of wicked and
openly profane sinners and imply that there is security even in sin.
The confused girl said, "But all true Christians will keep on
believing." "I agree," I said. "That is exactly what I said. You are a
Christian as long as you believe and, as you say, if you have truly
believed you will keep on believing. I just said it a little differently.
Listening to you I get the impression that you think you can quit
believing and still have everlasting life."
I sometimes read John 10:27–28 three different ways in order to clearly
illustrate the three views concerning perseverance. The first time I add
the word if and read, "My sheep hear my voice and if they
follow me I give …" That is the saved-and-lost position. It makes ultimate
salvation to be the reward for my perseverance. That is salvation by
works. The second time I leave out the words follow me and greatly
emphasize the rest of the verse. "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them
and [skipping they follow me] I give them eternal life and
they shall never perish" That is the
eternal-security/carnal-Christian view. Lastly I read the verse correctly
and remind the audience that Jesus emphasized both the
following and the never perishing. We must never separate
the great blessings of eternal life and never perishing from the mark on
the sheep's ear and the mark on his feet.
We must preach the necessity of faith producing effects, but again we
must be careful that we do not get into a works sanctification. I have
some friends that have twisted the doctrine of perseverance to the place
that they are purely legalistic. They have exalted the law to the place
that they are bringing the Christian's conscience under the condemning
power of the law. Under such preaching even the best of saints lose the
joy and the assurance of God's so great salvation. We must avoid both of
these extremes, which is no easy task.
On the one hand we dare not hold assurance of salvation hostage to the
fruits of sanctification or we will become legalists. On the other hand we
dare not isolate justification from sanctification in such a way that
sanctification is not an essential part of biblical salvation or we will
become antinomians. How we preach these two concepts will quickly prove
whether we are legalistic, antinomian, or believe in biblical grace.
I believe any honest person will admit there are texts of Scripture
that may appear to teach that you can be saved and lost. The answer to
this problem is not to drown out these texts by giving more texts that
teach one cannot be lost after having truly believed. Nor is the answer to
evade either the texts or the important truth that they teach. We must
recognize that truth has two sides and we must believe and teach both
sides even when we cannot fully understand how they fit together.
Perseverance is essential in biblical salvation, and perseverance is
absolutely guaranteed by God to every true sheep.
Let me correct a great error that keeps insisting that the truth of God
is found 'in the middle.' Almost always the people who dislike clear
doctrine use this argument to blunt the edge of clear texts of Scripture.
They are always ready to "tone down the extreme" and strive to be
non-offensive by being in the middle of the road. The truth of God is not
found in the middle of the road. It lies in daring to assert both of
the extremes. Let me illustrate this with the doctrine of the person
of Christ. The gospel confronts us with a person born of a human mother.
He gets hungry, goes to sleep, and weeps. Obviously he has all the
attributes of humanity and any reasonable person would agree that this
person is a man. And of course that is correct. Jesus is a true
man.
The gospel also reveals that this individual could raise the dead,
control the weather, forgive sins, call God His Father. He even claimed
that He was God. There is much evidence to support His claim of being
deity just as there is much evidence to prove He is a man. What shall we
do with this apparent contradiction? Is He man or is He God? Many would
insist that He cannot be both God and Man. It must be an either/or
situation but which one? Those dear 'middle of the road' people will solve
the problem and "reconcile" the problem by toning down both of the
extremes. They will say that Jesus is half God and half man and avoid both
wild extremes and reach the middle of the road. The only problem is they
have lost the biblical truth of the person of Christ. They have a person
who is half God and half man that in essence is neither. We must take both
of the extremes at the same time and say that Jesus is "God of God and Man
of Man" united in one unique person. I make no attempt to explain how it
can be possible. I merely state that is what the Bible clearly teaches.
The Bible is also crystal clear that only those who persevere to the
end will reach heaven. The perseverance of the saints is an essential part
of the gospel of sovereign grace. The Bible is equally clear that not
everyone who merely professes to be going to heaven is really going there.
And lastly, the Bible is clear that all who persevere in faith and
ultimately make it to heaven do so only because the sovereign grace and
power of God enabled them to do so. We must insist on two clear facts:
One, perseverance is essential, and two, perseverance is absolutely
certain for all of the elect. Kevin Hartley has covered this well in the
article which begins on Page 1.
It might be well to mention the major objections to the doctrine of
perseverance. The first objection concerns freedom of the will. The
argument goes something like this: "If man's will is truly free then he
can choose to be lost after he is saved. If this is not true then man
loses half of his will power when he becomes a Christian. Before he was
saved he had the power to choose to reject or to believe, but after
choosing to believe he is then no longer able to choose to reject." If
this is true, then the sinner indeed has twice as much will-power as the
saint. I personally do not think there is a valid answer to this
objection. If the premise that man has a free will—the unencumbered or
unaided ability to either accept or reject the gospel—is true, then that
same free will can choose to renounce the gospel after one is saved. It is
logically impossible to believe in free will and also believe you cannot
be saved and then lost. Most evangelicals do not see the utter absurdity
of their free will religion.
We must add that even though we reject the doctrine of the free will of
man, we do believe that every person who savingly believes does so because
he wants to with all of his heart. No one, including God Himself, makes a
person do something they do not choose to do. Every act of man is an act
of free choice. But God can, and indeed He does, make us willing to do
what we are totally unwilling and unable to do by nature. We covered this
in the articles on regeneration (see Sound of Grace, Vol. 5, Nos. 1
and 2). The question is not "does the sinner willingly believe" but
"whether the willingness is a product of his free will or the sovereign
work of the Holy Spirit?" Likewise, the question is not "must every sheep,
and does every sheep, persevere unto the end," but rather "does he do so
by the power of free will or free grace?" Paul said the folks at Achaia
had "believed through grace." They had willingly believed but it
was sovereign grace that made them want to believe.
The second argument states that the doctrine of the perseverance of the
saints will lead to immoral behavior. At its roots this argument is always
a form of legalism that cannot trust the awesome power of grace to
transform and teach a child of God. This view is usually accompanied by a
very weak view of regeneration. We must admit that the doctrine of eternal
security and its twin sister the carnal Christian doctrine does indeed
lead to immoral living. It must be remembered that the Holy Spirit giving
a new heart and writing the law on the heart in regeneration is not at all
essential to the proponents of the doctrines of eternal security/carnal
Christians. This second argument is a valid evaluation and condemnation of
much of evangelicalism today.
The old Methodist mourner's bench was far closer to the truth than
modern day mass evangelism and the altar call system. There are two
reasons for this statement. First, they made the sinner keep praying until
he "got through." They did not give very good directions on how to get
through to God but they did insist that no one had a right to tell you
that you were saved except God Himself! They did not have personal
workers trained in how to badger you into an assurance of salvation. They
believed the Holy Spirit alone could validate His own work and give you
assurance. They were right on that point.
The second thing they taught was that if "getting through" did not make
you a radically changed person on Monday then you must not have gotten
through and you better come back and get another dose. In other words,
they insisted that salvation made people holy in their hearts. The carnal
Christian doctrine would have been just as odious to them as it is to
thinking people today.
The third argument is a modified form of the previous one. This
argument states that "if the doctrine of the perseverance of the saints
does not lead to overt sin it will surely lead to an indolent
"could-not-care-less" attitude. If I am eternally secure then I need never
fear or worry about my soul." Again we must admit that this charge is
valid when made against the "eternal security/carnal Christian" people.
However, this is only because these people view salvation as "insurance"
and not as "biblical assurance." They totally distort the truth of
perseverance.
Following are a few differences.
Perseverance is not merely "rely and relax" but it is "trust and
obey."
Perseverance is not merely "let go and let God" but it is "pick up
your cross and follow."
Perseverance is not "salvation is certain if we have once
believed," but it is "perseverance (keeping on) is certain if we have
truly believed."
Perseverance is not "persistent effort (holding out to the end) on
the sinner's part is necessary to stay saved, but it is "if you are
truly saved you are certain of succeeding in your perseverance."
Perseverance is not "salvation is certain regardless of what you do
once you are saved," but it is "perseverance (following) is guaranteed
if we have truly believed."
Perseverance is not "you must keep yourself saved by your efforts,"
but it is "He whom we trust has promised that He will not let our faith
fail."
It is easy to see from these comparisons that there is a great
difference in how different theologies view the security of a true child
of God. In the next issue of Sound of Grace we will discuss the
Carnal Christian doctrine and these distinctions will become even more
clear.
One of the things that is often overlooked in any discussion of
perseverance is the tremendous stake that God Himself has in the security
of a child of God. I am sure you remember how Moses pleaded with God to
spare Israel when He announced that He was going to wipe the whole nation
out and start all over with Moses as the new Abraham. Hear again the
exchange between God and Moses:
(9) And the LORD said unto Moses, I have seen this people, and,
behold, it is a stiffnecked people: (10) Now therefore let me alone,
that my wrath may wax hot against them, and that I may consume them: and
I will make of thee a great nation. (11) And Moses besought the LORD his
God, and said, LORD, why doth thy wrath wax hot against thy people,
which thou hast brought forth out of the land of Egypt with great power,
and with a mighty hand? (12) Wherefore should the Egyptians speak, and
say, For mischief did he bring them out, to slay them in the mountains,
and to consume them from the face of the earth? Turn from thy fierce
wrath, and repent of this evil against thy people. (13) Remember
Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, thy servants, to whom thou swarest by thine
own self, and saidst unto them, I will multiply your seed as the stars
of heaven, and all this land that I have spoken of will I give unto your
seed, and they shall inherit it for ever (Exodus 32:
9–13).
Notice how Moses argues that the very glory and reputation of God is at
stake. The heathen will say that God's grace and power are not sufficient
to fulfill His purposes. His professed love for this people is not strong
enough for Him to forgive and keep them. Moses pleads God's covenant
promise and God's power. God's oath, power, purpose, and reputation is
tied with Israel His chosen people.
Our Lord realized that He was responsible for the safety of every sheep
the Father had given Him. This is clear in the following verses:
While I was with them in the world, I kept them in thy name:
those that thou gavest me I have kept, and none of them is lost…(John
17:12).
That the saying might be fulfilled, which he spake, Of them which
thou gavest me have I lost none (John 18:9).
Again it is clear that the both the glory and reputation of our Lord
and His Father is tied up with the perseverance of every one of the sheep.
There are three things involved in this subject. There is the stated
purpose of God, the specific promise of God, and the
sovereign power of God.
The stated purpose of God is clearly set forth in the five
golden links in the chain of grace described in Romans 8:28–32. Every
person who has been chosen and predestinated to be conformed to the image
of Christ is going to be effectually called and perfectly justified. They
are already—past tense—glorified in the mind and purpose of God. If one of
the sheep in the chain of grace is lost the whole chain is broken and
God's purpose is unrealized.
The specific promise of God is set forth in, among many others,
1 Corinthians:
(4) I thank my God always on your behalf, for the grace of God
which is given you by Jesus Christ; (5) That in every thing ye are
enriched by him, in all utterance, and in all knowledge; (6) Even as the
testimony of Christ was confirmed in you: (7) So that ye come behind in
no gift; waiting for the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ: (8) Who shall
also confirm you unto the end, that ye may be blameless in the day of
our Lord Jesus Christ. (9) God is faithful, by whom ye were called unto
the fellowship of his Son Jesus Christ our Lord (1 Cor.
1:4–9).
Notice the clear promise in verse 8. God has pledged to confirm the
elect "unto the end." Verse 9 assures us that God is faithful to perform
the things that He promises. Just as He faithfully called those He had
chosen, so He will be faithful in keeping them in grace. Granted this has
two sides. 1 Peter 1:5 tells us that we are "kept by the power of God" and
Jude 21 exhorts us to "keep ourselves in the love of God." These are the
two sides of one coin and are not in contradiction. We keep ourselves in
the love of God purely through the grace and power of God that is given to
us. Notice how John states the matter. "We know that whosoever is born of
God sinneth not; but he that is begotten of God keepeth himself, and that
wicked one toucheth him not (1 John 5:18). The "keeping" of ourselves is
because of the truth of regeneration giving us a new nature. "…greater is
he that is in you that he that is in the world" (1 John 4:4).
The sovereign power of God in keeping His people is set forth in
1 Peter:
(3) Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, which
according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively
hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, (4) To an
inheritance incorruptible, and undefiled, and that fadeth not away,
reserved in heaven for you, (5) Who are kept by the power of God through
faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time. (6) Wherein
ye greatly rejoice, though now for a season, if need be, ye are in
heaviness through manifold temptations: (7) That the trial of your
faith, being much more precious than of gold that perisheth, though it
be tried with fire, might be found unto praise and honour and glory at
the appearing of Jesus Christ: (8) Whom having not seen, ye love; in
whom, though now ye see him not, yet believing, ye rejoice with joy
unspeakable and full of glory: (9) Receiving the end of your faith, even
the salvation of your souls (1 Peter 1:3–9).
The salvation of God begins with God's abundant mercy choosing us. We
are then begotton by God's power unto a living hope. That same grace
enables us to keep on believing in spite of many hindrances and
temptations. We are enabled to rejoice even in tribulation because we are
positively certain of reaching the final and full salvation of our souls.
The eternal-security crowd does not consider the biblical exhortations
to perseverance and the saved-lost crowd incorrectly think that such
exhortations would never have been given if it were not possible to fall
away. It never occurs to these people that the very means that God uses to
assure our efforts to persevere are the warnings against apostasy. Someone
has said, "To warn a traveler to keep to a certain path, and by the
warning keeping him to the path, is no evidence that he will ever fall
into a pit by the wayside just because you warned him about it. The very
warning was necessary to keep him in the path." John Bunyan said, "There
are two deep ditches on either side of the road to heaven. The one is the
ditch of despair and the other is the ditch of presumption. In front of
the ditch of despair God has placed a row of hedges made of promises to
keep the poor pilgrim from despair in times of defeat. In front of the
ditch of presumption he has placed another row of hedges made of up of
fearful warning to keep the poor pilgrim from presuming on the grace of
God." J.C. Ryle said there were two thieves on either side of Christ. The
one was saved in order to show there are death bed conversions and the
other was lost to show that no one should wait and presume.
One last thing.
Whenever you say that a man was saved and is now lost you make two
possible grievous mistakes. You judge the man's heart in saying he was
saved, and then you judge the second time when you say he is lost. We
would all have pronounced Judas saved for nearly three whole years and we
would have been wrong. We would also have labeled Peter a lying hypocrite
when he cursed and swore and again we would have been wrong. Judas was
lost even when everyone would have put him on the saved list, and Peter,
though back-sliden, was a true believer even though all of us would have
put him on the lost list.
We will come back to the nature of true salvation when we cover both
assurance of salvation and the carnal Christian doctrine in upcoming
issues of Sound of Grace.
Copyright 2004
John G.
Reisinger
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