Sunday, February 21, 2010

Are you born-again? Sometimes, enough is enough.

"Are you born-again? "
Have you heard the Good News?"
These are questions we often hear or share in the Evangelical circle, however, these questions can be strange to those whom have faith in Jesus yet didn't have a defined, born-again moment, that they are aware of (of course, they did have one).

Romans 10:11-13 is vital to the Christian identity. Here, the "minimum" knowledge of what a Christian believes is noted. In other words, if a Christian believes this, then they have already been born-again and are Christians, whether they know it or not, and no matter how ignorant of God's word or misled they are by their "church leaders."

So let us examine this truncated Gospel.

That if you confess with your mouth, "Jesus is Lord," and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you confess and are saved. As the Scripture says, "Anyone who trusts in him will never be put to shame." For there is no difference between Jew and Gentile—the same Lord is Lord of all and richly blesses all who call on him, for, "Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved."

All those whom have called on Jesus will be saved, because, of course, they must believe He is Risen if they are calling on Him. When we are saved, we always confess our Lord with our words, because we realize He is our one hope, and we are hopeless sinners. This is faith. Many have this faith, and have no idea what we are talking about when we ask him if they have been born-again. It's important for us to understand this clearly, as it can be a terribly confusing barrier between orthodox and evangelical branches of the faith. If are to maintain salvation is by grace alone by faith alone, we must understand that those whom have faith in Jesus Christ may not realize their salvation has been credited to them by grace alone - yet for the very reason its grace alone they have been born-again and are saved, and are being sanctified just as we are. Thus, it is a theological mistake to call other believers whom are relying somehow on themselves to say they are not saved - this is an important distinction and one that needs to be readily made. We should not be re-evangelizing those that have faith.

But let us close with the last verse of this section.

Romans, 10:14-15.

How, then, can they call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the one of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone preaching to them? And how can they preach unless they are sent? As it is written, "How beautiful are the feet of those who bring good news!"

Francis of Assisi (known as "St. Francis" to some) famously said "Preach the Gospel at all times, if necessary use words." I've come to understand that this really makes no sense at all. We have been commissioned by God to share the Gospel. We need to explain the Gospel for folks who believe they are sinners to believe upon Him, in words. Romans 10 is explicit as what confessing our Lord encompasses. If we have been born-again, even if we do not know what that means, to confess Jesus as Lord isn't reciting some creed in church. It's sharing the Gospel with your loved ones, your friends, your co-workers, and strangers.

Are you born-again?

If you trust that God sent Jesus to die for your sins, and He was risen from the dead as Lord of the Universe, and if you have called upon Him to be saved and entrusted Him, then you are saved. And if are saved, you can be assured God will keep you eternally. I think Scripture is clear on this. Even if you erroneously believe you have something to do with your salvation, and even if you believe that you are not saved, or may at some time become "unsaved." This is grace alone by faith alone. A famous evangelical writer whom wrote countless expositions on nearly every Chapter of Scripture during the course of his life, was asked towards the end of his life how he would sum up the Gospel. After thinking about it for a minute he responded, "Jesus loves me, for the BIble tells me so." This is the Gospel of Grace.

As an Evangelical Anglican recently pointed out to me, it's not our theological aptitude that is the deciding factor.
"We are saved by grace alone. PERIOD. We are not saved by grace PLUS KNOWING IT'S ONLY BY GRACE. Does our sanctification depend, in part, on this knowledge? Yes. But salvation...absolutely not."

What is at stake here? For one, wasteful evangelism, not recognizing other true Christians as brothers and sisters, and, of course, immensely hurting the kingdom of God. Secondly, we can know with certainty through God's Grace that the countless Christians whom died with the erroneous (and heretical) teaching that our works play a role in our salvation, despite their theological ignorance, were as saved as me and you.

There is a joke in the Christian world about Baptists. A Christian dies and goes to heaven. As he is being shown around, at some point the guy showing him around turns to him and tells him to quiet down. He asks "Why?" The man turns to him and points to a group of Baptists they are approaching. "They think they are the only ones here."

While it is okay to be reassured that our theology is tight-knit because it is what the Bible says, it is not okay to extrapolate beyond the Bible. Scripture is clear that we are saved through the outpouring of God's Grace, through the free gift of faith. Just like we cannot qualify ourselves for the prize, we cannot disqualify ourselves either.



5 comments:

Vince said...

Tony you say:

"Francis of Assisi (known as "St. Francis" to some) famously said "Preach the Gospel at all times, if necessary use words." I've come to understand that this really makes no sense at all. We have been commissioned by God to share the Gospel. We need to explain the Gospel for folks who believe they are sinners to believe upon Him, in words. Romans 10 is explicit as what confessing our Lord encompasses. If we have been born-again, even if we do not know what that means, to confess Jesus as Lord isn't reciting some creed in church. It's sharing the Gospel with your loved ones, your friends, your co-workers, and strangers."

And I guess I would say often our deeds speak louder than words. Often it is what we do, how we live, that is the best teaching we can hope to share.

Years ago a reported asked Russ Francis if he had any Raymond Berry stories back when Raymond was the receivers coach and Russ was 'All World' tight end.

Russ told the story of one day after practice when everyone left the field Ray picked up a ball and tossed it to Russ... who promptly tossed it back... to which Ray tossed it to him again.. Russ figured... OK... Ray wants to play catch.

So after about 15 minutes of playing catch without speaking a word to each other Russ noticed that every time Raymond caught the ball... he tucked it away before throwing it back to Russ.

So Russ, catching the ball from Raymond... tucked the ball. When he went to throw it back to Raymond... Berry was walking back into the clubhouse.

Francis said it was the best lesson he'd ever had and he's never forgotten it. Not a word was spoken but some real great teaching happened.

I'm just sayin... :)

Tony Faber said...

I think the question though is, "What is a Christian?"

The answer, according to what is recorded in the Bible, is clear.

Isiah 64:6 All our good works are as filthy rags.

Romans 3:23 For there is no one that is righteous - no not one.

So the crux of the problem is how does one become right with God if we all are eternally lost.

The Christian answer is only through the imputed righteousness of Jesus Christ, which is received as a free gift from God (John 1,3,8,11), Titus 3:5, Romans 3,4,8), Ephesians 2:24).

Without this imputed righteousness, no matter what kind of life somebody lives, the end result is spiritual death and the wrath of God eternally rests on this soul (John 8:24).

Any "lesson" one gives to another is completely useless, minus the saving message of the Cross.

Vince said...

Wait... "Any" lesson?... on "Any" subject? I'm not clear here on what you mean. Also my story of Russ Francis/Ray Berry was all about HOW we 'teach' lessons... that sometime... non-verbally can be a stronger medium. That's all I was trying to say... sometimes actions 'Teach' better than 'Words'.

But be that as it may... I'm confused here... are you saying that any lesson, on any subject, MUST include Christ or else it's completely useless? Or are you just talking about teaching 'Christian' lessons?... the only thing that jumps out at me here... and it's an old saw... is that saying that only through Christ is anyone worth anything... leaves out a significant part of the worlds population... many of whom do believe in God... in different ways. I'm just sayin....

Tony Faber said...

Thanks for the comment. It's always nice to converse.

I think I'm failing to relay clearly two points.

The first will help clarify the second.

There are many professing Christians, whom are no Christians at all. Every minute, they are in fact falling farther and farther away from possible belief in the Gospel. Some of the so-called "televangelist preachers" and clergy of the Roman Catholic Church come to mind. These wolves in sheep's clothing preach God every day, but have no idea whom God is, and have no motivation to find out. They are after their own lusts, and there acts are the proof - some televangelists are after only money and power, and some clergy in the RCC commit rape of children and others help hide it.

On the other side of the spectrum, there are those whom are becoming Christians more and more every day. Many have never heard of Christ - many are Muslim, Jew, or Pagan. But their hearts and minds are after God, and they will one day confess Jesus Christ. They are also known by the deeds - these however, do out of love.

The second point is this. Every person to walk this earth has and continues to impact others, many in ways they have no idea. These, if we will, "lessons", either do one of two things: they either bring people closer to Christ, or farther away. The lessons that bring those away from Christ are entrenched in lies and selfishness. Some of the greatest lies have to do with self-sufficiency. These are from the former group.
The lessons that bring those closer to Christ are always words and deeds that are borne out of love. These are from the latter group, or from true and sincere believers.

I talk about doctrine because without proper doctrine we are all doomed. But Jesus never said He will judge based on our knowledge on what day Jesus rose after his death, or whether we understand the essence of the Trinity. At the end of Matthew's Gospel, the final words of Jesus are not of doctrine, but of actions, clear indications of man's motives... Jesus asks instead, when I was hungry did you feed me? when I was naked, did you clothe me? did you comfort me? did you love me???

God exists in many, many more dimensions than we do. Time is not one of them. God created the universe 17 billion years ago, the sun and earth 5 million years ago. Time is meaningless to Him in this sense. Thus, believers, past, present or future, is no different. These believers, whom may have never heard of Christ or acknowledge no God, they are the ones that can lead others to life. It is there actions that are truly out of love. Thus, they're "lessons" are the only ones that we must adore.

Vince said...

Ahhhh now this is very clear to me. Thanks for responding. I like what you've said and these words are much more palatable than my interpretation of what came before.

I guess I'm still colored by thinking of any 'Christianity' being tied to RCC, being a 'lapse Catholic' as I am... :). But this explanation of what you mean is reasonable and much easier to understand and accept.

Thanks again Tony for the further explanation.

Vince