~Here's an overview of what I'm attempting to do here with this blog series.~
"For
God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that
whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that
the world through him might be saved." - John 3:16-17
"Jesus Saves"
The foundation of the Christian doctrine. The pillar of the New Testament. This is what I see most quoted among my Christian peers, pasted on to email signatures and bumper stickers and t-shirts, which is very good... However, some Christians seem to only go that far. They tell you "Jesus Saves!" but they don't answer the following questions. Why does He save? How does He save? And why do we even need saving in the first place?
A Brief Explanation and Exploration of Free Will and Human Nature
For most of my life I did not understand free will. In the back of my mind I always wondered why evil was in the world, why God didn't just create "good beings." Free will is something I feel is glanced over by most Christians today, not fully explained, and maybe not even fully understood. Yet free will is quite simple, and it is the basis of everything we know and feel in the world today. Free will is the beginning of "Jesus Saves."
C. S. Lewis, in his book Mere Christianity, explains it eloquently:
God created things which had free will. That means creatures which
can go either wrong or right. Some people think they can imagine a
creature which was free but had no possibility of going wrong; I
cannot. If a thing is free to be good it is also free to be bad. And
free will is what has made evil possible. Why, then, did God give them
free will? Because free will, though it makes evil possible, is also
the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth
having. A world of automata - of creatures that worked like machines -
would hardly be worth creating. The happiness which God designs for His
higher creatures in the happiness of being freely, voluntarily united
to Him and each other in an ecstasy of love and delight compared with
which the most rapturous love between a man and a woman on this earth is
mere milk and water. And for that they must be free.
In the beginning God created Adam and Eve in their proper states - in a direct, personal, and unveiled relationship with Him. If you have ever wondered why God didn't just make "good beings"... well, He did. But He also made free beings. A free thing must be free to be good or bad, to go right or wrong, or it isn't free at all.
In the Garden of Eden there was the Tree of Life and the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. If God created the pre-sin world, why did he create the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil? It was Adam and Eve's free will. It was their possibility of going wrong, and as harsh as it seems, it was necessary. God did not want clockwork people. Adam and Eve could have never had the full joy of God otherwise.
So, when Adam and Eve were tempted into eating the Forbidden Fruit they unlocked in themselves their own sinful human nature (which is the inclination to do wrong), thus separating them and their future descendants from God. Adam and Eve exercised free will and disobeyed God, which caused humans to be veiled from God. It gave them the need to be forgiven, to be "saved."
A Life, A Death, A Resurrection - A Savior
Enter Jesus. He came as God in a human body, tempted and tried but never sinning. Out of every person in the world, he, of course, was the absolute least deserving of death and total separation of God, yet that was what happened.
God, being a Perfect Existence, cannot be in the presence of sin. As fallen humans, in our sullied state of human nature, can in no way can ever be in the presence of God, no matter how hard we try to resist our free will. So God sent His Son to live a perfect, blameless life, but after it all He made Jesus suffer on a cross, suffer pain none of us will ever be able to imagine and total spiritual separation. Why? Timothy Keller, in his book The Reason For God, puts it like this:
God, being a Perfect Existence, cannot be in the presence of sin. As fallen humans, in our sullied state of human nature, can in no way can ever be in the presence of God, no matter how hard we try to resist our free will. So God sent His Son to live a perfect, blameless life, but after it all He made Jesus suffer on a cross, suffer pain none of us will ever be able to imagine and total spiritual separation. Why? Timothy Keller, in his book The Reason For God, puts it like this:
"Why did Jesus have to die? Couldn't God just forgive us?" This is what many ask, but... we see that no one "just" forgives, if the evil is serious. Forgiveness means bearing the cost instead of making the wrongdoer do it, so you can reach out in love to seek your enemy's renewal and change. Forgiveness means absorbing the debt of the sin yourself. Everyone who forgives great evil goes through a death into resurrection, and experiences nails, blood, sweat, and tears.
We are sinners. We are unforgivable. The human nature inside us makes an uncrossable gulf between us and God. But God forgives. God sent Jesus. Jesus absorbed (or perhaps the better word is "bore") our sin - all of our sin, yours, mine, the world's, future and past - and suffered in death. But sin, being only a product of free will, has no power over God. God raised Jesus from the dead, and, in essence, defeated human nature and, it could be said, free will. We, in all our humanness, made an unbridgeable divide between ourselves and God that no human devices can span, but Jesus "saved us." He made a Divine Bridge out of the cross, one that he allows all people to come over to True Love and heaven.
"For Christ also suffered once for sins, the just for the unjust, that He might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh but made alive by the Spirit." - 1 Peter 3:18
Closing Words
How do we get saved? Well, Derek Prince in his book The Spirit Filled Believer's Handbook says it plainly:
Let me now state... [the] basic facts of the gospel and response which each person is required to make.
- Christ was delivered by God the Father to the punishment of death on account of our sins.
- Christ was buried.
- God raised Him from the dead on the third day.
- Righteousness is received from God through believing these facts.
If you have read this far and have not made a personal, direct commitment to Christ as your Lord and Savior I urge you to do it now. Jesus saves, but you must reach out and take His Saving Grace. He's standing right beside you, gently guiding you toward His Love and His Mercy. Sometimes, even if someone claims to be a Christian, they do not fully understand the simplicity of the act of salvation. They get so caught up in "being saved" they forget to reach out and take the saving.
Have you believed the facts stated above? Have you made a direct and personal response in your own life? If not, I ask you to do it now. Pray with me, these words:
You were buried; that You rose again on the third day.
I now repent of my sins and come to You for mercy and
forgiveness.
By faith in Your promise, I receive You personally as my
Savior and confess You as my Lord.
Come into my heart, give me eternal life and make a child of God.
Amen!
^(OvO)^
The 'no comments' thing in big red letters is depressing me, so I decided to pop over and drop a comment in here. As you already know, I love this, I love this, I love this. And you have unmatchable brilliance and wordlessness is quite common when I read things like this, so YEAH. THERE YA GO. FIRST COMMENT. NOW. OTHER PEOPLE. COMMENT AS WELL. *points to comment box* Y'know you want to... =P
ReplyDeleteYou are doing a great job, Nate!
ReplyDeleteHowever, I think you may be confusing free will with sinful human nature. The reason Jesus was able to resist sin in a human state is because He came as God in a human body, not as a human with human nature in a human body. It is not our free will that separates us from God, but rather the sinful human nature we have inherited from Adam. So the difference is, simply put, that free will is the opportunity to choose whether to do what is right or wrong, whereas human nature is the inclination to do what is wrong.
This was a really helpful comment, thank you. And I agree with you, and looking back I realized I did confuse the two in the post. Much appreciation for pointing that out
DeleteI edited the post a bit, and I used some of the wording you used in this comment because it was wonderfully written. I hope you don't mind :) Thanks again for commenting!
DeleteThis is fantastic. Mere Christianity is one of my favorite works of literature, and I love how you used it in this post. The "Jesus Saves" movement is something that always got at me, too. Churches that tell attendants that Jesus loves them and that they can be saved, like that's all there is to it. They never want to admit that there's more, that we have a role to play too. I guess it just shows how widespread the fear of rejection is, even among believers. They don't want to lose followers, even if it means letting people believe in an easier, false version of a very real faith, and consequently going to Hell. It makes me sad.
ReplyDelete