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Home > 2007 > MarchChristianity Today, March, 2007  |   |  
Jesus and the Sinner’s Prayer
What Jesus says doesn’t match what we usually say.



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Is it permissible to reopen the question of salvation? If we do, how will Jesus' teachings stand up to our inherited traditions?



These questions came to me acutely not long ago. I was getting ready to preach. As the worship leader was finishing the music set, he offered some unscripted theological reflections. He said something like: "The only thing required of us is to believe that Jesus' blood saves us. Nothing more. It's nothing but the blood of Jesus."

In my Baptist context, we've heard these thoughts a thousand times. The problem was that I had in my pocket a message in which Jesus himself had a very different answer to the question of salvation.

The Big Question

In reading through Luke, I had discovered that twice (10:25, 18:18) Jesus is asked, "What must I do to inherit eternal life?"

In the first passage, Jesus turns the question back on the lawyer who asks it. The lawyer replies with the Old Testament commands to love God with all your heart, soul, strength, and mind, and to love your neighbor as yourself (cf. Mt. 22:34-40). Jesus affirms his answer: "You have answered correctly; do this, and you will live." The lawyer then tries to narrow the meaning of neighbor. So Jesus tells the unforgettable parable of the compassionate Samaritan, who proved to be a neighbor to a bleeding roadside victim.

In Luke 18, Jesus responds to the same question, this time from the man we know as the rich young ruler, by quoting the second table of the Decalogue, forbidding adultery, murder, theft, and false witness, and mandating honor towards parents. His questioner says that he has kept these commandments, and Jesus proceeds to call on him to "sell all … and distribute to the poor." Jesus assures him, "You will have treasure in heaven; and come, follow me." The "extremely rich" ruler won't do this, and Jesus goes on to teach his disciples about how hard it is for the wealthy to enter the kingdom of God.

Trying to be an honest expositor of the texts in front of me, I told the chapel students that morning that on the two occasions in Luke when Jesus was asked about the criteria for admission to eternity, he offered a fourfold answer: love God with all that you are, love your neighbor (like the Samaritan loved his neighbor), do God's will by obeying his moral commands, and be willing, if he asks, to drop everything and leave it behind in order to follow him.

I concluded by suggesting that the contrast between how Jesus answers this question and how we usually do is stark and awfully inconvenient.

Getting Radical

In my Baptist tradition, especially, we direct people to "invite Jesus into your heart as your personal Savior," an act undertaken using a formula called the "sinner's prayer." Or we simply say, "Believe in Jesus, and you will be saved."

But Jesus never taught easy believism. Whether he was telling the rich young ruler to sell all and follow him or telling a miracle-hungry crowd near Capernaum that to do the work of God was, yes, to believe on him (John 6:28-29), he called people to abandon their own agenda and trust him radically. Radical trust calls for both belief and action.

I suggest that we tend to confuse the beginning of the faith journey with its entirety. Yes, believe in Jesus—that's the first step. Yes, invite Jesus into your heart as your personal Savior. Then, empowered by God's grace, embark on the journey of discipleship, in which you seek to love God with every fiber of your being, to love your neighbor as yourself, to live out God's moral will, and to follow Jesus where he leads you, whatever the cost.





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Displaying 1 - 3 of 219 comments.See all comments
Maggy   Posted: March 13, 2007 10:37 AM
Great, thank you for letting the Lord speak to you and sharing with your church. I think the Lord is doing a great job touching the hearts of many about this issue in our country. Thank you for trusting the Lord and being bold and having no fear to share his truth. Is not easy because we are few, and people don't like to let go of tradition just like when Jesus came to save us, people didn't like him, because now their traditions were not enough for them to have salvation. There is no magic words, is a journey walking and growing with Christ.

Jojikaden   Posted: March 09, 2007 11:22 PM
The concern is understood in the backdrop of utter hypocrisy, unbridled worldliness and mere preaching without any practice we see in the Church. However, this should not turn out to be a weapon in the hands of the enemy to confuse and divert people from the truth. Instead of asking "what will save?" we must ask "Who will save?" because it is only Jesus who can save. The enemy is using the very words of Jesus to focus our attention on the effect than the cause. Christian living or living out our faith is possible only when we have begun the faith journey. This is with a definite commitment and personal decision to invite Jesus as the Master, Owner, LORD and the ultimate authority in our lives. As Paul says, "it is not I but Christ that lives" from that point on and one should die to self, sin and the world in order to allow the LORD to live in and through him. This is the difficult part and that is exactly why the Holy Spirit is dwelling withing the believer. I'll continue later.

H. D. Schmidt   Posted: March 07, 2007 3:48 AM
But, the fact that I believe is really not what saves me! Why not just simple state the fact that Jesus saved us. He saved me even without my permission and that makes me happy as a lark. Most Christians dwell constantly on themselves, never really sure if they have enough or strong etc., faith/believe, while Satan loves it greatly, because, as long as they keep examinating themselves they are in a way denying what is a fact of life, that Jesus saved us without asking us. In reality, nobody can make Jesus Christ their Lord and Savior because, that could only be done by Jesus himself. It is like this: A Child in the womb does not give birth to itself, but it is the mother that does that. A child cannot say I chose my mother and father and no parent will ever say to a child: You have to accept us as your father and mother to be our child. The world, has been saved, lets just go and tell it to all kindred and tongues, and don't even put them on the spot by asking them to accept Jesus!

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