Jesus and the Sinner’s Prayer
What Jesus says doesn’t match what we usually say.
David P. Gushee | posted 3/06/2007 08:31AM

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If Jesus is to be believed, inheriting eternal life involves a comprehensive divine assessment at every step along our journey, not just at its inception.
Mediocrity and hypocrisy characterize the lives of many avowed Christians, at least in part because of our default answer to the salvation question. Anyone can, and most Americans do, "believe" in Jesus rather than some alternative savior. Anyone can, and many Americans sometimes do, say a prayer asking Jesus to save them. But not many embark on a life fully devoted to the love of God, the love of neighbor, the moral practice of God's will, and radical, costly discipleship.
If it comes down to a choice between our habitual, ingrained ways of talking about salvation and what Jesus himself said when asked the question, I know what I must choose.
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Related Elsewhere:
David Gushee's columns are available on our site.
Gushee's webpage has a biography and information on his books and articles.
Other Christianity Today articles on salvation include:
A Call to Evangelical Unity | Introduction and 'The Gospel of Jesus Christ: An Evangelical Celebration' (June 14, 1999). A discussion followed in Books & Culture: 'Why I Didn't Endorse The Gospel of Jesus Christ: An Evangelical Celebration' (January 1, 2001) and Thomas Oden's 'Calm Answer' (March 1, 2001)
The Work of Faith | How the torch of racial reconciliation, once carried by Christian civil-rights workers, is now being held by faith-based organizations. (March 5, 2007)
Reflections: The Way of Salvation | Quotations to stir heart and mind. (November 1, 2004)
Good Question: Prayers for Salvation | God may have lessons for us in the way he answers our askings. (J.I. Packer, April 1, 2003)
What's the Good News? | Nine evangelical leaders define the gospel. (February 7, 2000)
Are We Speaking the Same Language? | What Catholics really believe about justificationand why defining our terms makes all the difference. (November 1, 1999)