Discipleship 101
a beginner's guide to
Christianity
Chapter 16
Salvation — a rescue!
Salvation is a rescue operation.
To understand salvation, we need to
know what the problem was, what God did about it, and how we respond to it.
What humans are
When God made humans, he made them "in his own image," and he
pronounced his creation "very good" (Genesis 1:26-27, 31). Humans were a
wonderful creation: made from dust, but energized by the breath of God (Genesis
2:7).
"The image of God" probably includes intelligence, creativity
and power over creation. It also includes the ability to have relationships and
to make moral choices. We are in some way like God himself. That’s because God
has something special in mind for us, his children.
Genesis tells us that the first humans did something God had
warned them not to do (Genesis 3:1-13). Their disobedience showed that they did
not trust God, and it was a violation of his trust in them. By being faithless,
they had broken the relationship and fallen short of what God wanted for them.
They were becoming less like God. The result, said God, was struggle, pain and
death (vv. 16-19). If they were not going to follow the Maker’s instructions,
they were going to end up doing things the hard way.
Humans are noble and crude at the same time. We can have high
ideals, and yet be barbaric. We are like God, and yet ungodly. We are not the
way we are supposed to be. Even though we have messed ourselves up, God still
considers us to be made in his image (Genesis 9:6). The potential is still there
for us to be like God. This is why he wants to rescue us, to save us, to restore
the relationship he had with us.
God wants to give us eternal life, free from pain, on good
terms with God and with each other. He wants our intelligence, creativity and
power to be used for good. He wants us to be like he is, to be even better than
the first humans were. This is salvation.
The center of the plan
We need to be rescued. And God has done this—but he did it in
a way that no human would have expected. The Son of God became a human, lived a
perfect life, and we killed him. And that, says God, is the salvation we need.
What irony! We are saved by a victim! Our Creator became flesh so he could
die for us. But God raised him back to life, and through
Jesus, he promises to resurrect us, too.
In the death and resurrection of Jesus, the death and
salvation of humanity is represented and made possible. His death is what our
failures deserve, and as our Creator, he paid for all our failures. Though he
did not deserve death, he willingly died for our sins, on our behalf.
Jesus Christ died for us, and was raised for us (Romans
4:25). Our old self died with him, and a new person is brought back to life with
him (Romans 6:3-4). In one sacrifice, Jesus atoned "for the sins of
the whole world" (1 John 2:2). The payment has already been made; the question
now is how we are to receive the benefits. We participate in the plan through
repentance and faith.
Repentance
Jesus came to call people to repentance (Luke 5:32). Peter
told people to repent and turn to God for forgiveness (Acts 2:38; 3:19). Paul
said people "must turn to God in repentance" (Acts 20:21). Repentance means to
turn away from sin and toward God. Paul told the Athenians that God overlooked
idolatry done in ignorance, but "now commands all people everywhere to repent"
(Acts 17:30). They should stop their idolatry.
Paul was concerned that some of the Corinthian Christians
might not repent of their sexual sins (2 Corinthians 12:21). For these people,
repentance would mean a willingness to stop their immorality. Paul preached that
people should "prove their repentance by their deeds" (Acts 26:20). We change
our attitude and our behavior.
Part of our doctrinal foundation is "repentance from acts
that lead to death" (Hebrews 6:1). But this does not mean perfect
behavior—Christians are not perfect (1 John 1:8). Repentance means not that we
arrive at our goal, but that we begin traveling in the right direction.
No longer do we please ourselves, but we live to please
Christ (2 Corinthians 5:15; 1 Corinthians 6:20). Paul tells us, "Just as you
used to offer the parts of your body in slavery to impurity and to
ever-increasing wickedness, so now offer them in slavery to righteousness"
(Romans 6:19).
Faith
However, simply telling people to repent is not going to
rescue them from their failures. Humans have been told to obey for thousands of
years, but they still need to be rescued. Something more is needed, and that is
Christ. But we do not experience the blessing of forgiveness if we don’t believe
that Christ has done this for us. We need faith, or belief. The New Testament
says much more about faith than it does repentance—the words for faith occur
more than eight times as often.
Everyone who believes in Jesus is forgiven (Acts 10:43).
"Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved" (Acts 16:31). The gospel "is
the power of God for the salvation of everyone who believes" (Romans 1:16).
Christians are known as believers, not as repenters. Belief is the defining
characteristic.
Does this mean that we are to accept certain facts? The Greek
word can mean that kind of belief, but more often it conveys the sense of
trust. When Paul encourages us to believe in Jesus Christ, he is not emphasizing
facts. (The devil knows the facts about Jesus, but he isn’t saved.)
When we believe in Jesus Christ, we trust him. We know he is
faithful and trustworthy. We can count on him to take care of us, to give us
what he promises. We can trust him to rescue us from humanity’s worst problems.
When we turn to him for salvation, we admit that we need help, and that he can
provide it.
Our faith does not save us—our faith must be in him, not
something else. We commit ourselves to him, and he saves us. When we trust in
Christ, we quit trying to save ourselves. Although we try to have good behavior,
we do not think our efforts are saving us (diligent effort never made anyone
perfect). Nor do we despair when our efforts fail. That’s because we are
trusting in Christ, not in ourselves, for our salvation. Our confidence is in
him, not in our success or failure.
Faith is what motivates repentance. When we trust Jesus as
our Savior, when we realize that God loves us so much that he sent his Son to
die for us, when we know that he wants the best for us, then we become willing
to live for him and please him. We make a choice—we give up the pointless and
frustrating life we used to have, and accept his purpose and direction for what
life is supposed to be.
Faith is the internal change that makes all the difference.
Our faith doesn’t earn anything or add anything to what Jesus has earned for us.
Faith is simply the willingness to respond to what he has done. We are like
slaves working in the clay pits, and Christ announces, "I have purchased your
freedom." We are free to stay in the pits, or we can trust him and leave. The
redemption has been done; our part is to accept it and act on it.
Grace
Salvation is God’s gift to us, given by his grace, his
generosity. We can’t earn it, no matter what we do. "It is by grace you have
been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of
God—not by works, so that no one can boast" (Ephesians 2:8-9). Even our faith is
a gift of God. Even if we obey perfectly from now on, we do not deserve a reward
(Luke 17:10).
We were created for good works (Ephesians 2:10), but good
works cannot save us. They follow salvation, but they cannot earn it. As Paul
says, if salvation could be achieved by law-keeping, then Christ died for
nothing (Galatians 2:21). Grace does not give us permission to sin, but grace is
given to us when we sin (Romans 6:15; 1 John 1:9). Whatever good works we do, we
thank God for doing them in us (Galatians 2:20; Philippians 2:13).
God "has saved us and called us to a holy life—not because of
anything we have done but because of his own purpose and grace" (2 Timothy 1:9).
"He saved us, not because of righteous things we had done, but because of his
mercy" (Titus 3:5).
Grace is the heart of the gospel: We are saved by God’s gift,
not by our works. The gospel is "the message of his grace" (Acts 14:3; 20:24).
"It is through the grace of our Lord Jesus that we are saved" (Acts 15:11). "We
are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by Christ
Jesus" (Romans 3:24). We would be hopelessly in sin and condemnation, except for
grace.
Our salvation depends on what Christ has done. He is the
Savior, the one who rescues us. We cannot brag about our obedience, or our
faith, because they are always defective. The only thing we can be proud of is
what Christ has done (2 Corinthians 10:17-18)—and he did it for everyone, not
just us.
Justification
The Bible explains salvation in many ways: ransom,
redemption, forgiveness, reconciliation, adoption, justification, etc. That is
because people understand their problem in different ways. For those who feel
dirty, Christ offers cleansing. For those who feel enslaved, he offers
redemption, or purchase. For those who feel guilt, he gives forgiveness.
For people who feel alienated and put at a distance, he
offers reconciliation and friendship. For those who feel worthless, he gives an
assurance of value. For people who don’t feel like they belong, he describes
salvation as adoption and inheritance. For those who are aimless, he gives
purpose and direction. For those who are tired, he offers rest. For the fearful,
he gives hope. For the anxious, he offers peace. Salvation is all this, and
more.
Let’s look at justification. The Greek word is a courtroom
term. People who are justified are declared "not guilty." They are exonerated,
cleared, acquitted, declared OK. When God justifies us, he says that our sins
will not be counted against us. They are removed from the record.
When we accept that Jesus died for us, when we acknowledge
that we need a Savior, when we acknowledge that our sin deserves punishment and
that Jesus bore the punishment of our sins for us, then we have faith, and God
assures us that we are forgiven.
No one can be justified, or declared righteous, by observing
the law (Romans 3:20), because the law does not save. It is only a standard that
we fail to meet, and by that measurement, all of us fall short (v. 23). God
"justifies those who have faith in Jesus" (v. 26). We are "justified by faith
apart from observing the law" (v. 28).
To illustrate justification by faith, Paul uses the example
of Abraham, who "believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness"
(Romans 4:3, quoting Genesis 15:6). Because Abraham trusted God, God counted him
as righteous. This was long before the law was given, showing that justification
is a gift of God, received by faith, not earned by law-keeping.
Justification is more than forgiveness, more than removing
our debts. Justification means counting us as righteous, as having done
something right. Our righteousness is not from our own works, but from Christ (1
Corinthians 1:30). It is through the obedience of Christ, Paul says, that
believers are made righteous (Romans 5:19).
Paul even says that God "justifies the wicked" (Romans 4:5).
God will consider a sinner righteous (and therefore accepted on the day of
judgment) if the sinner trusts God. A person who trusts God will no longer want
to be wicked, but this is a result and not a cause of salvation. People are "not
justified by observing the law, but by faith in Jesus Christ" (Galatians 2:16).
A new start
Some people come to faith suddenly. Something clicks in their
brain, a light goes on, and they accept Jesus as their Savior. Other people come
to faith in a more gradual way, slowly realizing that they do trust in Christ
and not in themselves for their salvation.
Either way, the Bible describes this as a new birth. When we
have faith in Christ, we are born anew as children of God (John 1:12-13;
Galatians 3:26; 1 John 5:1). The Holy Spirit begins to live within us (John
14:17), and God begins a new creation in us (2 Corinthians 5:17; Galatians
6:15). The old self dies, and a new person is being created (Ephesians
4:22-24)—God is changing us.
In Jesus Christ, and as we have faith in him, God is undoing
the results of humanity’s sin. As the Holy Spirit works within us, a new
humanity is being formed. The Bible doesn’t say exactly how this happens; it
just says that it is being done. The process begins in this life and is finished
in the next.
The goal is to make us more like Jesus Christ. He is the
image of God in perfection (2 Corinthians 4:4; Colossians 1:15; Hebrews 1:3),
and we must be transformed into his likeness (2 Corinthians 3:18; Galatians
4:19; Ephesians 4:13; Colossians 3:10). We are to be like him in spirit—in love,
joy, peace, humility and other godly qualities. That’s what the Holy Spirit does
in us. He is restoring the image of God.
Salvation is also described as reconciliation—the repair of
our relationship with God (Romans 5:10-11; 2 Corinthians 5:18-21; Ephesians
2:16; Colossians 1:20-22). No longer do we resist or ignore God—we love him. We
are changed from enemies to friends. And even more than friends—God says that he
adopts us as his own children (Romans 8:15; Ephesians 1:5). We are in his
family, with rights, responsibilities and a glorious inheritance (Romans
8:16-17; Galatians 3:29; Ephesians 1:18; Colossians 1:12).
Eventually there will be no more pain and sorrow (Revelation
21:4), which means that no one will be making mistakes. Sin will be no more, and
death will be no more (1 Corinthians 15:26). That goal may seem a long way off
when we look at ourselves now, but the journey (just like any other journey)
begins with a single step—the step of accepting Christ as Savior. Christ will
complete the work he begins in us (Philippians 1:6).
And in the future, we will be even more like Christ (1
Corinthians 15:49; 1 John 3:2). We will be immortal, incorruptible, glorious and
sinless. Our spiritual bodies will have supernatural powers. We will have a
vitality, intelligence, creativity, power and love far beyond what we know now.
The image of God, once tarnished by sin, will be restored even better than it
was before.
Michael Morrison
To
the next article in this series:
Responding to grace |