Tag Archive - salvation


Taking the Gospel to "The Found"

For all the talk that goes on in Christian churches today about reaching “the lost,” I would love to see a little more emphasis on reaching “the found.”  When people who identify as Christian but are mired from month to month and year to year in pornography, gambling, addictions, and bad marriages (at nearly identical rates to those who do not claim to be Christians), something is profoundly wrong.

There are several directions we can go with this.  1.) We can say that the reason Christians are nearly identical to non-Christians in terms of how we actually live is because what we believe is not actually capable of bringing transformation; 2) We can say that we’re missing a critical piece of the whole thing — something upon which the promise of transformation itself rests and without which there can simply be no significant transformation; 3) We can say that the problem is that we just aren’t trying hard enough.  (As some popular writers are in fact saying.  See my post “Not Crazy about Crazy Love“.)

I think the answer is #1 and #2.  I think the reason Christians en-masse are not experiencing significant life transformation is because we missing a critical piece of what Christianity actually is.  Continue Reading…

Is Jesus the only way to God?

I should begin by saying in my opinion YES, absolutely, Jesus is the only way to God.  But it’s not enough to say this because in saying it you haven’t really said anything.  All you’ve said is that Jesus is the way to God.  You have said nothing about what this actually means.

There are two ways of thinking about this question and they both hinge on one’s interpretation of John 14:6 where Jesus says, “I am the way, the truth, and the life.  No one comes to the Father but by me.”  Again, wonderful.  But what does it mean?

The traditional view is that it means only Christians will get to be with God in the next world (and in this one!).  Only Christians have come to Christ for forgiveness of sin and so everyone who is not a Christian will be eternally separated from God.  The problem with this is that even the Christians who hold this belief don’t actually believe it.  If I approach one of them and say, “What about those who have never heard of Jesus during their lives at all?” almost all of them will say, “God will judge them according to what they knew.”  Very few Christians are willing to say that everyone who ever lived before Jesus, along with all who will die without ever having heard of him will be separated eternally from God.  So they say there’s a loophole.  Apparently the death of Jesus will ultimately secure even some who never formally accepted him, because of God’s mercy and love.

Which leads to interpretation #2, which has not a lower but a higher view of Jesus.  This view holds simply that all who come to God come through Christ.  Let’s say I am drowning and you throw me a lifeline, pull me to shore, and then immediately leave the scene once you know I am safe.  After I recover my senses, I may remember your face and thus “know” who saved me.  Or I may have been so panicked and hysterical that I don’t remember your face at all.  In fact maybe I don’t even have any memory of being saved.  None of these three scenarios changes the fact that it was you who saved me.  It was you whether I realize it or not, whether I saw you or not, whether I remember you or not.  You did it, and you were the ONLY one who did it.  Even if I think someone else did it, you were the one who actually did.  What I understand about it takes away absolutely nothing from the reality that it was you who did it.

This view completely freaks out large numbers of Christians and they believe it is close to heresy, if not actual heresy.  They believe it takes a low view of Jesus, but it doesn’t.

Continue Reading…

The Almost-Gospel

In yesterday’s post I was writing about how there’s a problem in the church that is evident in the statistical data which shows that divorce and other moral problems are occurring in the lives of Christians at the same rate as in those who are not Christians.

I think the cause of this is deeper than most people would imagine.  Continue Reading…