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Thursday January 12, 2006

Assurance of Salvation (Part 2)

On Tuesday we began a short series on assurance of salvation, a series that was rudely interrupted by my site crashing. I sought to show that, in many ways, contemporary evangelicalism can create an atmosphere in which many who consider themselves may have false assurance of their salvation. A decision-based system of conversion and regeneration has been historically proven to create many who believe they are Christians, yet who show little evidence of conversion. I looked in particular at assurance given to people based on their sincerity such as in an appeal that says “If you just prayed that prayer and meant it with all your heart, then God will know you as one of His own.” Such an appeal is dependent upon at least one human factor: sincerity.

Today I will begin to tie this into assurance of salvation, beginning with three affirmations.

It is possible and even normal for the Christian to experience assurance of salvation.

John MacArthur calls assurance of salvation “the birthright and privilege of every true believer in Christ.” This assurance is not only possible but should be the normal experience for any believer in Christ. Romans 8:16 teaches that assurance of salvation is part of the ministry of the Holy Spirit. “The Spirit himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God…” Matthew Henry says the following about this verse: “But those that are sanctified have God’s Spirit witnessing with their spirits, which is to be understood not of any immediate extraordinary revelation, but an ordinary work of the Spirit, in and by the means of comfort, speaking peace to the soul. This testimony is always agreeable to the written word, and is therefore always grounded upon sanctification; for the Spirit in the heart cannot contradict the Spirit in the word.” 2 Peter 1:10 goes so far as to command us to pursue this assurance. “Therefore, brothers, be all the more diligent to make your calling and election sure, for if you practice these qualities you will never fall.”

Yet even more clear than these verses is 1 John 5:13. As John wraps up this epistle he reveals his purpose in writing it. “I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God that you may know that you have eternal life.” God has seen fit to provide us an entire book in the Bible that will teach us to know that we have eternal life. Surely, then, we can agree that God intends that we have assurance that we are His children.

Having seen that it is both possible and normal for the Christian to experience assurance of salvation, we now turn to a second point which seems nearly contradictory:

It is possible and even normal for the non-Christian to experience a false assurance of salvation.

A foreshadowing of one of the most terrifying scenes the world will ever experience unfolds in Matthew 7, in a section often titled “I Never Knew You.” “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. On that day many will say to me, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many mighty works in your name?’ And then will I declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from me, you workers of lawlessness.’” When the final judgment comes, there will be many who will be shocked to learn that they are not true believers. They will go to the grave confident that they are saved, but come to the judgment and find that they are to be cast out of Jesus’ presence. This ought to be sobering for all who consider themselves Christians. No wonder that Paul sought confidence in his salvation, declaring in 2 Timothy 1:12 “I know whom I have believed, and I am convinced that he is able to guard until that Day what has been entrusted to me.”

It is educational, of course, to look at the grounds for assurance of those who only think they are true believers. We will look at this in more detail in our next article, but for now notice the short phrase, “Did we not…” There is much we can learn from those few short words. Those who have false assurance have placed their hope in themselves and in their own efforts. They appeal to their own work rather than Christ’s.

We’ll now turn to our third affirmation, which should provide great comfort to those who struggle in this area.

It is possible and even normal for Christians to have doubts about their salvation

There is nothing unusual about occasionally doubting one’s salvation. The only thing unusual about doubt would be to experience it and not deal with it, wrestling with it, until it has been quelled by the power of the Spirit. A survey of many of the great believers of our day or of days past would prove that it is common to deal with some level of doubt. This is usually not a consuming doubt that drives a person to constant depression and despair, but a more occasional doubt that can be overcome by the ministry of the Spirit.

Don Whitney lists several important understandings about this type of doubt. First, doubting assurance is not the same as experiencing unbelief. A person can have a strong, vibrant faith in Jesus Christ while still feeling some level of doubt. We must not make doubt and unbelief synonymous terms, lest a person feel that his brief periods of doubt indicate serious unbelief in his heart. Unbelief presupposes a denial of many important points of doctrine where as doubt is mere uncertainty about them. Second, there are many causes of doubt. We can doubt because of the attacks of Satan, because of trials or difficult circumstances, because of sin in our lives or even a mental or physical condition. Doubt is not necessarily brought about by overwhelming sin in our lives. Third, spiritual immaturity may contribute to doubt. With greater maturity comes a greater understanding of God and our position before Him through Jesus’ atoning death. Thus we would generally expect doubts to decrease as a person grows in spiritual maturity. Fourth, sensitivity to sin may cause confusion about assurance. Believers, through their reborn hearts, are blessed with a greater sensitivity to sin. This heightened understanding of the gravity of sin may lead young Christians to doubt. Yet it should be noted that this increased understanding of sin is actually a mark of the Spirit’s work with a person’s heart. Fifth, comparisons with other believers may cloud assurance. Comparing oneself to other believers may emphasize the immaturity of a person’s faith. We must understand that people mature only with great effort and over a great amount of time. It is often unrealistic to compare oneself with a believer who is far more mature. Finally, childhood conversion may affect assurance. A person who was converted as a child may feel that he was deceived when he made the decision. He may feel that his decision is somehow less meaningful because Christianity is all he has ever known.

We see, then, that there are many possible reasons that may lead Christians to lose their assurance of salvation. Some of these are internal factors and some are external. Some of them may, in fact, be given by God Himself to test and sharpen us. So the believer can have confidence that some doubt is common to the Christian life and that, while doubt is a symptom of living in a sinful world, it is not necessarily sinful to struggle with it.

By way of brief review, we have seen that assurance of salvation is possible for the believer, that false assurance of salvation is possible for the unbeliever and that it is normal for Christians, from time to time, to experience doubt about salvation.

We will conclude tomorrow by looking to the basis of true assurance.

Comments (13) »


1. Ken Fields
January 12, 2006
12:18 PM

Tim,

Thanks for addressing this topic. Having grown up in a pastor’s home, and dealing with the doubts of my conversion as a child (a pastor’s kid should never have doubts, right?), I have found that MANY who trusted in Christ as children have experienced these same fears (in my experience, at a much higher rate than those converted later in life). May we each be mindful of Scripture’s truth… it is not I who keeps Christ, it is Christ who keeps me! May God write the eternal truth of John 10:27-28 on our hearts.


2. Steve S
January 12, 2006
12:46 PM

Wow, Tim. I think this is the best treatment of this topic I have ever read. I’m looking forward to the next installment, and may comment further at that time, but I did want to commend you on some excellent writing here!

steve :)


3. David Chalkley
January 12, 2006
3:47 PM

Tim, Thank you for your posting (and all your labor of love to provide this site). This is a hymn by Horatius Bonar that has helped me much.
As Ken Fields commented, “His love, not mine, the resting place, His truth, not mine, the tie.”

“I hear the words of love.”

I hear the words of love,
I gaze upon the blood,
I see the mighty Sacrifice,
And I have peace with God.

’Tis everlasting peace!
Sure as Jehovah’s name;
’Tis stable as His steadfast throne,
For evermore the same.

The clouds may go and come,
And storms may sweep my sky—
The blood-sealed friendship changes not;
The cross is ever nigh.

My love is ofttimes low,
My joy still ebbs and flows;
But peace with Him remains the same,
No change Jehovah knows.

I change, He changes not,
The Christ can never die;
His love, not mine, the resting place,
His truth, not mine, the tie.

Horatius Bonar


4. Jim
January 12, 2006
6:32 PM

Tim,

A very level headed and objective look at the subject of assurance. This is a crucial foundational step for all believers in Christ.

Does not doubt stem from unbelief? Do we as christians not suffer this from time to time? In fact we are told that the just shall live by faith. Therefore the requirement of belief is quite necessary.

However, if a believer continues to struggle with assurance of their salvation for a lengthy period of time, I dare say this reveals some confidence in themselves rather than complete faith and trust in the unshakeable rock of Jesus Christ and His Word.

God bless,

Jim


5. lucyplusfour
January 12, 2006
7:10 PM

oh my goodness! Great post! this one will get printed.


6. john challies
January 12, 2006
10:46 PM

archibald alexander wrote a great book “essays on Religious Experiences” - which I gave away to Chris White- where he very sympathetically deals with the subject of doubt [lack of assurance] from the perspective the 4 medieval tempers. A book well worth seeking out at antiquarian booksellers.
Dad


7. PuritanD71
January 12, 2006
11:55 PM

Tim,

Thank you for a helpful reminder. I am taking the Jr. Highers on a winter retreat this weekend. I have been struggling with ways to inform and instruct them about being a Christian withouth giving them a false hope that they have been saved just because they prayed the prayer, raised their hand, etc. It is a difficult propostion to communicate to kids (especially in one 30 minute block of time), but nonetheless, truth needs to prevail.

Thanks again!!

Respectfully,

PuritanD


8. nsbeal
January 14, 2006
11:30 AM

A couple of things that stood out to me in your article. In the first installment, you said that Packer’s definition of regeneration is “thoroughly Reformed, and so thoroughly biblical.” I think equating any theological system to the Bible is probably arrogant, regardless of how close it gets, because if the theological system is really that valuable, with all of its neat definitions and ways to solve all the mysteries of the Bible, God would have just written that down instead of the perfect, infallible Word He gave us. To equate any logical associations of ideas with the Truth from God’s Word will ultimately lead to system-driven conclusions, not biblical ones. As a friend said to me recently, “We don’t have to be logical, just biblical.” And I think that’s where your conclusions lack a little bit of reality. For example, Jesus tells the woman at the well that true worshippers of God worship Him in Spirit and in Truth, which is sincerity. So sincerity plays some role in this thing we call salvation. Not only that, but an examination of any narrative section of Scripture would indicate that there are requirements for salvation, that God calls man to repentance and expects a response, that mankind is judged based on that response, and that God remains Sovereign throughout the process. Not only that, but your article introduces an even greater quandary: How do we know those “great Christians of our day” were really saved, and that it was the Holy Spirit who calmed their fears? If a non-believer can be deceived into thinking he is a Christian to the point that he will die believing it, how do we know that the manic-depressive Charles Spurgeon didn’t just talk himself into salvation? I’m not sure that your article answers any important questions, even though you do start with a valid concern about modern evangelicalism blatant disregard for the eternal souls of people, possible because it’s really hard to build big churches when true salvation is a requirement. Ok, that’s all I have to say. And I may not be able to get back to the old computer for a while, so if anyone responds it may take me a while to respond back.


9. DLE
January 14, 2006
11:58 AM

Tim,

You commented a couple weeks ago that you and Doug laughed about my ability to start series and actually finish them.

All I can say is that at least I don’t have to deal with my site going down in the middle of a series!

Man, bad circumstance all the way around. I had to blink and reload the page several times when I got the vDeck “This account is suspended” page. I thought to myself, “Tim starts a series and they suspend his account!”

Have a great weekend.


10. Tim Challies
January 14, 2006
12:34 PM

Dan - What’s more I have even finished this one. I just found something else to post on Friday.


11. karen turco
May 17, 2007
10:45 AM

Did you get this from the book “How can I be sure I’m a Christian?” by Donald Whitney?


12. Pete
May 18, 2007
9:05 AM

Tim,

Great post.

Anytime we look inward to ourselves for assurance, instead of outward to Christ’s atoning work on Calvary for sinners, we will not find assurance.

-Pete


13. Logan Stanton
July 24, 2008
10:53 PM

This is 1 of several articles that i have read about assurance of salvation. I am 18 years old right now and for much of my life, especially over the past few years or so, i have often doubted my salvation even though i have given my life to God. One of your reasons that you included is that some doubt because they became a Christian as a child. I remember that when i was about 7, i was scared that my heart would stop beating and that i would die. It was then my mom called a pastor of the church we went to at the present time to come over to our apartment. I don’t remember exactly what happened that night. I think i remember us going into our bathroom. He may have baptized me, i’m not sure. But i’m pretty sure i remember that i felt a lot better after that as if i had peace. So i’m pretty sure that i got saved that night. So i think it is the fact that i can’t remember exactly what happened that night that causes my doubt. I’ve also read in many places that you can’t rely on your own thoughts and feeling to determine if you are saved or not, but by faith in God. I think there lies two of my reasons. Plus, sometimes when i give in to temptation or when i sin, i feel as if i was not even saved to begin with even though i know that i have given my life to God. There will be certain times of the day where i feel 100% sure of my salvation and other times when i’m not completely sure. So as a result, i oftentimes find myself saying the sinner’s prayer over and over again. I am truly sincere when i pray and i truly believe that God saves, but i don’t know if sometimes i just don’t trust God or if i don’t trust myself. I do find myself in spiritual growth oftentimes until i begin to doubt. This article really helps, although i still have some doubt.