SALVATION
The Romans' Road to Salvation. Romans: 3:23, 6:23; 5:8; 10:9, 10, 13.
Traditional.
During the Spanish-American War, Clara Barton was overseeing the work of the Red Cross
in Cuba. One day Colonel Theodore Roosevelt came to her, wanted to buy food for his sick
and wounded Rough Riders. But she refused to sell him any. Roosevelt was perplexed. His
men needed the help and he was prepared to pay out of his own funds. When he asked someone
why he could not buy the supplies, he was told, "Colonel, just ask for it!" A
smile broke over Roosevelt's face. Now he understood--the provisions were not for sale.
All he had to do was simply ask and they would be given freely.
Our Daily Bread, October 11, 1992.
Lord Kenneth Clark, internationally know for his television series Civilization, lived
and died without faith in Jesus Christ. He admitted in his autobiography that while
visiting a beautiful church he had what he believed to be an overwhelming religious
experience. "My whole being," Clark wrote, "was irradiated by a kind of
heavenly joy far more intense than anything I had known before." But the "gloom
of grace," as he described it, created a problem. If he allowed himself to be
influenced by it, he knew he would have to change, his family might think he had lost his
mind, and maybe that intense joy would prove to be an illusion. So he concluded, "I
was too deeply embedded in the world to change course."
Our Daily Bread, February 15, 1994.
Graffiti from the 1800s discovered by workers renovating the Washington Monument has
quite a different tone from that usually found today on the sides of buildings and subway
cars: "Whoever is the human instrument under God in the conversion of one soul,
erects a monument to his own memory more lofty and enduing (sic) than this," reads
the inscription which can now be viewed by visitors to the monument. It is signed BFB. No
one knows who that is, or who left the small drawings and 19th century dates on other
walls.
The markings in the lobby of the monument were covered over when it was decorated at
the turn of the century. They were found when workers removed marble wainscoting as part
of a year-long $500,000 renovation which was just completed.
Spokesman-Review, June, 1994.
In 1981, a Minnesota radio station reported a story about a stolen car in California.
Police were staging an intense search for the vehicle and the driver, even to the point of
placing announcements on local radio stations to contact the thief. On the front seat of
the stolen car sat a box of crackers that, unknown to the thief, were laced with poison.
The car owner had intended to use the crackers as rat bait. Now the police and the owner
of the VW Bug were more interested in apprehending the thief to save his life than to
recover the car. So often when we run from God, we feel it is to escape his punishment. But
what we are actually doing is eluding his rescue.
Unknown.
Salvation depends upon Christ's work for us, while rewards depend upon our works for
Christ.
Milburn Cockrell.
A marshal in Napoleon's army -- a man who was devotedly and enthusiastically attached
to him -- was mortally wounded in battle. As the last struggle drew near and he lay dying
in his tent, he sent for his chief. Napoleon came. The poor man thought his emperor could
do anything. Perhaps he even sought to put him in the place of God. So he earnestly
pleaded with his leader to save his life. The emperor sadly shook his head and turned
away. But as the dying man felt the cold, merciless hand of death drawing him irresistibly
behind the curtain of the unseen world, he was still heard to shriek out, "Save me,
Napoleon! Save me!" In the hour of death, that soldier discovered that even the
powerful Napoleon could not give him physical life.
Our Daily Bread.
Back in 1830 George Wilson was convicted of robbing the U.S. Mail and was sentenced to
be hanged. President Andrew Jackson issued a pardon for Wilson, but he refused to accept
it. The matter went to Chief Justice Marshall, who concluded that Wilson would have to be
executed. "A pardon is a slip of paper," wrote Marshall, "the value of
which is determined by the acceptance of the person to be pardoned. If it is refused, it
is no pardon. George Wilson must be hanged."For some, the pardon comes too late. For
others, the pardon is not accepted.
Prokope, V. 11, #5.
A businessman well known for his ruthlessness once announced to writer Mark Twain,
"Before I die I mean to make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. I will climb Mount Sinai
and read the 10 Commandments aloud at the top." "I have a better idea,"
replied Twain. "You could stay in Boston and keep them."
Moody Bible Institute's Today in the Word, September,
1991, p. 32.
The citizens of Feldkirch, Austria, didn't know what to do. Napoleon's massive army was
preparing to attack. Soldiers had been spotted on the heights above the little town, which
was situated on the Austrian border. A council of citizens was hastily summoned to decide
whether they should try to defend themselves or display the white flag of surrender. It
happened to be Easter Sunday, and the people had gathered in the local church. The pastor
rose and said, "Friends, we have been counting on our own strength, and apparently
that has failed. As this is the day of our Lord's resurrection, let us just ring the
bells, have our services as usual, and leave the matter in His hands. We know only our
weakness, and not the power of God to defend us." The council accepted his plan and
the church bells rang. The enemy, hearing the sudden peal, concluded that the Austrian
army had arrived during the night to defend the town. Before the service ended, the enemy
broke camp and left.
Unknown.
Several years ago a man and his wife were found frozen to death in their car. A
blizzard had dumped tons of snow in the area, burying their vehicle. Before she died, the
woman scribbled a note on a piece of paper and stuffed it in the glove compartment. The
note read: "I don't want to die this way." Tragically, less than six feet from
their icy grave was a stranded bus, whose festive passengers remained warm throughout the
night.
Today in the Word, October, 1990, p. 28.
"The life of Christianity consists of possessive pronouns" says Martin
Luther. It is one thing to say, "Christ is a Saviour"; it is quite another thing
to say, "He is my Saviour and my Lord." The devil can say the first; the true
Christian alone can say the second.
Resource, July/August, 1990.
In May, 1963, in an interview conducted by Sherwook E. Wirt , C. S. Lewis said,
"There are many different ways of bringing people into His Kingdom, even some ways
that I specially dislike."
Quoted in His, November. 1976.
The devil and his cohorts were devising plans to get people to reject the Gospel.
"Let's go to them and say there is no God," proposed one. Silence prevailed.
Every devil knew that most people believe in a supreme being. "Let's tell them there
is no hell, no future punishment for the wicked," offered another. That was turned
down, because men obviously have consciences which tell them that sin must be punished.
The concave was going to end in failure when there came a voice from the rear: "Tell
them there is a God, there is a hell and that the Bible is the Word of God. But tell them
there is plenty of time to decide the question. Let them 'neglect' the Gospel, until it is
too late." All hell erupted with ghoulish glee, for they knew that if a person
procrastinated on Christ, they usually never accept Him.
Resource, July/August, 1990.
Three elements of personality are involved in making a decision to become a Christian,
or in making any significant decision for that matter. They are the emotions, the
intellect, and the will.
For example, a young man meets a young woman. They are immediately attracted to one
another. They both say to themselves, "Now there is someone I'd like to marry."
At that point, if the emotions had their way, there would be a wedding. But the intellect
intervenes, questioning the impulsive emotional response. Would we be compatible? What is
she really like? Can I afford to support her? Both conclude it would be better to take
some more time and answer a few questions before they proceed. So the two begin spending
more time with each other. He eventually concludes that she is as beautiful on the inside
as she is on the outside. Now his intellect has sided with the emotions on the idea of
marriage.
But the final and heaviest vote remains to be cast -- that of the will. It stops the
march toward the altar with the questions, "Am I willing to give up this lifestyle
for another? What about my freedom -- is it worth the trade? Am I willing to assume the
added responsibility?" The marriage will occur only when the will finally agrees with
the emotions and the intellect. And so it is in coming to Christ.
Jim Peterson, Living Proof , NavPress, 1989, p. 170.
Lengthy Illustrations
Normally the flight from Nassau to Miami took Walter Wyatt, Jr., only sixty-five
minutes. But on December 5, 1986, he attempted it after thieves had looted the
navigational equipment in his Beechcraft. With only a compass and a hand-held radio,
Walter flew into skies blackened by storm clouds.
When his compass began to gyrate, Walter concluded he was headed in the wrong
direction. He flew his plane below the clouds, hoping to spot something, but soon he knew
he was lost. He put out a mayday call, which brought a Coast Guard Falcon search plane to
lead him to an emergency landing strip only six miles away. Suddenly Wyatt's right engine
coughed its last and died. The fuel tank had run dry. Around 8 p.m. Wyatt could do little
more than glide the plane into the water.
Wyatt survived the crash, but his plane disappeared quickly, leaving him bobbing on the
water in a leaky life vest. With blood on his forehead, Wyatt floated on his back.
Suddenly he felt a hard bump against his body. A shark had found him. Wyatt kicked the
intruder and wondered if he would survive the night. He managed to stay afloat for the
next ten hours. In the morning, Wyatt saw no airplanes, but in the water a dorsal fin was
headed for him. Twisting, he felt the hide of a shark brush against him. In a moment, two
more bull sharks sliced through the water toward him. Again he kicked the sharks, and they
veered away, but he was nearing exhaustion. Then he heard the sound of a distant aircraft.
When it was within a half mile, he waved his orange vest. The pilot radioed the Cape York,
which was twelve minutes away: "Get moving, cutter! There's a shark targeting this
guy!" As the Cape York pulled alongside Wyatt, a Jacob's ladder was dropped over the
side. Wyatt climbed wearily out of the water and onto the ship, where he fell to his knees
and kissed the deck. He'd been saved. He didn't need encouragement or better techniques.
Nothing less than outside intervention could have rescued him from sure death. How much we
are like Walter Wyatt.
Peter Michelmore, Reader's Digest, October, 1987.
Commentary
The thief had nails through both hands, so that he could not work; and a nail through
each foot, so that he could not run errands for the Lord; he could not lift a hand or a
foot toward his salvation, and yet Christ offered him the gift of God; and he took it.
Christ threw him a passport, and took him into Paradise.
D. L. Moody, "Day by Day with D.L Moody," Moody Press.
When the author walks onto the stage, the play is over. God is going to invade, all
right; but what is the good of saying you are on His side then, when you see the whole
natural universe melting away like a dream and something else comes crashing in? This time
it will be God without disguise; something so overwhelming that it will strike either
irresistible love or irresistible horror into every creature. It will be too late then to
choose your side. That will not be the time for choosing; It will be the time when we
discover which side we really have chosen, whether we realized it before or not. Now,
today, this moment, is our chance to choose the right side.
C.S. Lewis.
A.B. Simpson is reported to have said that the gospel "Tells rebellious men that
God is reconciled, that justice is satisfied, that sin has been atoned for, that the
judgment of the guilty may be revoked, the condemnation of the sinner cancelled, the curse
of the Law blotted out, the gates of hell closed, the portals of heaven opened wide, the
power of sin subdued, the guilty conscience healed, the broken heart comforted, the sorrow
and misery of the Fall undone.
M. Cocoris, Evangelism, A Biblical Approach, , Moody,
1984, p. 29.
Statistics and Research
Despite the efforts of evangelists, parachurch ministries and local churches, the
percentage of American adults who are born again Christians is no different now than in
1982, according to a study by the Barna Research Group. The study found that 34% of all
Americans can be identified as born again--that is, they have made a personal commitment
to Jesus Christ, and say they will go to heaven because they have confessed their sins and
accepted Christ as their savior. Among those surveyed, 62% said they had made a personal
commitment to Jesus Christ that is still important in their lives today. However, among
those who have made a commitment to Christ, only 55 percent believe they will go to heaven
because of accepting Christ as their personal savior (the basic belief in the "born
again" movement)...Most of those surveyed said they would go to heaven because of
living a good life, or obeying the 10 commandments, or because all people will go to
heaven. Others who said they had made a commitment to Christ said they were unsure about
what will happen to them after they die.
Reported in Inland Northwest Christian News, March, 1990, p. 3.
According to a recent poll of American young adult men, 48% believe that most of the
problems in the world today are a result of man himself. Only 41% indicated agreement that
Jesus has provided the way to know God personally. Only 29% could correctly state how one
becomes a Christian. But 67% were interested in knowing more about Christianity.
What's Gone Wrong With The Harvest.
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