Sunday, November 17, 2024

Can You Lose Your Salvation?

Today, as I read John’s record of Jesus’ final words to His disciples before He was taken away, I was struck by how many times in chapters 14-17, He said keep My commandments (4 times) or keep My words (10 times) as an essential element of true belief. I ruffled some feathers a while back when I suggested that just as God gives the word to people, He also takes it away. This begs the long-debated question of whether someone can lose their salvation.

The writer of Hebrews describes people who have fallen away as having, “tasted the good word of God.” Some ask if tasting the Word is equivalent to becoming saved. If so, this verse seems to suggest one can forfeit salvation through apostasy. Perhaps the Hebrew readers would recall Old Testament prophets who were instructed to eat a scroll containing God’s word. I might be stretching the metaphor, but I see eating and tasting as significantly different.

Jesus, whom John proclaimed was the Word made flesh, once told people that they must eat His flesh if they truly wanted eternal life. Jesus’ explanation of that shocking statement made it clear that He was talking about His words. The point is obvious: licking nourishing food won’t give any sustenance; it must be eaten. In the same way, tasting God’s Word will not bring eternal life; it must be eaten – taken into the very soul of existence to do any good. Only those eat, who act on God’s Word are true believers, as Jesus implied by tying obedience to belief.

Rather than discuss what level of unbelief results in the loss of eternal life, I want to look at what proper belief looks like. Throughout Jesus’ last supper teaching, He emphasized the fact that love for Him involved obedience to Him (14 times). A.W. Tozer puts it like this: “Our Lord told His disciples that love and obedience were organically united, that the keeping of His sayings would prove that we love Him. This is the true test of love, and we will be wise to face up to it!”[1] Our obedience to Christ’s Word is the proof of our love, but what does that look like?

When Jesus was explaining the parable of the sower, He described true receivers of the Word by saying, “these are the ones who, hearing the word, hold fast with a noble and good heart, and bear fruit with patient endurance.” Jesus said after hearing the word, there are four characteristics that indicate true belief: holding fast, having a noble and good heart, bearing fruit, and demonstrating patient endurance. Each one of those things bears a closer look.

“Holding fast” is another way to describe obedience. Those who play fast and loose with God’s Word connive whatever ways they can to circumvent it. Strict obedience is the farthest thing from their mind. Those who hold fast make sure that all they do is in accordance with the Scripture. They run a tight course within the boundaries instead of looking for shortcuts that allow them to skirt their biblical responsibilities. They want to do what the Word says.

A person with a “noble and good heart” is just the type we would love to have for a friend. The biblical definition of noble is commendable and honest. To be good in the biblical sense is to be generous and kind. Each of these traits represents obedience to Jesus’ commands and find their center in the greatest one: to love God and to love one another. Essentially, Jesus said to truly love Him the love of others is required. Another was to say this is that our love must be heartfelt not duty bound.

It is no surprise that Jesus included “bearing fruit” in His description of a true believer. In John 15, He called Himself the vine from whom His disciples would draw the life that made it possible to bear fruit for the Gardener, His Father. Throughout the New Testament the nature of the fruit coming from the True Vine is described as righteousness otherwise known as doing good. This hits the same chord once again: hearing leads to doing if it is genuine.

“Patient endurance” can only be found in those who know and do God’s Word. In fact, patience is part of the fruit of the Spirit which characterizes all true believers. If I didn’t know Who the victor is in the struggle we call life, I would not be able to endure. My patience comes only because I know Whom I have believed, and I believe He is able to complete His good work in and through me. I don’t understand how people who are not caught up in love for God and His Word can get out of bed every day. However, I do understand the epidemic of emptiness and despair that characterizes worldly people.

My advice to anyone who is worried about losing salvation in Christ is to look for these qualities in their life: holding fast to the Word, having a noble and good heart, bearing fruit, and waiting patiently for God’s will to be accomplished. I’ll repeat Jesus’ words once more: “If you love Me, keep my commandments.” There is no salvation for someone who doesn’t love Jesus. There is no true love for Jesus without obedience to His commands. The question isn’t whether you can lose your salvation; the real question is whether you have gained it.

Related Posts: Necessary Obedience; Merely Christian



[1] A. W. Tozer and Gerald B. Smith, Evenings with Tozer: Daily Devotional Readings (Chicago, IL: Moody Publishers, 2015), 345.

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