
eBook - ePub
How Can I Be Sure I'm a Christian?
The Satisfying Certainty of Eternal Life
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
Have you ever doubted the certainty of your salvation?
If worries about your salvation ever disturb your peace, turn to this book for refreshing clarity and confidence in the God who guides your steps. Bestselling author Don Whitney carefully walks readers through the Bible's teaching on salvation and eternal life in this well-researched guide by addressing issues such as:
"Every book Don Whitney writes is worth the cover price. How Can I Be Sure I'm a Christian? is doubly so. Christians struggling with assurance of their salvation should buy and read this book. Pastors should buy a box of them to give to doubting church members." âJason K. Allen, president of Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
"If you have questions about your assurance or even somebody else's, you should read this book. Dr. Whitney's illustrations are superb, and his borrowings from the great theologians of the past are wise, stimulating, and well chosen. I commend his work highly." âJames M. Boice, author of Foundations of the Christian Faith
If worries about your salvation ever disturb your peace, turn to this book for refreshing clarity and confidence in the God who guides your steps. Bestselling author Don Whitney carefully walks readers through the Bible's teaching on salvation and eternal life in this well-researched guide by addressing issues such as:
- Is assurance of salvation possible?
- Is it normal to have doubts about salvation?
- Signs of a genuine believer
- The basis of assurance
- Common problems that erode our certainty
- And more
"Every book Don Whitney writes is worth the cover price. How Can I Be Sure I'm a Christian? is doubly so. Christians struggling with assurance of their salvation should buy and read this book. Pastors should buy a box of them to give to doubting church members." âJason K. Allen, president of Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
"If you have questions about your assurance or even somebody else's, you should read this book. Dr. Whitney's illustrations are superb, and his borrowings from the great theologians of the past are wise, stimulating, and well chosen. I commend his work highly." âJames M. Boice, author of Foundations of the Christian Faith
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Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access How Can I Be Sure I'm a Christian? by Donald S. Whitney in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Theology & Religion & Christian Theology. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
1
Assurance of SalvationâIs It Possible?
Assurance is a precious gift, which many that live in these days do undervalue, and tread under foot.
ANDREW GRAY
The Works of Andrew Gray
ON SEPTEMBER 13, 1858, the steamship Austria caught fire and sank in the Atlantic, killing all but 89 of the 542 passengers. One survivor told how he and five Christian friends stood between the fire behind them and the ocean before them. They agreed that at the end they would leap from the sinking ship together. When the time arrived, they joined hands, looked at each other, and, just before jumping into the cold waters of the Atlantic, expressed their confidence that in only a few moments they would all meet in Heaven.[1]
The story greatly affected those in the prayer meeting where it was first told, and it had a powerful effect on me when I read it. What a beautiful way to meet death. What a joyful thought to imagine entering Heaven in a matter of minutes, with an entire group of friends or loved ones. But most of all, what a wonderful thing it is, at the very moment of death, to have such strong confidence that you are, in fact, going to Heaven.
When you consider the reality that each of us is going to die, is there anything more important than knowing whether you are going to Heaven?
I donât meet too many people who think they are not going to Heaven. But the Bible presents another picture. Jesus used the words many and few in a way that indicates that most people will not go to Heaven. As Matthew 7:13-14 records, Jesus said,
Enter by the narrow gate. For the gate is wide and the way is easy that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. For the gate is narrow and the way is hard that leads to life, and those who find it are few.
Many who think they are going to Heaven are mistaken. How can we avoid being deceived? Is there any way to know now where we stand? It is possible to have assurance like the people on the Austria did?
Assurance is not only possible for Christians, but normal.
Assurance of salvation is a God-given awareness that He has accepted the death of Christ on your behalf and has forgiven you of your sins. It involves confidence that God loves you, that He has chosen you, and that you will go to Heaven. Assurance includes a sense of freedom from the guilt of sin, relief from the fear of judgment, and joy in your relationship with God as your Father.
Unfortunately, many people donât believe assurance of salvation is possible. (Some allow for the possibility, but only if you are one of the rare âsaintsâ to whom God gives an unusual, extra-biblical revelation that you are saved.) They teach that, despite your earnest response to all youâve been taught from Scripture, you must continue to live under the shadow of discovering at the judgment that God has condemned you. In the official teachings of at least one large group, curses are heaped upon those who say we may know in this life that we are right with God, our sins are forgiven, and we are going to Heaven.
But not only is assurance of salvation possible, it should be the normal experience for every Christian.
Romans 8:16 boldly declares, âThe Spirit himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God.â That describes an ongoing, present-tense experience normative for the children of God. The assurance of salvation enjoyed by the apostle Paul should be the experience of every Christian: âI know whom I have believed and I am convinced that He is able to guard what I have entrusted to Him until that dayâ (2 Timothy 1:12, NASB).
In 2 Peter 1:10, God commands us to pursue the assurance of our salvation: âTherefore, brothers, be all the more diligent to confirm your calling and election.â He would not command every Christian to make this pursuit of certainty unless He intended to give certainty.
Clearest of all is 1 John 5:13. There the apostle John specifically stated that he wrote that letter so that those who believe in Jesus Christ would know that they have eternal life:
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.
Some teach that assurance is of the essence of faith, that is, a part of genuine faith. You havenât really come to believe in Christ, they contend, unless you are sure you are saved by Christ. They point to such passages as Hebrews 11:1: âNow faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.â Obviously, there must be at least some degree of certainty in the power and willingness of Christ to save you, or else you would not believe in Him to do so. But how much certainty is necessary? Some saved people will have strong assurance from the beginning, but not all do.
We must not say that firm, unshakable assurance is necessary for salvation to be real. You can be a true Christian without having a powerful sense of assurance. If that were not so, the apostle John would not have said in 1 John 5:13 that he was writing to believers so that they would know they had eternal life.
Even if we grant that some measure of assurance is intrinsic to faith, the Bible never emphasizes this when it tells us how to be saved. Instead it tells us (in Mark 1:15, for example) that we must repent and believe in order to become Christians. It does not say to repent, believe, and have assurance. So if there is a kind of assurance that is inherent to faith, it is different from what Hebrews 10:22 calls the âfull assurance of faithâ (emphasis added). Between these two points are degrees of assurance.
While the Bible does not require an unflinching, fully developed assurance of salvation for a person to be a Christian, it does tell us that it is possibleâin fact, normalâfor a Christian to enjoy a rich and satisfying assurance.
Think of it this way: If a governor pardons a death-row criminal, he will tell him. He will not force the condemned man to wait until his neck is in the noose to inform him he is pardoned. Likewise, when God pardons us and adopts us into His family, He does not want to hide our new status from us until the moment we stand quivering before Him, wondering if a trapdoor to hell is about to open beneath our feet. He wants us to know weâre pardoned and to confidently âdraw near with a true heart in full assurance of faithâ (Hebrews 10:22).
It is possibleâindeed, normalâfor non-Christians to have a false assurance of salvation.
While many who doubt their salvation shouldnât, there are also many who donât doubt their salvation who should.
Speaking of the Day of Judgment, Jesus said,
On that day many will say to me, âLord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many mighty works in your name?â And then will I declare to them, âI never knew you; depart from me, you workers of lawlessness.â
MATTHEW 7:22-23
Many will be shocked when they arenât accepted. Until that moment they will be confident; they have assurance, but itâs a false assurance.
The Pharisees, a scrupulously religious sect of the Jews, were invariably at odds with the teaching of Jesus, but they were quite sure they were right with God. They might brazenly pray, like the Pharisee from a parable,
God, I thank you that I am not like other men, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week; I give tithes of all that I get.
LUKE 18:11-12
Their assurance, however, was not based upon truth. Despite their veneer of righteousness and obedience to Godâs commands, they were the recipients of Jesusâ most withering words, such as âchild of hellâ and âHow are you to escape being sentenced to hell?â (Matthew 23:15, 33).
A âchild of hellâ can feel secure and assured that he is bound for Heaven, even up to the moment of condemnation. How can this be? We will pick this up later, but for now, letâs briefly note a few contrasts between true Christians and falsely assured professing Christians.
True Christians are fearful of sinning away their assurance. Believers knowâusually by experience as well as by doctrineâthat sometimes assurance atrophies as the result of sin. They will prize assurance enough to protect it.
Spuriously assured persons, however, are usually unconcerned about the potential loss of assurance. Their attitudes toward assurance could be described as casual and nonchalant. They simply take their assurance for granted.
Another difference is that people with pseudo-assurance turn first to other things for assurance rather than to the Word of God. Those surprised by condemnation at the judgment will not say, âLord, You promised in Your Word that if we would repent and believe, You would receive us.â Instead, as in Matthew 7:22-23, they will base their confidence upon their prophesying, exorcisms, and miracles. If such people are reminded today that Scripture should be the primary source of assurance, they would quickly say, âOh, yes, of course I agree.â But face-to-face with Christ Himself they prove what they truly rely on by turning to things other than the promises of Scripture.
How many people today, if asked why they are sure of their salvation, would answer, âI was baptized,â or âI was confirmed,â or âI go to church,â or âI walked forward at the end of a church service,â or âI prayed a prayer with someone,â or âI was raised in a Christian home,â or âI raised my hand in response to a sermon,â or âI take the Lordâs Supper,â or âI did so many good things to help peopleâ? These essentially are identical to the answers Jesus said would be given by many at the judgment. These people reveal an illusional assurance based upon something done by humans rather than something said and done by God.
Similarly, others are wrongly assured that they are right with God because of what they have not done. Like the Pharisee mentioned in Luke 18:11, they are self-confident before God because they are ânot like other men, extortioners, unjust, adulterers.â Most people understand why Hitler or a mass murderer shouldnât be in Heaven, but unless they are egregiously wicked (and virtually no one thinks he or she is), they canât imagine God closing the door of eternity in their faces. So while some have sham assurance because they think they are so good, others feel spiritually smug because they think they arenât so bad.
As we will see later, assurance does involve examining ourselves for evidence of Christlike actions, but the first place a Christian should turn for assurance is the Bible. Our confidence is not in ourselves but in God and His Word. The message of Christ and salvation is in the Scriptures, so the words of Scripture should be our primary source of assurance that we know Christ and have salvation.
Jesusâ encounters with those in His day who had false assurance show us that false assurance also breeds pride. The Pharisees seethed with an arrogant presumption of righteousness. Their spiritual conceit came from a belief that they had earned the favor of God. Our own day has seen manifestations of arrogance from people under the same delusion of wrongly based assurance. Cult leader David Koresh was so egotistical about his place in Heaven that he once signed a letter as âYahweh Koresh,â audaciously taking an Old Testament name of God as his own.[2] Many who would strongly denounce both the Pharisees and Koresh, however, think in ways similarly presumptuous. Some are so prideful about their spiritual conditions that they refuse to recog...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Endorsements
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter 1: Assurance of Salvation âIs It Possible?
- Chapter 2: Having Doubts about Your Salvation
- Chapter 3: The Basis of Assurance
- Chapter 4: An Inner Confirmation
- Chapter 5: Signs of Eternal Life
- Chapter 6: A Spiritual Mind-Set
- Chapter 7: Things That Erode Our Assurance
- Chapter 8: Common Problems with Uncertainty
- Chapter 9: False Assurance of Salvation
- Chapter 10: What to Do If Youâre Still Not Sure
- Discussion Guide