Wednesday, October 03, 2007

On Salvation

I have a number of thoughts running through my head, but currently they won’t slow down enough for me to see what they are.

I think that there is something fundamentally wrong with our view of salvation. The problem is I’m not sure what it is I find so disheartening about our current understanding of salvation.
I have a problem with the emphasis of “personal salvation.” I think that we may have over contextualized to the point of syncretism. We live in a culture that highly prizes the individual – so our concept of salvation is only extended to the individual. We have no concept of “group salvation” or the salvation of a people.
Because salvation is only for the individual, every person needs to get saved. I don’t have a problem with this concept – I believe that salvation is available to everyone. But, what is salvation? What does it mean to “ask Jesus into your heart?” What does that even mean? We plan services so that they may whip the congregation into an emotional frenzy that one or two may be saved. We expect pastors to preach salvation sermons with such “umph” that all present will accept Christ. We begin friendships with the sole intent of “leading” that friend to Christ. We learn formulas to take a person down the “Roman’s Road.” We ask that people who have gained the head knowledge of Jesus the Christ to pray the “sinner’s prayer.”
Is a person saved when he repents or does she repent to be saved? Which comes first? Jesus said that a person must forgive others before he can worship and that He will deny us before His father if we deny Him before men. Jesus said “go and sell all you have and give it to the poor.” Is this a condition for salvation? Can a person believe less than the whole gospel and yet find salvation in it? (“I believe that Jesus was a great man who died for my sins.” Can a person believe this and be saved by the name of Jesus even if he doesn’t understand that Jesus was God?) How much of the gospel should a person understand before she can respond to an emotional appeal to “get saved?”
Is it scriptural to play off the most base and selfish desires of Man to usher men into the kingdom? We promise escape from the torment of Hell and eternal reward in Heaven if only one will accept Christ. Salvation sermons rarely touch on the topic of forgiving others, selling possessions, or being willing to die for Christ by taking up the cross daily. Jesus often and willingly told people to leave – he never pressured people to accept his message. He never watered things down; he egregiously offended the people with a cultural taboo when he said that “you must eat of my flesh and drink of my blood” to have any part of Me. This was His condition for salvation and he wasn’t willing to let it go. The only ones who remained after that little speech were the twelve.

Here is what I do believe, and the areas about which I have fewer questions.

I believe that salvation is a choice. We must choose to accept the grace and forgiveness of Christ. If you minister in a collectivistic society you should aim for the group to choose salvation.

Salvation is based on more than head-knowledge; it is founded in heart-knowledge, but quickly moves beyond even that.

Personal salvation should be built on a trust transfer. I as a Christian should maintain such trust with those around me that when I tell them of the good news of Jesus Christ the trust I have built up with them would transfer to the Christ for whom I live my life. I have a lot to learn and a great bit of growth left in this area!

I believe that salvation is the doorway into the Kingdom of God. It isn’t the kingdom, and if it is all we are offering people we have nothing to offer.

A disciple is infinitely better than a convert in the Kingdom of God.

Here are a few things I think I believe about salvation:

A person needs to be saved before he or she can truly repent of his or her sins.

Eradication of sin is a lifelong process, and God will lead the way. A person can, I believe, be a Christian for decades before God will convict him of a particular sin that those around him have noticed since day one.

A person, once saved, should almost never be removed from his old friends and acquaintances to be brought into “church” culture. How can salt make food salty if it never touches the food?

1 comment:

Pastor Bill said...

Great observations, Michael. I don't know exactly how to go about it, but "group conversion" is a great subject (heh - maybe you should write a book!).

Erwin McManus in "Unstoppable Force" writes, "God's purpose has always been about redeeming a people. But the modern church has reduced it to the conversion of individuals. And there is a radical difference between leading one person to faith and leading a people to faith. The former produces a follower of Jesus Christ; the latter produces a movement of Jesus Christ." (p 95)

I asked my Church School class this week what would happen if all the executives at the local bank (which is a multi-billion dollar, multi-state bank with the HQ in Warren)...what if all of the top management became Christians? What would be different? What if all the teachers at the High School did? A "people"...