VerseRomans 12:1–2 – 1I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service. 2And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.
Verse Context
In Romans 12:1–2, Paul shifts from doctrine to duty, from what God has done (chapters 1–11) to how believers must respond (chapters 12–16). Whenever the Bible uses the word “therefore” it is saying, “Because of what I just told you…” Sometimes that could be a sentence, a passage, a chapter or even several chapters. In this case, Paul I referring to everything back to Chapter 1. After eleven chapters of explaining justification, sanctification, and God’s sovereign plan of salvation, Paul now “beseeches”, pleads earnestly, with believers to live in light of God’s mercies.
Verse 1 calls Christians to present their bodies as a “living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God.” Under the Old Covenant, sacrifices were dead animals offered on an altar. But Paul now calls for a greater and continual sacrifice, the believer’s whole self, alive and set apart for God’s use. This is “reasonable service” (Greek logikē latreia), meaning it is logical, spiritual worship in response to God’s mercy. Matthew Henry (1662–1714, Presbyterian) explains: “The sacrificing of the beasts was reasonable service, but the sacrificing of ourselves, body and soul, to God, is much more so.”
Verse 2 warns believers not to be “conformed to this world.” The world system (its values, priorities, and corruptions) presses constantly against believers to shape them. Instead, Paul calls for transformation (metamorphoō, the same root used for Christ’s transfiguration in Matthew 17:2), through the renewing of the mind. John Gill (1697–1771, Reformed Baptist) notes: “It is not a mere outward reformation, but an inward transformation by the Spirit of God, a change of the very soul into the image of Christ.”
The purpose of this transformation is so believers may “prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.” Wayne Grudem (1948– , Evangelical) explains that God’s will here is not hidden, but something lived and discerned as believers grow in holiness: “The more our minds are renewed, the more we will approve, delight in, and choose what is pleasing to God.”
Paul’s call echoes Jesus’ own words: “^24If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me” (Matthew 16:24). Just as Christ gave Himself fully, believers are called to give themselves wholly in response; not half, not only on Sundays, not only on Easter and Christmas, but completely and utterly every hour we are awake.
I have met many who call themselves Christians. They read their Bible for five minutes in the morning and attend church on Sundays, provided it does not interfere with other plans. They give begrudgingly to the church, yet they have no hesitation in spending hundreds or thousands of dollars on conventions. They eagerly dress up in elaborate costumes they have made, but they despise the idea of presenting themselves respectfully when meeting with their Savior.
I have watched people argue for over an hour about video games, so passionate that their voices carried for everyone around to hear. Yet when it comes to Jesus, there is barely a murmur; there is certainly not an hour-long conversation filled with zeal. If you truly live by Jesus’ words, then put down the game controller, pick up your Bible, and live a clean life for Christ. There is nothing heavenly about video games that promote murder.
Broader Context
Romans 12:1–2 marks a turning point in Paul’s letter. For eleven chapters, he has laid out God’s mercies, man’s sin (Romans 1–3), justification by faith (Romans 3–5), sanctification by the Spirit (Romans 6–8), and God’s sovereign plan for Jew and Gentile alike (Romans 9–11). Now, Paul takes all of that breathtaking theology and turns to the believer with a burning appeal: “I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God…”
The word “therefore” is key, it connects every truth Paul has already proclaimed to the believer’s responsibility. In other words, because God has shown you mercy in Christ, your life must now be offered back to Him. This is not cold duty, but joyful devotion. Charles Spurgeon (1834–1892, Baptist) once said: “When I thought God was hard, I found it easy to sin; but when I found God so kind, so good, so overflowing with compassion, I smote upon my breast to think I could ever have rebelled against One who loved me so and sought my good.” Paul’s appeal is rooted not in fear but in God’s mercy.
The “living sacrifice” language ties back to Israel’s temple worship. Sacrifices under the Law were dead and temporary, but in Christ, the believer becomes a living, continual sacrifice. This is echoed in 1 Peter 2:5: “5Ye also, as lively stones, are built up a spiritual house, an holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ.” God is not looking for dead offerings but holy, living lives surrendered to Him.
Then Paul contrasts conformity and transformation. “Be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind…” The word “conformed” (Greek syschēmatizō) implies being pressed into a mold. The world is always pressing; through culture, politics, entertainment, and temptation, seeking to shape us into its likeness. But Paul calls instead for transformation (metamorphoō), the same word used in Matthew 17:2 when Christ’s glory shone on the Mount of Transfiguration. Believers are to be reshaped from the inside out, by the Spirit, as minds are renewed in God’s Word. John Gill (1697–1771, Reformed Baptist) emphasized this: “It is not a putting on of a new form from without, but a thorough change within, wrought by the grace of God upon the soul.”
The outcome of this transformation is discerning and delighting in the will of God: “that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.” Wayne Grudem (1948– , Evangelical) reminds us that God’s will here is not a mysterious code to be cracked, but a path of holiness to be walked: “The more our minds are renewed in Christ, the more we will approve, desire, and choose what God desires.”
N. T. Wright (1948– , Anglican) adds that this is the natural outworking of the gospel Paul has been preaching: “The gospel is designed to transform people, not merely to inform them. The renewed mind produces a new way of living, which is itself a sign of God’s kingdom breaking into the present age.”
In short, Romans 12:1–2 is Paul’s cry for total surrender. After beholding God’s mercy, there is only one logical response: present yourself wholly to Him. Not halfway, not someday, but now, fully, joyfully, and sacrificially.
Application
Appreciating God’s Greatness Romans 12:1–2 displays the greatness of God not only in what He has done, but in what He calls forth from His people. He does not demand empty rituals, but living sacrifices. This is the beauty of His mercy: He saves us not to sit idle but to shine as His transformed people. Matthew Henry (1662–1714, Presbyterian) observed: “The apostle beseeches; he does not command. He would rather persuade by the mercies of God than drive by the terrors of His wrath.” God’s greatness is revealed in this kindness. He wins us by mercy, not coercion, and He equips us to walk in holiness.
For the Believer For Christians, Paul’s words are both a challenge and an inspiration. To present your body as a living sacrifice is not to give God one part of life, but all of it. This means surrendering daily habits, choices, ambitions, even sufferings, to Him. As Paul himself said elsewhere: “I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me” (Galatians 2:20).
John Gill (1697–1771, Reformed Baptist) reminds us that this is not an outward change but inward renewal: “The believer is to be wholly devoted to God, his body and soul, not conformed to corrupt customs of the world, but changed by divine grace into the likeness of Christ.” This is a lifelong transformation, not a one-time decision.
C. S. Lewis (1898–1963, Anglican lay theologian) once compared it to handing God the keys to every room of your heart: “Christ says, ‘Give me all. I don’t want so much of your time and so much of your money and so much of your work: I want You. I have not come to torment your natural self, but to kill it. No half-measures are any good.’” That is the true heart of Romans 12:1–2. Call to Action: This week, examine where the world’s mold is pressing on your life. Are there places you’ve conformed — in speech, in entertainment, in priorities? Lay them before God. Present yourself fully to Him, not in theory but in practice, and let Him transform you by renewing your mind in His Word.
For the Unbeliever Romans 12:1–2 is also a call to those outside of Christ. Paul says “be not conformed to this world” — but apart from Christ, conformity to the world is all you have. You may clean the outside, reform a habit, or adopt new ideals, but without the Spirit’s renewal, you remain unchanged at the core. Jesus said: “Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God” (John 3:3).
Matthew Henry reminds us that God seeks the heart, not outward ritual. John Calvin (1509–1564, Reformed) echoed this truth: “We are not our own: let us therefore forget ourselves and all that is ours. We are God’s: let us therefore live and die to Him.” For the unbeliever, the call is clear: turn from sin, lay down your life, and be made new in Christ.
BBT is not content to whisper this truth; we call with urgency to all mankind: if you are saved but harboring undealt sin, repent and surrender fully. If you have not believed, do not wait until tomorrow. The world will press you into its mold and pay you with death. But Christ calls you today, offering life, renewal, and the joy of walking in His perfect will.
Final Encouragement
Romans 12:1–2 reminds us that God is not after half-measures. He has poured out His mercies in Christ, and the only logical response is full surrender, presenting our lives as living sacrifices, transformed by the renewing of our minds. This is not a burden but a joy, for in God’s will we find what is good, acceptable, and perfect. To live as a living sacrifice is not to lose life, but to gain true life in Christ.
Recap
This week in Romans has been a single, beautiful thread woven through five passages that speak to the heart of the gospel and the life it produces. We began with Paul’s fearless confession that the good news of Jesus is not a fragile idea we must protect, but the very power of God to save all who believe. From there we faced the sober truth that every one of us has fallen short of God’s glory, yet we were invited to rest in a righteousness we could never earn, but that was freely given by grace through the redeeming work of Christ. Then we lingered at the cross to behold love at its highest: God proved His love not after we improved, but while we were still sinners, as Christ died in our place. Having seen our need and His love, we stood at the fork in the road where sin pays its wage and God offers His gift, learning that death is what we have earned, but eternal life is what He delights to give in Jesus our Lord. And today we heard the only fitting response to such mercy: not a half-hearted nod, but our whole selves laid upon the altar as living sacrifices, minds renewed, lives transformed, joyfully seeking and doing the will of God. If this is the journey the Spirit has traced for us (power, need, love, choice, and response) then may our hearts answer with humble faith, holy resolve, and a deep desire to belong to Jesus without reservation.
Our Prayer for You
Lord, we thank You for the truth You have shown us in Romans this week, the power of the gospel, the reality of sin, the greatness of Your love, the seriousness of sin’s wages, and the call to live as transformed people. For every believer reading this, may today be the day of renewed surrender, presenting themselves as living sacrifices in Your service. For those who have not yet believed, may today be the day of repentance and faith, that they would no longer be conformed to the world but transformed by Christ.
And so Believers of Biblical Truth calls out to all mankind: if you are saved but living with undealt sin, repent and return to the Lord with your whole heart. If you are unsaved, do not harden your heart, Christ died for you, and eternal life is His free gift. The world offers death, but Jesus offers life. Choose Him today. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Closing
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Psalm chapter 18 verse 2: “The LORD is my rock, and my fortress, and my deliverer; my God, my strength, in whom I will trust; my buckler, and the horn of my salvation, and my high tower.”
VERSE CONTEXT
This verse was written by David, the second king of Israel, who was both a warrior and a worshiper. Psalm 18, where this verse is found, is a personal song of praise that David wrote to the LORD on the day when he was delivered “from the hand of all his enemies, and from the hand of Saul” (Psalm 18, title). It’s a deeply intimate, autobiographical testimony of divine rescue and sustaining power.
David had spent years on the run from King Saul, hiding in caves, living among enemies, and narrowly escaping death more than once. The pressure of being God’s anointed while being hunted like a criminal would have been immense. Yet throughout it all, David maintained his relationship with the LORD and trusted in Him completely.
Psalm 18 is therefore not a theoretical psalm—it is born out of personal warfare, betrayal, and survival. Its core is deliverance.
The verse itself uses eight vivid metaphors to describe who God is to David:
My rock – This refers to stability and a foundation. The Hebrew concept here involves something firm, unmovable, and protective—often a high rocky crag, a place of refuge in battle.
My fortress – A fortress is a strong, fortified place of defense. David would have spent much of his fugitive life seeking such places in the wilderness.
My deliverer – The one who rescues, who pulls out of danger. David is saying, “God is the One who gets me out when there’s no way out.”
My God – This is personal. Not a god, but my God. It reflects the covenant relationship David had with the LORD.
My strength – The Hebrew root here implies not just physical strength but firmness and reliability. When David was weak, he drew strength from the LORD.
My buckler – An older term for a small, maneuverable shield, used in close combat. The LORD is not a distant shield, but One who defends at intimate range.
The horn of my salvation – In biblical language, the horn is a symbol of power and victory. This phrase suggests God is the source of victorious salvation.
My high tower – A refuge placed high above danger, where enemies cannot reach and where vision and protection are maximized.
What’s important is how deeply personal this verse is. David is not writing a theological textbook—he’s writing from the battlefield of life. The repetition of the word “my” reveals a relationship, not just knowledge. He doesn’t merely believe about God—he knows God Himself. This is his rock, his shield, his fortress.
The language of this verse is not poetic exaggeration. It is the hard-won truth of a man who had been saved time and time again by God’s direct intervention. This psalm is also duplicated nearly word-for-word in Second Samuel chapter 22, suggesting that David preserved this song as a personal anthem of praise throughout his life.
Additionally, some commentators view Psalm 18 as messianic, foreshadowing the deliverance Jesus would bring. While the psalm is rooted in David’s experience, it stretches forward prophetically to the ultimate Deliverer—Jesus Christ—who provides eternal refuge, strength, and salvation.
The psalm was likely first written for private devotion and then publicly shared for worship and instruction. As king, David was not only testifying to God’s deliverance in his own life but modeling for the people of Israel what trust in the LORD looked like during times of trial.
BROADER CONTEXT
Psalm 18 is among the longest psalms in the Book of Psalms, with 50 verses, and it is deeply autobiographical. It opens with a superscription that anchors it in a specific historical context: “A Psalm of David, the servant of the LORD, who spake unto the LORD the words of this song in the day that the LORD delivered him from the hand of all his enemies, and from the hand of Saul.” That preface gives us an undeniable clue to the emotional and historical backdrop of the chapter. This is not simply a moment of joy—it is a culmination of years of warfare, wilderness wandering, royal uncertainty, and constant peril.
This Psalm is also found almost identically in Second Samuel chapter 22, written during the final season of David’s life. That chapter acts as a retrospective song of praise—a spiritual memoir of deliverance. That helps us understand that this Psalm didn’t emerge from a single crisis, but was shaped over a lifetime of hardship. It gathers the memory of a thousand dangers and the consistency of God’s saving grace into one towering testimony.
The language of the Psalm shifts between high praise and detailed accounts of God’s acts. Verses 4–6 describe David’s distress: “The sorrows of death compassed me,” he says. In verse 7, the imagery becomes explosive as God arises in wrath to defend His servant. That section—verses 7–15—reads like a divine theophany (God appearing in dramatic form), with earthquakes, fire, and smoke. It paints God not as passive but as a warrior-king, rising to shake the heavens for the sake of His anointed.
The broader structure of the Psalm shows a movement from desperation to deliverance to exaltation:
Verses 1–3: Declaration of trust and praise (where verse 2 is found).
Verses 4–6: Cry of distress.
Verses 7–19: God’s dramatic response.
Verses 20–29: Reward for righteousness.
Verses 30–45: Testimony of God’s strength in battle.
Verses 46–50: Final praise and acknowledgment of God’s steadfast love.
Now, let’s narrow in on how verse 2 functions in that structure. It is part of the introductory declaration. David begins by saying, “I will love thee, O LORD, my strength” (verse 1), and then immediately launches into the comprehensive list of metaphors in verse 2. This is his foundational theology—everything that follows in the Psalm grows out of this understanding: God is stable, safe, rescuing, and trustworthy.
This is why verse 2 has become a lifeline for many believers, especially in seasons of anxiety, stress, and uncertainty. It does not belong to the battlefield alone—it belongs to the exhausted parent, the discouraged worker, the burdened minister, and the believer crushed by invisible burdens. That is why this verse is so powerful for a Friday. The end of the work week often represents emotional depletion. Many people are carrying burdens from the office, home, or personal life—and they may be holding on by a thread.
Psalm 18 verse 2 reminds us that God does not change. He is still a fortress. Still a rock. Still a deliverer. This is a declaration we can speak even while the battle rages—and it becomes an anchor that keeps our faith from drifting in the storm.
Matthew Henry (1662–1714), a Nonconformist minister and commentator, wrote that “those who by faith fly to God for support and shelter shall find Him a rock under their feet, a buckler over their heads, a horn of salvation on their heads, and a high tower in which they are safe.” His emphasis on God being a complete refuge—above, around, under, and within—is drawn directly from the language of this Psalm.
Charles Spurgeon (1834–1892), a Reformed Baptist preacher, echoed this idea when he said, “This verse is a perfect mosaic of precious stones gathered from the quarry of divine faithfulness.” That poetic language points us to a truth: each name David gives to God in this verse is not ornamental—it’s earned.
Whether David was hiding in the caves of Adullam, seeking refuge in the strongholds of Engedi, or walking the palace halls of Jerusalem as king, his confession remained the same: the LORD is his rock.
APPLICATION
Appreciating God’s Greatness
Psalm chapter 18 verse 2 is not a list of titles—it is a confession of experience. It magnifies the Lord by declaring what He is rather than simply what He does. David doesn’t say, “The LORD gives me strength”—he says, “The LORD is my strength.” That distinction matters. God is not a vendor of support—He is the very embodiment of it. He is the place we run to, the power we stand in, and the protection we depend on.
Each image in the verse—rock, fortress, deliverer, shield, horn, tower—gives us a multifaceted vision of God’s greatness. His strength is not one-dimensional. He is our defense in war, our safety in storms, our shelter in grief, and our victory in battle.
God’s greatness here is relational, not distant. These aren’t just majestic metaphors—they’re evidence of a living God who enters the chaos of our lives and establishes peace by His presence.
For the Believer
David’s words in this verse invite believers to rest in God’s character, not in their circumstances. Whether you’re facing battles like David or simply carrying the slow grind of daily responsibilities, the call is the same: run to the Rock.
For many, Friday brings exhaustion—not just physical, but emotional and spiritual. The workweek can leave people strained, overlooked, or spiritually dry. This verse reminds us that God is not worn out when we are. He doesn’t rest—He is the rest. He doesn’t need to be refilled to fill us. The “fortress” David speaks of is not far away or locked—it is open and ready.
That’s why this verse is especially meaningful at the end of a long week. The weekend is not just a break from work—it is an opportunity to refresh with praise and rebuild with prayer. When we slow down, we can once again see how safe we are in Him. Instead of retreating into worldly distraction, we can retreat into divine refuge. Worship becomes our weapon, and prayer becomes our high tower.
David trusted God not only in caves and palaces, but in the quiet spaces between. So should we.
Call to Action:
As the week winds down, take time this weekend to actively rest in the Lord. Don’t simply collapse into entertainment—enter into worship. Carve out moments of stillness to read this verse aloud. Personalize it: “LORD, You are my rock. My strength. My deliverer.” Let His identity settle your anxiety. Trust Him in every layer of stress, and let your weekend be shaped not by escape—but by encounter.
For the Unbeliever
If you do not yet belong to Christ, this verse still invites you in. It shows what is available to all who put their trust in the Lord. The God who was David’s refuge wants to be your refuge too.
The storms of life are no respecter of persons. They come to the rich and the poor, the faithful and the faithless. The difference is this: one stands exposed, the other is hidden in the fortress of God’s love.
The same God who protected David from spears, armies, and betrayal has extended His hand to you through Jesus Christ. Jesus is the ultimate deliverer—He didn’t just save a man from battle; He saved a world from sin.
You may have tried to be your own rock, your own strength, your own tower—but it doesn’t hold. Come to Christ. He is strong enough to carry your guilt, and gentle enough to hold your wounds. Let today be the day you call Him your rock.
FINAL ENCOURAGEMENT:
Psalm chapter 18 verse 2 is more than a declaration—it’s a shelter. It reminds us that the same God who defended David in the wilderness defends us in the chaos of our lives. Whether you’re facing battles of the heart, mind, or circumstances, the invitation is the same: trust in the Lord as your rock. You don’t have to hold yourself up. You don’t have to be your own strength. You don’t have to run without rest.
Let this weekend be a time not of collapse, but of communion. Praise the God who has sustained you all week, and find your peace not just in the absence of work—but in the presence of your Fortress. The LORD is not just a place to run—He is the only place strong enough to hold your heart.
PRAYER:
Heavenly Father, Thank You for being our unshakable rock, our fortress in every storm, and our strength when we are weak. We come to You now with our burdens—some that we speak aloud, and others too deep for words. Let us find peace in knowing that You are our refuge, not just for today but for every tomorrow. Wrap Your presence around us this weekend. Restore our weary hearts. Help us to trust You, not just with our lips, but with our lives. And may we, like David, declare with confidence: You are my rock, my deliverer, and my high tower. In Jesus’ name we pray, Amen.
CLOSING:
If you’ve found these daily verses encouraging, enlightening, or fruitful, please consider helping us spread the truth and light of God’s Word by subscribing to the blog and YouTube channels and liking and following the Facebook page. Most of all, share Believers of Biblical Truth and our links with others who may need the sermons and daily teachings just as much as we do.
You are loved—so much in fact, that we want you to know and be Believers of Biblical Truth.
Acts chapter 4 verse 12: “Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.”
VERSE CONTEXT
The book of Acts, written by Luke, records the actions of the apostles and the early church after Jesus’ resurrection and ascension. Chapter 4 takes place shortly after Peter and John healed a lame man at the temple gate called Beautiful in Acts chapter 3. This miracle drew the attention of the Jewish leaders, who were alarmed at the apostles’ growing influence. They arrested Peter and John and brought them before the Sanhedrin, the Jewish ruling council.
Acts chapter 4 verse 12 is part of Peter’s bold response to the Sanhedrin. Instead of backing down, Peter proclaims that salvation is found in Jesus Christ alone. This statement was radical because it directly opposed the Jewish leaders’ belief that righteousness came through the Law of Moses. Peter’s declaration affirms that Jesus is the only way to salvation, rejecting any other path.
A key word in this verse is “salvation”, which means deliverance or rescue. In the biblical sense, it refers to being saved from sin and eternal separation from God. Peter insists that salvation is exclusively through Jesus, which aligns with Jesus’ own words in John chapter 14 verse 6: “Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.”
Another critical phrase is “none other name under heaven given among men”—this signifies that no prophet, religious leader, or moral teacher can offer salvation. Only Jesus, through His death and resurrection, provides the way to eternal life.
BROADER CONTEXT
Acts chapter 4 continues the theme of bold witness for Christ. The apostles were filled with the Holy Spirit and did not hesitate to proclaim Jesus even under threat of persecution. The Sanhedrin, the same council that had condemned Jesus, now faced His disciples preaching in His name.
This chapter emphasizes three major themes:
The Power of Jesus’ Name – The apostles healed and preached in Jesus’ name, showing that His authority continued beyond His physical presence on earth.
The Opposition of Religious Leaders – The Sanhedrin wanted to silence Peter and John, just as they had silenced Jesus. However, they could not deny the miracle and the boldness of the apostles.
The Boldness of the Early Church – The apostles refused to compromise their message, even when threatened. They later prayed for even more boldness instead of safety.
Acts as a whole is a record of how the early church grew through the power of the Holy Spirit. The apostles, though once fearful, became fearless in their preaching after Jesus’ resurrection. Their message—salvation through Jesus alone—remains the foundation of the Christian faith today.
APPLICATION
1. Appreciating God’s Greatness
This verse reveals the greatness of God by showing that He provided a single, clear way to salvation. He did not leave humanity to wander in confusion but sent Jesus as the perfect Savior. Unlike man-made religions that rely on works or rituals, God’s salvation is a gift through faith in Christ.
2. For the Believer
This verse serves as a reminder that Jesus is the only hope for salvation. In a world that promotes multiple paths to God, believers must hold firmly to the truth of Acts chapter 4 verse 12. This truth should give confidence in witnessing, knowing that no other belief system can offer true salvation.
Call to Action:
Stand firm in your faith. Share the message of Jesus with boldness, just as Peter and John did. Do not be ashamed to declare that salvation is found in Christ alone.
3. For the Unbeliever
If you have not yet placed your trust in Jesus, this verse makes it clear that there is no other way to be saved. Good works, religious rituals, or personal morality cannot earn salvation. Only Jesus can save you.
Call to Action:
Consider the truth of this verse. Ask yourself, “Am I trusting in Jesus alone for salvation?” If not, turn to Him today, believing that He died for your sins and rose again to give you eternal life.
FINAL ENCOURAGEMENT
Acts chapter 4 verse 12 is a bold declaration of the exclusivity of Jesus Christ. It challenges both believers and non-believers to acknowledge that salvation cannot be found in any other person or system. Just as Peter and John courageously proclaimed this truth before the Sanhedrin, we too must stand firm in our faith, knowing that Jesus is the only way to eternal life.
You are loved, so much in fact that we want you to know and be Believers of Biblical Truth.
The Christian Apologetics and Research Ministry defines apostasy as, “Apostasy is the falling away from the Christian faith. It is a revolt against the truth of God’s word by a believer. It can also describe a group or church organization that has ‘fallen away’ from the truths of Christianity as revealed in the Bible.” We must remember that there are two natures. First is the Divine nature. This is the nature of God, of Jesus, and of the Holy Spirit. It is a spiritual nature. This nature has a perspective that human nature—mankind—does not have. God knows the end. He knows who endures and who does not. This is why the Book of Life is complete now. It was complete from the beginning and is 100% accurate. So, if we want to talk about OSAS from God’s perspective, then on this, there cannot be an argument: God certainly knows who is saved and who is going to stay saved.
The argument against OSAS comes when human nature operates outside its parameters by declaring who is saved and who is not—an observation only God can make. When Judas was with Jesus and the disciples, no one accused him of not being saved. Likewise, when a pastor has dedicated 30 years of his life to the church, no one declares that he is not saved. But once Judas betrayed Jesus, and once that pastor fell into temptation and had an adulterous affair with the church secretary, all of a sudden, it is no longer seen as a matter of apostasy or a conscious decision to walk away from the faith—as the Bible indicates has, does, and will repeatedly happen. Instead, OSAS supporters play God. They operate outside the parameters of human nature and declare that man has been duped, claiming that Judas, the pastor, and others like them were never saved. How do we know that to be true when the Bible itself tells us about those who knew, walked in the faith, believed, and had knowledge of the kingdom of heaven?
Apostasy is real; it is biblical. The following exegesis will serve as the basis for my belief that Once Saved Always Saved (OSAS) is not only false teaching but heretical teaching.
Not Works Righteousness
I know that there are people who genuinely believe they can work their way to heaven; this is called “works righteousness.” I also know that many who believe in OSAS think that those who object to OSAS must subscribe to “works righteousness.” While this may be true for some, it is not at all what I, or many others who object to OSAS, believe. “Works righteousness” is not the argument I intend to put forth here. In fact, it is not only a false teaching but also a heretical one. There is nothing human nature can do to obtain the Divine nature; these two natures do not mix.
My intent is to show that we are saved by faith, and that God does not hold us hostage after our free-will decision for Christ. I plan to demonstrate that the Bible recognizes that people who have professed Jesus Christ as their Savior continue to possess the free will to walk away from the faith. So, let’s start where we should always start: Scripture.
Ezekiel 33:13 13 When I shall say to the righteous, that he shall surely live; if he trust to his own righteousness, and commit iniquity, all his righteousness shall not be remembered; but for his iniquity that he hath committed, he shall die for it.
In both the Old Testament (OT) and the New Testament (NT), people were saved by faith. For all the weight placed on sacrifices in the OT, one still had to have faith in the God to whom the sacrifice was being offered. Abraham had faith to obey God and take his son to be a sacrifice. He had faith to do what he was commanded to do. Doesn’t that same faith transcend into the NT and into our daily lives?
Additionally, in both the OT and the NT, people would sin again. Here is the difference: in the OT, another sacrifice was required, while in the NT, a prayer of repentance is required. Yet, in both cases, they remained believers despite their sins. If that is true, and a man is made righteous by his faith in God’s promise to cleanse him of sin through repeated sacrifices, why then is he told that if he trusts in his own righteousness, all of his righteousness will not be remembered? If God will not remember a person’s righteousness, doesn’t that mean the person had to be righteous in the first place?
This passage is not referring to someone who has always leaned on his own understanding. The verse begins by identifying the man as righteous. The audience is specifically addressed: “I shall say to the righteous.” We are not talking about fakes or non-believers. What we see here is God telling us that if we are righteous, we shall surely live. However, if we turn to ourselves—if we lean on our own understanding—all that we have done in Christ’s name will not be remembered. Furthermore, all that we do in our own idolatrous name will be counted as iniquity, and we shall die for it.
This verse clearly indicates that the man was once righteous but then made a personal, free-will choice to make himself his god. In NT terms, he fell back into the ways of his own flesh and reverted to the old man he once was.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, a seed should still be planted. Those seeds are these questions: “If it is not possible to give up your salvation because of sin—if we are truly sealed and will enter into the kingdom no matter what—then why are we warned to remain committed to God’s will and not our own?” “How can one say that once you are saved, you are always saved, when the scriptures CLEARLY offer both the warning and the consequence: obedience resulting in faith and disobedience resulting in the second death?” “Why does man try so hard to hide the clear instruction that one who was once righteous can, through weakened faith and their free will choice to turn away from God, become unrighteous through sin?”
Joseph Benson “It is evidently signified here, that to trust in our own righteousness, whether internal or external, whether graces or virtues, past or present, or to entertain high thoughts of our own attainments in religion, and to put confidence therein, is one step toward a fall, and generally issues in apostacy.”
Yielding to the Flesh
Romans 6 13 Neither yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin: but yield yourselves unto God, as those that are alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God. 14 For sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are not under the law, but under grace. 15 What then? shall we sin, because we are not under the law, but under grace? God forbid. 16 Know ye not, that to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness?
Another scripture commonly used to promote OSAS is Romans 8:1–2: “There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit. For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death.” Romans 8:1 reinforces what so many other verses declare: at the time of death, if you are in Christ, you will be saved. I could not agree with Romans 8:1–2 more. However, Romans 6:13–16 reminds us that if we are saved and under grace, we are no longer under the law. Let’s be clear: Paul is speaking to saved people here. He says to those under grace that they should not sin. If they sin—if they yield themselves to the sinful desires of the flesh and the wickedness of their minds—they will become slaves to sin, slaves to their wickedness.
Even though we are saved by faith, Paul reminds us that if our works are wicked, our faith is empty because we can only serve one master. If we obey sin—if we yield to sin—then we are servants of sin and will face eternal death. These verses do not address struggles for which we call on Christ for help. Rather, they specifically speak to the deliberate choice to serve sin, to become enslaved to it as we were before being washed in the blood of Christ. Paul also states that obedience is righteousness. To those who claim that I practice “works righteousness,” please hear Paul explain that we are to be obedient unto righteousness. We are made righteous by the blood of Christ, and because of the righteousness of the Holy Spirit within us, we choose obedience to God.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, seeds should still be planted. Those seeds are these questions: “If it is not possible to give up your salvation because of sin—if we are truly sealed and will enter into the kingdom no matter what—then why are we commanded, as an already saved people, not to yield to the members of our bodies that lust after sin?” “If we cannot fall from grace, why are we reminded that to whom we yield ourselves to obey, his servants we are?” If OSAS is a true biblical fact, why are we warned about becoming ‘instruments of unrighteousness’? Why are we taught about yielding to our flesh and sin at all if we cannot sin our way out of heaven? How can one be willfully, knowingly, happily, and consistently disobedient to God, yet still claim to have the Holy Spirit dwelling within?”
Repeated Warnings, Why?
Galatians 5 Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage. 2 Behold, I Paul say unto you, that if ye be circumcised, Christ shall profit you nothing. 3 For I testify again to every man that is circumcised, that he is a debtor to do the whole law. 4 Christ is become of no effect unto you, whosoever of you are justified by the law; ye are fallen from grace.
John Gill- “In this chapter the apostle exhorts to stand fast in Christian liberty, and warns against the abuse of it; and directs to shun various vices, and encourages, to the exercise of several graces, and the observance of several duties; and concludes with a caution against vain glory, provocation to wrath, and envy: and whereas, in the latter part of the preceding chapter, he had made it appear that the believers under the Gospel dispensation were free from the bondage of the law, he begins this with an exhortation to continue steadfastly in the liberty of the Gospel; and the rather, since it was what Christ obtained for them, and bestowed on them; and to take care, that they were not again brought under the bondage of the ceremonial law, particularly the yoke of Circumcision, Galatians 5:1, and dissuades from submitting to it, by observing, that it tended to make Christ unprofitable to them, Galatians 5:2, and that it laid them under an obligation to keep the whole law, Galatians 5:3, and that it made Christ wholly useless to them; and that such who sought for justification by obedience to the ceremonial law were apostates from the Gospel of the grace of God…. There is the liberty of grace, and the liberty of glory; the former of these is here meant, and lies in a freedom from sin; not from the indwelling of it, but from the dominion, guilt, and damning power of it; from the captivity and tyranny of Satan, though not from his temptations and insults…. Christ is become of no effect unto you,…. Or “ye are abolished from Christ”; or as others by an “hypallage” read the words, “Christ is abolished unto you”; for by their seeking for justification by their own works, it was all one to them as if there was no Christ, and no righteousness in him, and no salvation by him; they had nothing to do with him, nor he with them:….ye are fallen from grace; that is, either from that grace which they professed to have…. or else from the Gospel of the grace of God, from whence they were removed, through the influence of false teachers”
John Gill’s work on this topic is extensive. I have left out a great deal, believe it or not. The point here is that Paul often tells us to be on guard, to be watchful, to stand fast, and to beware. There are numerous admonitions to Christians—saved children of God—to be alert to the pitfalls of sin, the power of Satan, and the deceit of false prophets. Fourteen times in the New Testament we are told to beware, six times we are told to stand fast, seven times we are told to endure, and four times we are told to “be not deceived.” We are given warning after warning not to return to the ways of the old flesh, to be aware of sin and its draw on our flesh. Why? If OSAS is true, why would we need so many warnings? If there is no way to reject Christ after receiving Him, why would Paul issue such passionate pleas for us to remain vigilant?
The answer is simple: we are always vulnerable to the temptations of the world. Notice how Paul states that Jesus has become of no effect. Paul does not say Jesus “has not been” or” has never been”. He uses the word “become”, which clearly indicates that he is addressing saved people—people who had Jesus when Jesus was effective, but became entangled again in the yoke of bondage to sin to the point that Jesus has BECOME no effect. This renders Jesus of no effect in them, causing them to fall from grace. Here, Paul effectively nullifies OSAS.
This point is critical because a major argument from OSAS supporters is that a person who spends years serving God and professing their salvation through faith could never have been truly saved if they later decide to walk away. They argue that from the moment of their profession and conversion, their decision for Christ must not have been genuine. This argument, however, operates outside the boundaries of human nature and attempts to function within the parameters of the Divine nature—in other words, playing God. Yet, the scripture clearly speaks of believers, people who genuinely believed and later chose to walk away. They failed to heed the warnings, failed to remain steadfast in the faith, and failed to grasp the gospel—not just a message of love but a true warning of the power of sin, the pull and desire of the flesh, and the relentless worldly snares and entanglements. Notice Paul’s use of the word “again” when he warns us not to become entangled in the yoke of bondage. Think about this, my dear friends: when we come to Christ the first time, we are entangled in the yoke of bondage to sin. We are freed from that yoke by Christ and take on the yoke of Christ. This warning is not confusing, it is clear and direct. It is possible to become entangled once more in the yoke of bondage, becoming a slave to sin and needing to be set free again. However, repentance and salvation come only once. This is the reason for all these warnings: you cannot keep switching yokes. You are either under the yoke of bondage or under the yoke of Christ. While you can return to sin, you will never be able to RETURN to Christ, as we will discuss further.
The gospel reveals the reason for Christ’s sacrifice. Christ came and died for our sin—a sin so powerful that it consumes like a fire, destroying and killing everything it touches.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, seeds should still be planted. Those seeds are these questions: “If it is not possible to give up your salvation because of sin—if we are truly sealed and will enter into the kingdom no matter what—then why are we warned not to be entangled again with the yoke of bondage?” “How can we do something again if we never did it in the first place or, as is the implication of the argument they were never saved in the first place, never stopped doing it?” The wording indicates that we once engaged in it, stopped, and are now susceptible to falling into it again. How, then, can man refuse to recognize a previously genuine faith, while simultaneously placing himself in a higher position to declare that someone’s former faith was not genuine?” “How can Christ become of no effect if He was never effectual to someone from the moment of their original conversion?” “In order for Christ to become of no effect, doesn’t He have to have been of effect at one time?”
Revelation 2:10 10 Fear none of those things which thou shalt suffer: behold, the devil shall cast some of you into prison, that ye may be tried; and ye shall have tribulation ten days: be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown of life. 11 He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches; He that overcometh shall not be hurt of the second death.
The book of Revelation is not the story of the Apostle John. It is the testimony of Jesus Christ Himself, given to and recorded by the Apostle, Disciple, and Prophet John, the one whom Jesus loved. Let’s establish that right now—it is very important. Jesus Christ Himself stated that the churches of Smyrna and Philadelphia needed no rebuke. Of the seven letters He instructed John to write, they are the only two were without rebuke. This is incredibly significant because it establishes whom Jesus is addressing here. In Revelation 2:10, Jesus is addressing the church in Smyrna. Jesus is specifically addressing the believers in Smyrna, a church facing persecution for their faith. Smyrna was known for its faithfulness and steadfastness amidst trials. While the message was directed to the church in Smyrna, it applies to all believers throughout history who endure persecution and trials for their faith. The call to be “faithful unto death” and the promise of the “crown of life” extend to Christians everywhere who remain steadfast in their commitment to Christ, even in the face of suffering. This verse underscores the importance of enduring faith and loyalty to Christ, even unto death, with the assurance of eternal life for those who overcome, not for those who apostatize.
Jesus tells the church that they are about to face persecution. Many believers and followers will be persecuted and martyred. Yet Jesus does not say, “Listen, you are sealed, so don’t worry about it. You’ll be in heaven with Me forever.” No, such words are not found here. Instead, Jesus says, “Be faithful unto death.” Why would He need to say that? If OSAS is true, why doesn’t He say, “Be faithful unto conversion, and then just do your best; but if you fail, it’s okay because you’re sealed”? The answer is clear: we are not to forsake Him. To forsake means to abandon, renounce, or turn away from someone or something, especially in a deliberate and often final sense. In the context of not forsaking Jesus Christ, it refers to a conscious decision to reject or turn away from Him, His teachings, and the faith we professed in Him. This can involve prioritizing other things (idolatry), denying Him, or failing to remain steadfast in faith. Luke 9:62 (KJV)- “And Jesus said unto him, No man, having put his hand to the plough, and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of God.” This underscores the cost of discipleship and the seriousness of forsaking Christ by turning back to former ways or abandoning commitment to Him. Again, Jesus is saying you only get to put your hand to the plow ONCE. Turn back after that, and there will be no plow for you to put your hand on again.
Jesus continues by saying that the one who overcomes unto death, the one who does not fall to the flesh, who does not try to save himself, who dies faithful, shall not be hurt by the second death. The second death will be more righteous and final than the first. It will determine an eternity of reward or suffering, depending on the choices we make—right up until the moment of death. We are called to overcome daily. In other words, our race does not end at the starting line; it ends at the finish line. We are warned to remain faithful until the end because there will be those who do not. There are those who are faithful for a season but not until the end.
Again, how can someone fail to remain faithful at the end if they were never faithful in the beginning? I find believing this as illogical as winning the race at the start line and not the finish line. The entire idea, I refuse to call it a theology, is simply not logical and it is amazing as to how many people satan has convinced that its truth. If they were never faithful at all, there would be no warning to endure. A central argument of OSAS believers is that if you are not faithful at the end, then you were never faithful. They must hold this position, or OSAS collapses. However, this is not a biblical teaching. Nowhere in Scripture does God say that someone who is faithful at first but fails later was never truly faithful. Instead, God, through His inspired Word, reveals that people can be faithful in the beginning and then fail. Failure is a part of life.
Nevertheless, we see the promise from Christ: if we remain faithful until the end, THEN He will give us the crown. Jesus does not say He will let us keep a crown we received at the beginning. In fact, if we are sealed, why must we be told to be faithful unto death? Wasn’t my faithfulness on the day I was sealed and trusted Him as my Savior sufficient? Yes, it was—but only for that moment. Because you professed with your mouth, you were saved in an instant. But that was just the beginning of a journey, not the end. Please do not overlook the powerful significance of how Jesus had nothing to rebuke in the church in Smyrna. They were a perfect church, as was the church in Philadelphia. Jesus had issues with all of the other five. Why is he giving this direction and encouragement to a perfect church? I submit that it is to teach all those who think they are so perfect in their faith that you can indeed fall and that you should not boast and thus OSAS is heretical teaching. Hebrews 10:29 (KJV)- “Of how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing, and hath done despite unto the Spirit of grace?” This verse warns of the severe consequences of forsaking Christ after receiving the knowledge of the truth.
Albert Barnes- The particular promise here is made to him that should “overcome”; that is, that would gain the victory in the persecutions which were to come upon them. The reference is to him who would show the sustaining power of religion in times of persecution; who would not yield his principles when opposed and persecuted; who would be triumphant when so many efforts were made to induce him to apostatize and abandon the cause.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, seeds should still be planted. Those seeds are these questions: “Why does Christ single out the person who overcomes if it is true that all who cry out unto the LORD will be saved?” “Why is there a stipulation of being ‘faithful unto death’ in order to receive my crown if, as a saved man today, I already have my crown?” “And, according to the commentary of the learned Albert Barnes, how does one abandon a cause they were never a part of?” “Why must I be told to be faithful unto death if I have been sealed and cannot possibly walk away—even when I choose myself over God during a time of persecution?” “What does Mr. Barnes mean when he states, ‘him who would show the sustaining power of religion in times of persecution’; who ‘would not yield his principles when opposed’ and persecuted; who ‘would be triumphant when so many efforts were made to induce him to apostatize….’? If, once I am saved, I am saved once and for all, why are such warnings and exhortations necessary?”
2 Peter 3:17 17 Ye therefore, beloved, seeing ye know these things before, beware lest ye also, being led away with the error of the wicked, fall from your own steadfastness.
An argument that OSAS believers make is based on John 10:29, which states, “My Father, which gave them me, is greater than all; and no man is able to pluck them out of my Father’s hand.” As a person who does not subscribe to OSAS, I completely believe this verse. I do not believe that any man can take you away from Jesus. In fact, I do not believe that even Satan himself can take you away from Jesus. However, let’s examine this verse with discernment.
First, we must understand the context: by this time, Peter is an elder statesman of the faith, writing to encourage and warn believers. Again, we see the need for a warning to believers. Peter is addressing Christians, specifically those in the early church. These believers are scattered throughout various regions, likely in Asia Minor, as mentioned in his first epistle (1 Peter 1:1). The letter is meant to be circulated among them. Tradition holds that Peter wrote this letter from Rome, where he was imprisoned and facing imminent martyrdom (circa 65–68 AD). This is his farewell letter, written with a sense of urgency and deep concern for the faithfulness of the church. Why worry if OSAS is truthful? Salvation is secure, no amount of persecution can make a man quit on God, right? Apparently, Peter disagrees. The early church was plagued by false teachers and heretical doctrines. These individuals twisted Scripture, promoted licentious living, and denied essential truths, such as the return of Christ. Peter ends with a call to grow in grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ (2 Peter 3:18), urging believers to remain anchored in their faith as they await the Lord’s return. His farewell echoes the urgency of his heart for the church to persevere in the face of trials and deception. Why? Because it is absolutely possible to be in the faith, led astray, and walk away from God.
But wait—no man can pluck you out of God’s hand. Does the Bible contradict itself? No, it does not. This verse emphasizes that no external force or person can forcibly remove you from God’s hand. However, the Bible also clearly teaches that we always retain the free will to walk away. These warnings—and everything we have discussed so far—are given because God knows the strength of our flesh. The Holy Spirit inspired the writers of Scripture to repeatedly emphasize the importance of remaining steadfast and enduring to the end.
If you allow yourself to be led astray, your desire to remain in the faith grows weaker and weaker, rather than stronger and stronger. The result? Falling from your steadfastness and falling from your faith. The Bible uses the word “fall” over and over again. Yet OSAS ideology would have us believe that for a believer, there is nothing to fall from—and for those who do fall, well… they were never in that position of enlightenment in the first place. However, I believe that the Holy Bible, the blessed commentators, and the Holy Spirit Himself teach us the opposite.
Man went from perfection—being a perfect creation, living in a perfect place, and enjoying perfect communion with God—to evil. Man fell from grace, was punished, and was told that because of his sin, death entered into life. The greatest example that contradicts OSAS is found in the Garden of Eden. How much more perfect could a place be than the Garden? To live in heaven, to have God, Himself, walk and talk with you daily, to have perfect communion with Him, to want for nothing, to suffer no pain or sickness, to labor without hardship, and to live in true equality between man and woman—this was humanity’s original state. Mankind was in a perfect place, but we fell. This fall is echoed in Romans 11, where Paul speaks of falling from grace, and it is the origin of death and sin.
If I subscribe to OSAS, am I to believe that the Garden never existed? Am I to believe that Adam and Eve were evil from the start? Am I to deny the serpent’s role in deceiving them and the significant part he played in mankind’s fall? Am I to believe that they were not truly in communion with God before the fall? OSAS theology raises these contradictions.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, seeds should still be planted. Those seeds are these questions: “Why are we warned over and over to remain steadfast if there is no danger of losing it?” “If we cannot fall, why does the Bible continuously warn us that if we do not remain focused, we can and will be led astray, resulting in a fall?” “How can you fall from a place you were never at?” “How do you reconcile the Bible’s statement that no man can pluck you out of God’s hand with its repeated warnings to remain steadfast, so you are not led astray? If being led astray results in falling from grace and steadfastness, how does OSAS stand?”
Righteousness
Matthew 5 20 For I say unto you, that except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven. 26 Verily I say unto thee, Thou shalt by no means come out thence, till thou hast paid the uttermost farthing. 30 And if thy right hand offend thee, cut it off, and cast it from thee: for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish, and not that thy whole body should be cast into hell.
Jesus is teaching in His Sermon on the Mount. He is speaking to His followers, instructing them on how a follower of Christ should view the world, respond to situations, and think about behavior. Jesus Himself is laying down clear expectations. What I find very interesting is that, as He discusses obeying the Ten Commandments, harboring hate in your heart, entertaining lust in your heart, and dealing with those who hate you, He emphasizes that there are consequences for behavior. What He doesn’t say is that everything will be okay because you are saved. In fact, Jesus doesn’t even say that as a saved person, all you need to do is repent.
What He tells His followers is this: if you have a problem that can lead you astray, deal with it. Jesus does not literally mean to pluck out your eye or cut off your hand; these are hyperboles. What He does mean is that, even as a saved person, if you are looking at a woman and lusting after her, you must alter your behavior—stop looking. If your hands become idle and serve as tools for sin, put them back to work; stop using them for sinful acts. He clarifies to His followers that self-discipline is crucial because failing at it—even in something as seemingly small as looking with lust in your heart—can result in your whole body being cast into hell.
Jesus Himself warned against falling from grace because He knew mankind would face temptation and that many would fail to remain steadfast in the faith. Notice that Jesus says nothing about merely losing rewards. He does not say, “Because you believed but failed, you will receive less in heaven.” Instead, He warns that the whole body will be cast into hell. That does not sound like the teaching of OSAS to me.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, seeds should still be planted. Those seeds are these questions: “Why does Jesus tell saved people—those who are following Him—that they need to make drastic changes (thus the hyperbole about plucking out your eyes) if they sin? Why does He say that if their righteousness does not exceed that of the scribes and Pharisees, they will not enter heaven? Why doesn’t Jesus simply say that if you lust after another, God and Jesus won’t like it but will only take away some of your rewards because you are saved and sealed forever, no matter what?” Notice too that Jesus does not say that you won’t receive rewards, He says you won’t even ENTER IN!
Restoration
Romans 11 17 And if some of the branches be broken off, and thou, being a wild olive tree, wert grafted in among them, and with them partakest of the root and fatness of the olive tree; 18 Boast not against the branches. But if thou boast, thou bearest not the root, but the root thee. 19 Thou wilt say then, The branches were broken off, that I might be grafted in. 20 Well; because of unbelief they were broken off, and thou standest by faith. Be not highminded, but fear: 21 For if God spared not the natural branches, take heed lest he also spare not thee. 22 Behold therefore the goodness and severity of God: on them which fell, severity; but toward thee, goodness, if thou continue in his goodness: otherwise thou also shalt be cut off. 23 And they also, if they abide not still in unbelief, shall be grafted in: for God is able to graft them in again.
Albert Barnes “The process of grafting consists in inserting a scion or a young shoot into another tree. To do this, a useless limb is removed; and the ingrafted limb produces fruit according to its new nature or kind, and not according to the tree in which it is inserted. In this way a tree which bears no fruit, or whose branches are decaying, may be recovered, and become valuable. The figure of the apostle is a very vivid and beautiful one. The ancient root or stock, that of Abraham, etc. was good. The branches – the Jews in the time of the apostle – had become decayed and unfruitful, and broken off. The Gentiles had been grafted into this stock, and had restored the decayed vigor of the ancient people of God; and a fruitless church had become vigorous and flourishing…
It is true they were broken off; but in order to show that there was no occasion for boasting, he adds that they were not rejected in order to admit others, but because of their unbelief, and that their fate should have a salutary impression on those who had no occasion for boasting, but who might be rejected for the same cause….
The continuance of these mercies to you depends on your fidelity. If you are faithful, they will be preserved; if, like the Jews, you become unbelieving and unfruitful, like them you will be also rejected. This fact should repress boasting, and excite to anxiety and caution….
If God did not refrain from rejecting the Jews who became unbelievers, assuredly he will not refrain from rejecting you in the same circumstances. It may be supposed that he will be quite as ready to reject the ingrafted branches, as to cast off those which belonged to the parent stock. The situation of the Gentiles is not such as to give them any security over the condition of the rejected Jew….
Christians do not merit the favor of God by their faith and good works; but their obedience is an indispensable condition on which that favor is to be continued. It is thus that the grace of God is magnified, at the same time that the highest good is done to man himself….
In relation to them the favor of God was dependent on their fidelity. If they became disobedient and unbelieving, then the same principle which led him to withdraw his mercy from the Jewish people would lead also to their rejection and exclusion. And on this principle, God has acted in numberless cases. Thus, his favor was withdrawn from the seven churches of Asia Revelation 13, from Corinth, from Antioch, from Philippi, and even from Rome itself….
If they do not continue in willful obstinacy and rejection of the Messiah. As their unbelief was the sole cause of their rejection, so if that be removed, they may be again restored to the divine favor.”
I read this to mean that Abraham was the father of the faith, and in the example Paul speaks about, the Jews use Abraham as the root—just as in Christianity, Christ is the root from which His followers feed. The account of the Old Testament and the foundation of the faith are in that root. The chosen people, the Nation of Israel, were the continuation of the root, called the branches. Because of their unbelief, God removed the unbelieving branches and made way for the Gentiles—all who did not belong to the Nation of Israel—to be grafted into the faith. We Christians often refer to this as the Great Adoption. Because of our belief, we are fruitful branches grafted onto the tree of God’s chosen people.
The fact that God did not refrain from removing unbelieving Jews is a profoundly powerful statement, as the Nation of Israel was and is the chosen people of God and had their place securely on the tree. Yet God clearly, profoundly, and without dispute defines their presence on the tree as conditional upon their belief and obedience. In fact, Paul teaches—and Barnes expounds—that if God would grant them a position on the tree and then remove them because of unbelief, Gentiles should not boast about their fortune in being grafted onto the tree over the removal of the non-believers from the Nation of Israel. Instead, we are to boast about the Root, boast about God, but not the misfortune of the Jews who were removed. Furthermore, God, through Paul, declares that if the Jew who has been removed restores his faith, God can restore his position on the tree.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, seeds should still be planted. Those seeds are these questions: “If OSAS is true, then why does God speak about His ability to restore a man? How can someone be restored if they were never in an original condition? Why does one need to be restored if they never fell out of that original condition? If I was grafted onto the tree because of my belief and cannot be removed, according to OSAS, why am I warned not to be like the Jew who was on the tree and then removed because of unbelief? If my faith is all there is to being saved, why is obedience described as ‘an indispensable condition on which that favor is to be continued’? If my unbelief, according to OSAS ideology, means I was never saved, how did I get on the tree in the first place to be removed from it? Which is it—does God make mistakes regarding whom He puts on the tree? Do we fool God with our belief, and then, to cover up His mistake, He removes us from the tree? Or do we continue to have free will throughout our lives and are held accountable for our own actions, rewards, or consequences?”
Apostasy is a Sin
Galatians 6 6 Therefore leaving the principles of the doctrine of Christ, let us go on unto perfection; not laying again the foundation of repentance from dead works, and of faith toward God, 2 Of the doctrine of baptisms, and of laying on of hands, and of resurrection of the dead, and of eternal judgment. 3 And this will we do, if God permit.4 For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, 5 And have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the world to come, 6 If they shall fall away, to renew them again unto repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame.
Albert Barnes “I shall endeavor, as well as I may be able, to state the true meaning of the passage by an examination of the words and phrases in detail, observing here, in general, that it seems to me that it refers to true Christians; that the object is to keep them from apostasy, and that it teaches that if they should apostatize, it would be impossible to renew them again or to save them.”
Matthew Henry He shows that this spiritual growth is the surest way to prevent that dreadful sin of apostasy from the faith.
They may be enlightened. Some of the ancients understand this of their being baptized; but it is rather to be understood of notional knowledge and common illumination, of which persons may have a great deal, and yet come short of heaven. Balaam was the man whose eyes were opened (Num. 24:3), and yet with his eyes opened he went down to utter darkness.
They may taste of the heavenly gift, feel something of the efficacy of the Holy Spirit in his operations upon their souls, causing them to taste something of religion, and yet be like persons in the market, who taste of what they will not come up to the price of, and so but take a taste, and leave it. Persons may taste religion, and seem to like it, if they could have it upon easier terms than denying themselves, and taking up their cross, and following Christ.
In the verses of Galatians 6:1-6 we clearly, and profoundly, see that from the highest of faith (having been enlightened) it is possible for man to fall away by blaspheming the Savior, and rejecting His sacrifice for salvation.
I believe these verses directly address the blaspheming of the Spirit. I do not think that a disobedient heart alone constitutes blasphemy, as the Scriptures speak of those who, at the great white throne of judgment, cry out about all the works they did and how they served the church. Yet, they are still rejected because they did not work for the glory of God but for their own glory. I believe this distinction helps clarify the difference between Galatians 6 and Romans 11.
In Romans 11, the sin of pride and idolatry is evident. These verses teach that we can fall from grace because of the depravity of our sin when we choose to serve sin rather than God. In contrast, Galatians 6 addresses the sin of blasphemy, the one unpardonable sin for which there is no restoration. The Bible clearly states that there is only one sin that cannot be forgiven, and that is the blasphemy of the Holy Spirit. Even a believer can turn from God and commit this most egregious sin.
We often say, “A sin is a sin is a sin,” and assert that, to God, all sin is equal—that no one sin outweighs another. However, the Bible also teaches that blasphemy is not equal to other sins. There is no return from that sin. By contrast, there is restoration from all other sins, provided that sin is not the final condition at death and true repentance has been made before death.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, seeds should still be planted. Those seeds are these questions: “If the theology of OSAS teaches that a person never falls—because if they fall, they were never truly saved in the first place—how does one explain the Bible’s statement that it is impossible to restore those who have ‘once known Christ’ if they reject Him (which is the definition of blasphemy)? How can the Bible say, as clearly as it does, that such a person has known Christ, tasted the heavenly gift, been a partaker of the Holy Spirit, and been enlightened, yet still have the free will to commit the one unpardonable sin by blaspheming (rejecting) Christ and the gift of salvation? I, personally, believe that this is one of the most powerful verses in the dissolution of OSAS.”
Condemnation
James 5 “12 But above all things, my brethren, swear not, neither by heaven, neither by the earth, neither by any other oath: but let your yea be yea; and your nay, nay; lest ye fall into condemnation.”
James, often referred to as James the Just, was the half-brother of Jesus Christ and a prominent leader in the early church, serving as the first head of the church in Jerusalem. His epistle is addressed to Jewish Christians scattered among the nations (James 1:1), offering them encouragement, instruction, and warnings about living out their faith amidst trials. James writes with the authority of a leader deeply concerned with practical holiness, faith that produces works, and steadfastness under pressure.
By the time James wrote this letter (circa AD 40–50), the church faced external persecution, internal struggles, and misunderstandings about the timing of Christ’s return. Many believers expected the second coming of Christ imminently and were growing impatient or discouraged. James addresses these concerns, urging patience, perseverance, and righteous living. His warnings often imply that believers can fall into apostasy and face severe consequences—including condemnation—if they fail to remain steadfast in the faith.
In James 5:12, we see James addressing saved people, without a doubt. He refers to them as “brethren,” emphasizing their shared faith and relationship in Christ. As the first head of the church in Jerusalem and the half-brother of Jesus Christ Himself, James speaks with both authority and familiarity. His audience includes those who believed in and witnessed the ascension of Christ and were eagerly awaiting His second coming.
James implores them to have patience, reminding them that Christ’s return may not come as soon as they expect. He teaches them how to live for Christ through positive, loving behaviors, but then he issues a significant directive: “Above all things.” This phrase demands attention. James tells them not to swear, either by heaven or earth or by any other oath, warning that such behavior could lead to condemnation.
The significance of this statement lies in condemnation—a form of judgment that no human is qualified to give or bear. While Christians are often taught not to judge, James clarifies that judgment itself is not inherently wrong. In fact, judgment is essential for spiritual discernment. We judge what is good and dangerous, healthy and unhealthy, right and wrong. For instance:
How can iron sharpen iron if we do not first acknowledge our dullness?
How can we confront others about sin if we fail to examine the rotten fruit in their lives—or in our own?
James does not forbid judgment; instead, he forbids condemnation—a form of judgment reserved for God alone. None of us are righteous enough to condemn another. Condemnation implies eternal judgment, the kind of judgment that determines a person’s ultimate fate.
James’s warning is crucial: if believers engage in unacceptable behaviors, they risk falling into condemnation. This aligns with the broader biblical warnings about falling from grace. Unless we remain steadfast, guard against false prophets, and avoid being led astray, we can indeed fall into condemnation—what James describes here as the ultimate consequence of rejecting God’s ways, effectively being “sent to hell.”
Even if you do not agree with my analysis, seeds should still be planted. That seed is this question: If I am a brother to James, a member of the church body of Christ, how can I face condemnation unless I fall from grace? James’s words challenge OSAS ideology by showing that even believers must guard their faith to avoid falling into apostasy and the resulting eternal consequences.
Temptation
Luke 8 13 They on the rock are they, which, when they hear, receive the word with joy; and these have no root, which for a while believe, and in time of temptation fall away.
1 Timothy 1: 18-20 18 This charge I commit unto thee, son Timothy, according to the prophecies which went before on thee, that thou by them mightest war a good warfare; 19 Holding faith, and a good conscience; which some having put away concerning faith have made shipwreck: 20 Of whom is Hymenaeus and Alexander; whom I have delivered unto Satan, that they may learn not to blaspheme.
1 Corinthians 10:1-12 10 Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant, how that all our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea; 2 And were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea; 3 And did all eat the same spiritual meat; 4 And did all drink the same spiritual drink: for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them: and that Rock was Christ. 5 But with many of them God was not well pleased: for they were overthrown in the wilderness. 6 Now these things were our examples, to the intent we should not lust after evil things, as they also lusted. 7 Neither be ye idolaters, as were some of them; as it is written, The people sat down to eat and drink, and rose up to play. 8 Neither let us commit fornication, as some of them committed, and fell in one day three and twenty thousand. 9 Neither let us tempt Christ, as some of them also tempted, and were destroyed of serpents. 10 Neither murmur ye, as some of them also murmured, and were destroyed of the destroyer. 11 Now all these things happened unto them for examples: and they are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come. 12 Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall.
In Luke 8, Jesus teaches by telling the parable of the seed sower, followed by His explanation of its meaning. In verse 13, we see an interpretation that completely challenges the doctrine of OSAS. Jesus describes believers who “receive the word with joy.” Importantly, He does not suggest that their reception of the word was false, insincere, or insufficient. Instead, He explicitly says they received it with joy.
However, Jesus continues to explain that these believers “believe for a while.” He acknowledges their belief but points out that it is temporary. The question arises: What is “a while”? Does it mean hours, days, months, or even years? Regardless of the duration, when temptation comes, they fall away. OSAS proponents argue that those who fall away were never truly saved. They claim such people served only themselves, never producing genuine spiritual fruit. But for the period these individuals were active in their faith—whether days, months, or years—there is no question of their outward fruitfulness. We call them brothers and sisters in Christ, celebrate their service, and testify of their faithfulness. We place them in positions of leadership in the church and affirm their sincerity.
Yet, when such a person falls, all their prior work and faithfulness are dismissed as illegitimate. OSAS ideology contends that their original conversion was not genuine, claiming they were never truly saved. This raises troubling questions: Were we fooled by their service and fruit? Was the Holy Spirit within us unable to discern the absence of the Spirit in them?
If OSAS were true, should we hold church leaders accountable for failing to discern false conversions? How many pastors and preachers, supposedly called by God, have been “fooled” into appointing someone unfit for leadership? The truth is, no human can control another’s free will. The Bible warns us repeatedly that believers can be led astray, fall from grace, and reject the faith they once held.
In 1 Timothy 1, Paul speaks of Alexander and Hymenaeus, whom he “turned over to Satan” because they made a “shipwreck of their salvation.” If one cannot lose salvation, how can it be shipwrecked? Similarly, in 1 Timothy 5:8, Paul warns that failing to provide for one’s family is a denial of the faith, making one worse than an unbeliever. How does one deny faith they never possessed? Why doesn’t Paul claim their faith was insincere or in vain? He unequivocally states they turned from the faith.
In 1 Corinthians 10, Paul addresses believers, reminding them of their ancestors—people who were baptized, ate spiritual meat, drank spiritual drink, and communed with Christ. Paul does not question the genuineness of their experiences but warns the Corinthians that these ancestors sinned and fell. Lust, idolatry, tempting Christ, and murmuring are highlighted as examples of sin that led to their fall. In verse 8, Paul recounts how 23,000 people fell due to fornication. Again, he does not dismiss their prior faithfulness but emphasizes their fall. He concludes with a sobering statement in verse 12: “Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall.”
This is why true teaching is critical. Many believe they stand securely but fail to take heed. OSAS often promotes complacency, suggesting that obedience is optional and sin has no eternal consequence for believers. Paul’s warnings contradict this, urging vigilance and steadfastness.
Another contradiction in OSAS teaching is the emphasis on Satan’s desire to rob believers of rewards rather than souls. The Bible describes Satan as a devourer, not a thief of heavenly rewards. He seeks to separate us from God, not merely to diminish our treasures in heaven. To believe that is Idolatry. You have now placed yourself above God in Lucifer’s life by insinuating that your rewards are more important to him than God is. His objective is not about us—it is about God. You are not that important, but rather a mere tool in his attempt to impose maximum pain upon God. You are one among the multitude with no specialness at all. He could not care any less about your rewards. By destroying us, Satan aims to grieve God and resist His glory. This is why Paul exhorts believers to put on the full armor of God, to stand firm, and to endure to the end.
OSAS denies the free will of believers to walk away from their faith. Jesus, the perfect gentleman, does not force anyone to follow Him. He knocks at the door, but we must open it. If we choose to open it, we are free to close it again. I have seen faithful servants fall away after tragedies, losses, and personal failures. These are precisely the people for whom the warnings in Scripture exist.
OSAS fosters spiritual laziness and a weakening of the church. Instead of engaging the community and standing apart from the world, many churches have allowed worldly influences to infiltrate the sanctuary (AKA auditoriums) and pulpits (AKA stages) and dominate the community. Tragedy and sin gain a foothold because we are unprepared. God does not cause divorce, death, or sin; we do, through our choices and consequences. Faith must be exercised daily so that we are prepared for trials and persecution.
OSAS does not make biblical sense. The Bible repeatedly warns us to remain steadfast, to stay vigilant, and to endure to the end. Satan seeks to devour souls, not to nibble at rewards. Salvation requires a reciprocal relationship with God: He fulfills His promises, and we must honor ours. To love Christ means to keep His commandments—not merely to avoid sin, but to actively pursue holiness.
Friends, no one can steal your salvation—not Satan, not anyone else. But you can choose to walk away. Let us remain steadfast, endure to the end, and finish well.
The Christian Apologetics and Research Ministry defines Apostasy as, “Apostasy is the falling away from the Christian faith. It is a revolt against the truth of God’s word by a believer. It can also describe a group or church organization that has “fallen away” from the truths of Christianity as revealed in the Bible.” Apostasy is real, it is biblical, and the following exegesis will serve as my basis to my belief in why Once Saved Always Saved (OSAS) is not only false teaching but heretical teaching.
I know that there really are people out there who feel like they can work their way to heaven; this is called “works righteousness”. I know that most who believe in OSAS think that everyone who objects to OSAS has to believe in “works righteousness”. This is not at all true; that is not at all what I, and all others who object believe. “Works righteousness” is not what I intend to put across here. That is also not only a false teaching but a heretical teaching. My intent is to show that I believe we are saved by faith, and that God does not hold us hostage after our free will decision for christ. I plan to show that the bible recognizes people who have professed Jesus the Christ as their savior continue to have the free will to walk away from the faith. So let’s start where we should always start, scripture.
Ezekiel 33:13
13 When I shall say to the righteous, that he shall surely live; if he trust to his own righteousness, and commit iniquity, all his righteousness shall not be remembered; but for his iniquity that he hath committed, he shall die for it.
In both the OT and the NT people were saved by Faith. For as much weight is put on the sacrifice in the OT, you had to have faith in the God you were offering the sacrifice to. Abraham had the faith to take his son to be a sacrifice. He had the faith to do what he was told to do. Doesn’t that same faith transcend into the NT and into our daily lives? Additionally, in both the NT and the OT, both persons would sin again, and here is that difference. In the OT another sacrifice was in order. In the NT a prayer of repentance is in order. Both were still believers no matter what. So if that is true, and we have a man who is made righteous by his faith in God’s promise to cleanse him of sin with his repeated sacrifices, why then is he told that if he trusts in his OWN righteousness all of his righteousness will not be remember? If I am not going to remember your righteousness, don’t you first have to be righteous? We are not talking about someone who has always leaned to his own understanding because this verse starts off by identifying the man as righteous. The audience identified is “I shall say to the righteous.” We are not talking to fakes or non-believers. So what we see here is God telling us that if we are righteous, we shall surely live. But if we turn to ourselves, if we lean to our own understanding, all that we have done in Christ’s name will not be remembered. Additionally, all that we do in our own idolatrous name will be iniquity and we shall die for it. Please note that this verse clearly indicates that the man was once righteous and then made the personal free will choice to make himself his God. In the NT terms, he fell back into the ways of his own flesh, he reverted back to the old man he was.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, there should be a seed planted. Those seeds are these questions, “If it is not possible to give up your salvation for sin, if we are truly sealed and will enter into the kingdom no matter what, then why are we warned to remain committed to God’s will and not our own?” “How can one say that once you are saved you are always saved if the scriptures CLEARLY offer the warning and the consequence of obedience resulting in faith and then disobedience resulting in the second death?” “Why does man try so hard to hide the clear instruction here that one who was once righteous and then, through their weakened faith and free will to turn away from God become unrighteous through sin?”
“It is evidently signified here, that to trust in our own righteousness, whether internal or external, whether graces or virtues, past or present, or to entertain high thoughts of our own attainments in religion, and to put confidence therein, is one step toward a fall, and generally issues in apostacy.”
Romans 6
13 Neither yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin: but yield yourselves unto God, as those that are alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God. 14 For sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are not under the law, but under grace. 15 What then? shall we sin, because we are not under the law, but under grace? God forbid. 16 Know ye not, that to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness?
I use this scripture because another scripture commonly use to promote OSAS is Romans 8:1-2, “There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.2 For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death.” I agree with this verse. For those who die in Christ there is no condemnation under the law. To die in the spirit of Christ is to live in eternity. Chapter 8 verse 1 reinforces what so many other verses say and that is at the time of death, if you be in Christ, you will be saved. I could not agree with this Chapter 8 verses 1-2 more. Romans Chapter 6 verses 13-16, however, reminds us that if we are saved, if we are under grace, we are not under the law. So let’s be clear, Paul is talking to saved people here. He says to the saved that if they be under grace, they should not sin. If they sin, if they yield themselves to the sinful desires of the flesh and the wickedness of their minds, they will become slaves to sin, slaves to their wickedness. Even though we are saved by faith, Paul is reminding us that if our works be wicked, our faith is nothing because we can only serve one master. If we obey sin, if we yield to sin then servants of sin we are and we will die in eternal death. This does not address the struggles that we call on Christ to help us with. These verses are specifically talking about the deliberate choice to serve sin, to become a slave to it, as we were before being washed in the blood. It also states that obedience is righteousness. So to those who say that I practice works righteousness, please hear Paul explain that we are to be obedient unto righteousness. We are made righteous by the blood of Christ, and because the righteousness of the Holy Spirit in us we chose obedience to God.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, there should be seeds planted. Those seeds are these questions, “If it is not possible to give up your salvation for sin, if we are truly sealed and will enter into the kingdom no matter what, then why are we commanded, as an already saved people, to not yield to the members of our bodies that lust after sin?” “If we cannot fall from grace, why are reminded to whom we yield ourselves to obey, then his servants we are?” If OSAS is a true biblical fact, why are we warned about becoming ‘instruments of unrighteousness’? Why teach us about yielding to our flesh and sin at all if we cannot sin our way out of heaven? How can one be willfully, knowingly, happily and consistently disobedient to God, and still have the Holy Spirit in him?
Galatians 5
Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage. 2 Behold, I Paul say unto you, that if ye be circumcised, Christ shall profit you nothing. 3 For I testify again to every man that is circumcised, that he is a debtor to do the whole law. 4 Christ is become of no effect unto you, whosoever of you are justified by the law; ye are fallen from grace.
“In this chapter the apostle exhorts to stand fast in Christian liberty, and warns against the abuse of it; and directs to shun various vices, and encourages, to the exercise of several graces, and the observance of several duties; and concludes with a caution against vain glory, provocation to wrath, and envy: and whereas, in the latter part of the preceding chapter, he had made it appear that the believers under the Gospel dispensation were free from the bondage of the law, he begins this with an exhortation to continue steadfastly in the liberty of the Gospel; and the rather, since it was what Christ obtained for them, and bestowed on them; and to take care, that they were not again brought under the bondage of the ceremonial law, particularly the yoke of Circumcision, Galatians 5:1, and dissuades from submitting to it, by observing, that it tended to make Christ unprofitable to them, Galatians 5:2, and that it laid them under an obligation to keep the whole law, Galatians 5:3, and that it made Christ wholly useless to them; and that such who sought for justification by obedience to the ceremonial law were apostates from the Gospel of the grace of God…. There is the liberty of grace, and the liberty of glory; the former of these is here meant, and lies in a freedom from sin; not from the indwelling of it, but from the dominion, guilt, and damning power of it; from the captivity and tyranny of Satan, though not from his temptations and insults…. Christ is become of no effect unto you,…. Or “ye are abolished from Christ”; or as others by an “hypallage” read the words, “Christ is abolished unto you”; for by their seeking for justification by their own works, it was all one to them as if there was no Christ, and no righteousness in him, and no salvation by him; they had nothing to do with him, nor he with them:….ye are fallen from grace; that is, either from that grace which they professed to have…. or else from the Gospel of the grace of God, from whence they were removed, through the influence of false teachers”
John Gill’s work on this is extensive. I have left a lot out, believe it or not. The point here is that Paul often tells us to be on guard, to be watchful, to stand fast, and to beware. There are so many admonitions to Christians, saved children of God, to be alert to the pitfalls of sin and the power of Satan and the false prophets. 14 times in the NT we are told to beware, 6 times we are told to stand fast, 7 times we are told to endure and 4 times we are told to “be not deceived”. We are given warning after warning to not go back to the ways of the old flesh, to be aware of sin and the draw that it has on our flesh. Notice how Paul states that Jesus HAS BECOME no effect. Paul did not say Jesus ‘has not been’, or ‘has never been’. Paul uses the word ‘become’. This is a clear indication that he is talking to saved people who have Jesus, and then get entangled AGAIN in the yoke of bondage, rendering Jesus no effect in them, causing them to FALL FROM GRACE. Paul just nullifies OSAS. This is very important because a huge argument from the believers of OSAS is that a person who spends years serving God and professing their salvation through their faith could not have ever been truly saved if they decide to walk away. They argue that from the second of their profession and subsequent conversion, their decision for Christ was not genuine; it could not have been genuine. However, we do see that we are talking about believers, people who truly believe, and then make the decision to walk away. They fail to heed all the warnings; they fail to remain steadfast in the faith. They failed to hear the gospel which is not just a teaching of love but a true warning of the power of sin, the power of flesh and a never ending desire to satisfy ourselves through worldly snares and entanglements. In the gospel we truly need to see the reason for Christ. Christ came and died for our sin. A sin that was so powerful that it consumed like a fire, destroying and killing everything it touches.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, there should be seeds planted. Those seeds are these questions, “If it is not possible to give up your salvation for sin, if we are truly sealed and will enter into the kingdom no matter what, then why the warning to not be entangled AGAIN with the yoke of bondage?’ “How can we do something again, if we never did it or have not stopped doing it?” The wording here indicates that we once did it, stopped, and are susceptible to doing it again, so how can man not recognize a previous genuine faith and yet man finds themselves in a higher office to declare that a previous faith was not genuine?” “How can Christ become “No Effect” if he was not effectual to you from your original conversion?” “In order to BECOME no effect, doesn’t he have to have been effect at one time?”
Revelation 2:10
10 Fear none of those things which thou shalt suffer: behold, the devil shall cast some of you into prison, that ye may be tried; and ye shall have tribulation ten days: be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown of life. 11 He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches; He that overcometh shall not be hurt of the second death.
The book of revelation is not the story of the Apostle John. It is the testimony of Jesus Christ himself, given to and recorded by the Apostle/Disciple/Prophet John, the one whom Jesus loved. Let’s get that straight right now, it is very important. Jesus Christ himself stated that the Church of Smyrna and Philadelphia needed no rebuke. Of the seven letters he told John to write; only two were without rebuke. This is incredibly important because it establishes who Jesus is talking to here. Jesus tells the church, you are about to be persecuted. Many believers and followers are going to be persecuted and martyred. Jesus does not tell them, listen, you are sealed, do not worry about it. You will be in heaven with me forever. No, there are no such words here. Instead, Jesus says, “be faithful unto death.” Do not forsake him. Jesus goes on to say that he who overcomes unto death, he who does not fall to the flesh, he who does not try to save himself, he who dies faithful shall not be hurt of the second death. The second death will be more righteous than the first death. It will be an eternity of reward or suffering, depending on the choices we make- right up unto death. We are to overcome every day. In other words, our race does not end at the start line; it ends at the finish line. We are warned here to be faithful until the end because there will be those who will not be. There are those who are faithful for a season, but not to the end. Again, how can you not be faithful at the end, if you were not faithful in the beginning, if you never were faithful at all? A huge argument of OSAS believers is that if you are not faithful in the end, then you were never faithful. They have to have that position otherwise OSAS falls to the ground. But that is not a biblical teaching anywhere in the bible. God tells us through His inspired word that people are faithful in the beginning, and fail. Failure is a part of life. However, we see the promise from Christ again; if we are faithful until the end, THEN will He give us the crown. Jesus does not say that He will let us keep the crown he gave us at the beginning. In fact, if we are sealed, why do I need to be told to be faithful unto death? Wasn’t my faithfulness on the day I was sealed and trusted Him as my savior good enough? Of course it was. Because you professed with your mouth, you were saved in an instant. But that was the beginning of a journey, not the end.
The particular promise here is made to him that should “overcome”; that is, that would gain the victory in the persecutions which were to come upon them. The reference is to him who would show the sustaining power of religion in times of persecution; who would not yield his principles when opposed and persecuted; who would be triumphant when so many efforts were made to induce him to apostatize and abandon the cause.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, there should be seeds planted. Those seeds are these questions, “Why does Christ single out the person who overcomes if it is true that all who cry out onto the LORD will be saved?” “Why is there a stipulation of being “faithful unto death” in order to receive my crown if, as a saved man today, I already have my crown?” “And according to the commentary of the learned Albert Barnes, How does one abandon a cause that they were never a part of?” “Why do I have to be told to be faithful unto death if I have been sealed and cannot possibly walk away when I chose myself over God during my time of persecution?” “What does Mr. Barnes mean when he states, ‘him who would show the sustaining power of religion in times of persecution’; who ‘would not yield his principles when opposed’ and persecuted; who ‘would be triumphant when so many efforts were made to induce him to apostatize….” If, once I am saved, I am saved once and for all?
Matthew 5
20 For I say unto you, that except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven. 26 Verily I say unto thee, Thou shalt by no means come out thence, till thou hast paid the uttermost farthing. 30 And if thy right hand offend thee, cut it off, and cast it from thee: for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish, and not that thy whole body should be cast into hell.
Jesus is teaching in his sermon on the mount. He is teaching his followers. He is telling them how a follower of Christ should view things, respond to things, and think about behavior. Jesus himself is laying down some expectations. What I find very interesting is that he lets people know, as he talks about obeying the 10 commandments, having hate in your heart, having lust in your heart, and dealing with those who hate you, that there is a consequence for behavior. What he doesn’t say is that it is all going to be okay because you are saved. In fact, Jesus doesn’t even say that as a saved person all you have to do is repent. What he tells His followers is that if you have a problem that can lead you away, deal with it. Jesus does not literally mean to pluck you eye out or cut your hand off, but he does mean that, even as a saved man, if you are looking at a woman and lusting after her then alter your eye sight, stop looking. He is saying that if your hands become idle and become the devil’s playground, put them back to work, and stop using them for sin. He clarifies, to his followers that the behavior of self-discipline is so important because failing at it, even if it be something like looking with lust in your heart, will result in the casting of your whole body into hell. Jesus Himself warned against falling from grace because He knew that man would be tempted and that many would fail to remain steadfast in the faith. Notice that Jesus says nothing about losing rewards. He does not say, “because you believed but failed, you will receive less in heaven”. He says the whole body will be cast into hell. That does not sound anything like the teaching of OSAS to me.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, there should be seeds planted. Those seeds are these questions, “Why does Jesus tell saved people, the people who are following him, they need to make drastic changes (thus the hyperbole about plucking your eyes out) if they sin, or that if your righteousness does not exceed the scribes and Pharisees they will not enter heaven? Why doesn’t Jesus just say that if you lust after another God and Jesus won’t like it and will probably take away some of your rewards because you are saved and sealed forever no matter what?
Romans 11
17 And if some of the branches be broken off, and thou, being a wild olive tree, wert grafted in among them, and with them partakest of the root and fatness of the olive tree; 18 Boast not against the branches. But if thou boast, thou bearest not the root, but the root thee. 19 Thou wilt say then, The branches were broken off, that I might be grafted in. 20 Well; because of unbelief they were broken off, and thou standest by faith. Be not highminded, but fear: 21 For if God spared not the natural branches, take heed lest he also spare not thee. 22 Behold therefore the goodness and severity of God: on them which fell, severity; but toward thee, goodness, if thou continue in his goodness: otherwise thou also shalt be cut off. 23 And they also, if they abide not still in unbelief, shall be grafted in: for God is able to graft them in again.
“The process of grafting consists in inserting a scion or a young shoot into another tree. To do this, a useless limb is removed; and the ingrafted limb produces fruit according to its new nature or kind, and not according to the tree in which it is inserted. In this way a tree which bears no fruit, or whose branches are decaying, may be recovered, and become valuable. The figure of the apostle is a very vivid and beautiful one. The ancient root or stock, that of Abraham, etc. was good. The branches – the Jews in the time of the apostle – had become decayed and unfruitful, and broken off. The Gentiles had been grafted into this stock, and had restored the decayed vigor of the ancient people of God; and a fruitless church had become vigorous and flourishing…
It is true they were broken off; but in order to show that there was no occasion for boasting, he adds that they were not rejected in order to admit others, but because of their unbelief, and that their fate should have a salutary impression on those who had no occasion for boasting, but who might be rejected for the same cause….
The continuance of these mercies to you depends on your fidelity. If you are faithful, they will be preserved; if, like the Jews, you become unbelieving and unfruitful, like them you will be also rejected. This fact should repress boasting, and excite to anxiety and caution….
If God did not refrain from rejecting the Jews who became unbelievers, assuredly he will not refrain from rejecting you in the same circumstances. It may be supposed that he will be quite as ready to reject the ingrafted branches, as to cast off those which belonged to the parent stock. The situation of the Gentiles is not such as to give them any security over the condition of the rejected Jew….
Christians do not merit the favor of God by their faith and good works; but their obedience is an indispensable condition on which that favor is to be continued. It is thus that the grace of God is magnified, at the same time that the highest good is done to man himself….
In relation to them the favor of God was dependent on their fidelity. If they became disobedient and unbelieving, then the same principle which led him to withdraw his mercy from the Jewish people would lead also to their rejection and exclusion. And on this principle, God has acted in numberless cases. Thus, his favor was withdrawn from the seven churches of Asia Revelation 13, from Corinth, from Antioch, from Philippi, and even from Rome itself….
If they do not continue in willful obstinacy and rejection of the Messiah. As their unbelief was the sole cause of their rejection, so if that be removed, they may be again restored to the divine favor.”
I read this to mean that Abraham was the father of the faith, and in the example Paul speaks about the Jews using Abraham as the root, just as in Christianity, Christ is the root from which his followers feed. The account of the Old Testament and the foundation of the faith is in that root. The chosen people, the Nation of Israel, were the continuation of the root called the branches. Because of their unbelief, God removed the unbelieving branches and gave way for the Gentiles, all who did not belong to the Nation of Israel, to be grafted into the faith. We Christians also call this the Great Adoption. Because of our belief we are a fruitful branch that is grafted onto the tree of God’s chosen people. The fact that God did not refrain from removing unbelieving Jews, which is a really powerful statement because the Nation of Israel was/is the chosen people of God and had that place securely on the tree. Yet God, clearly and profoundly and without dispute, defines their presence on the tree as conditional to their belief and obedience. In fact, Paul teaches, and Barnes expounds, that if God would grant them position on the tree and then remove them from the tree for their non-belief, Gentiles should not boast their fortune for being grafted onto the tree over the removal of the non-believers from the Nation of Israel. Boast about the Root; boast about God, but not the misfortune of the Jews who have been removed. God goes further to say through Paul that if the Jew who has been removed, restores his faith, God can restore his position on the tree.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, there should be seeds planted. Those seeds are these questions, “If OSAS is a truth, then why does God speak about His ability to restore a man? How does one be restored if they were never in an original condition? Why does one need to be restored if they never fell out of the original condition? If I was grafted onto the tree because of my belief and cannot be removed according to OSAS, why am I warned to not be like the Jew who was on the tree and then removed because of a lack of belief? If my faith is all there is to being saved, why is obedience “an indispensable condition on which that favor is to be continued”? If my unbelief means, according to OSAS theology, that I was never saved, how did I get on the tree to be removed from the tree? Which one is it, does God make mistakes regarding who He puts on the tree? Do we fool God with our belief and then to cover up His mistake he removes us from the tree? Or do we continue to have free will throughout our life and are held accountable for our own actions, rewards or consequences?
Galatians 6
6 Therefore leaving the principles of the doctrine of Christ, let us go on unto perfection; not laying again the foundation of repentance from dead works, and of faith toward God, 2 Of the doctrine of baptisms, and of laying on of hands, and of resurrection of the dead, and of eternal judgment. 3 And this will we do, if God permit.4 For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, 5 And have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the world to come, 6 If they shall fall away, to renew them again unto repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame.
“I shall endeavor, as well as I may be able, to state the true meaning of the passage by an examination of the words and phrases in detail, observing here, in general, that it seems to me that it refers to true Christians; that the object is to keep them from apostasy, and that it teaches that if they should apostatize, it would be impossible to renew them again or to save them.”
He shows that this spiritual growth is the surest way to prevent that dreadful sin of apostasy from the faith.
They may be enlightened. Some of the ancients understand this of their being baptized; but it is rather to be understood of notional knowledge and common illumination, of which persons may have a great deal, and yet come short of heaven. Balaam was the man whose eyes were opened (Num. 24:3), and yet with his eyes opened he went down to utter darkness.
They may taste of the heavenly gift, feel something of the efficacy of the Holy Spirit in his operations upon their souls, causing them to taste something of religion, and yet be like persons in the market, who taste of what they will not come up to the price of, and so but take a taste, and leave it. Persons may taste religion, and seem to like it, if they could have it upon easier terms than denying themselves, and taking up their cross, and following Christ.
In the verses of Galatians 6:1-6 we clearly, and profoundly, see that from the highest of faith (having been enlightened) it is possible for man to fall away by blaspheming the savior, and rejecting His sacrifice for salvation.
I believe that these verses directly address the blaspheming of the spirit. I do think that a disobedient heart is not blaspheming as I know that the scriptures talk about those who at the great white throne of judgement cry out about all the works they did, and how they served the church. Yet they are still rejected because they did not work for the glory of God but for their own glory. I believe that is the difference between Galatians 6 and Romans 11. Sin exists in Romans 11, the sin of pride and idolatry. In those verses we are taught that we can fall from grace for the depravity of our sin, that we serve sin. In Galatians we are showed the sin of Blasphemy. We are also told there is no restoration for that sin. We are told in the bible that there is one unpardonable sin and that is blasphemy. We are told here that even a believer can turn from God and commit the most egregious of all sin. We have said that “a sin is a sin is a sin”. We have also said that to God everything that is a sin is equal, no one sin outweighs another. But we have also been taught that blasphemy is not equal. There is no return from that sin, but there is restoration from all other sin as long as sin is not the final condition at death, that true repentance has been made before death.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, there should be seeds planted. Those seeds are these questions, “If the theology of OSAS teaches that a person never falls because if they fall they were never truly saved in the first place, how does one then explain the bible’s statement that for those who have ‘once known Christ’ to be restored if they reject Christ (which is the definition of Blasphemy)? How can the bible say, as clearly as it does here, that this reprobate has known Christ, has tasted the heavenly gift, have been partakers of the holy spirit, have once been enlightened and yet can still have the free will to commit the one unpardonable sin and blaspheme (reject) Christ and the gift of salvation? I, personally, believe that this is such a powerful verse in the dissolution of OSAS.
2 Peter 3
17 Ye therefore, beloved, seeing ye know these things before, beware lest ye also, being led away with the error of the wicked, fall from your own steadfastness.
An argument that OSAS believers make is that John 10 states, “29 My Father, which gave them me, is greater than all; and no man is able to pluck them out of my Father’s hand.” As a person who does not subscribe to OSAS, I totally believe this verse. I do NOT believe that any man can take you from Jesus. In fact, I do NOT believe that Satan himself cannot take you away from Jesus. Please look at this verse with much discernment. We must first understand that Jesus is talking to his followers. He is telling them about false prophets, and wolves in sheep’s clothing. He was teaching that He is the Shepherd, He is the only Shepherd. He is stating that His followers are a people that God the Father gave to Him. He tells us that His sheep know Him as the Shepherd, and He knows His sheep. After reminding His followers about who He is, He warns all of us, again, to beware, but to beware of what? How about to be aware of those who are wicked and who would lead you astray? But wait, no one can pluck you out of God’s hand. Does the bible contradict itself? No, it does not. This verse is warning about being led astray. While no man can pluck you out of God’s hand, the bible clearly indicates that you are always free to walk away on your own. And these warnings, all of what we have talked about up until now, are warnings because God knows how strong our flesh is. The Holy Spirit led the writers of the bible to harp on remaining steadfast, and enduring to the end. That’s because if you allow yourself to be led astray, your desire to remain in the faith grows weaker and weaker, instead of stronger and stronger. What is the result, falling from your steadfastness; falling from your faith. The bible uses the word “fall” over and over. Yet, OSAS would have us believe that for a believer there is nothing to fall from, and for those who fall, well…..you were never in that high position of enlightenment in the first place. Even though I believe the Holy Bible, the blessed commentators, and the Holy Spirit Himself has taught us here to the contrary. Man went from perfection, being a perfect creation, living in a perfect place, having perfect communion with God, to evil. Man “FELL” from grace, was punished, and told that because of the sin of man, death now entered the life. The greatest example of how wrong OSAS is is the Garden of Eden. How much more perfect was that place. To live in heaven, to have God himself walk and talk with you in the Garden and have communion with Him every day, how great is that? To want for nothing, to be sick from nothing, to feel no pain, to not have to work hard, to not have hard labor/child birth, to truly be equal with one another, man and woman. Mankind was once in the perfect place. But we fell, an example of falling in Romans 11, and death and sin entered in. If I subscribe to OSAS am I to believe that the Garden never existed, or that Adam and Eve were evil from the start? Am I to believe that the serpent never really lied to them and did not play as huge of a part in the fall of man as he did because man was not really saved in the first place?
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, there should be seeds planted. Those seeds are these questions, “why are we warned over and over about REMAINING steadfast if there is no danger of losing it?” “If we cannot fall, why does the bible continuously say that if we do not remain focused we CAN and WILL be led astray resulting in a fall?” “How can you fall from place you were never at?” “How do you reconcile the fact that the bible states that no man can pluck you out of the hands of God and the FACT that it tells you to remain steadfast so that you are not led astray, because if you are led astray you can fall from grace, you can fall from being steadfast?”
James 5
“12 But above all things, my brethren, swear not, neither by heaven, neither by the earth, neither by any other oath: but let your yea be yea; and your nay, nay; lest ye fall into condemnation.”
In chapter 5 we see James talking to saved people, no doubt. We have the first head of the church of Jerusalem, the brother (half-brother) of Jesus Christ himself, calling his audience, “Brethren”. There is no doubt that he is talking to the saved. He implores them to have patience. His audience was people who saw and were talking about the observation of the ascension. They believed the “second coming” was coming any day. James was teaching them to have patience and to live for Christ. He spoke of many different positive behaviors, and loving behaviors. But then he says, “above all things”. That should get your attention. He then tells not to swear, or else you fall into condemnation. What is the significance of this? The significance is that condemnation is the judging that no man should engage in. We walk around saying that we should not judge. This is also a false teaching. We are to judge. For our own welfare we judge what is good and what is dangerous. We judge what is healthy and unhealthy. We judge what is right and what is wrong. All this judging we do for our benefit and the benefit of others. How does iron sharpen iron if we do not identify that we, you and I together, are dull? How do we talk to others about sin, if we do not examine the rotten fruit? It is the condemnation part that we are not to engage in. None of us are righteous enough to pass condemnation on each other. So the importance of this verse is that James, such an important person in the bible and in our faith, tells us that if we engage in unacceptable behaviors we are liable to fall into condemnation. Again, unless we remain steadfast, unless we are aware of the false prophets, unless we guard against being led astray, we may fall into condemnation, which is the technical way of saying ‘be sent to hell’.
Even if you do not agree with my analysis here, there should be a seed planted. That seed is this question, If I am a brother to James, a member of the church body of Christ, how can I face condemnation, unless I fall from Grace?
Luke 8
13 They on the rock are they, which, when they hear, receive the word with joy; and these have no root, which for a while believe, and in time of temptation fall away.
In this verse Jesus is teaching by telling a story, a parable, about the seed sower. Then we see an explanation about the parable. In verse 13 we see an explanation that completely disproves OSAS. We see here believers “receive the word with joy”. Jesus is not saying that the falsely received the word, or in any other minimizing or nullifying way indicate that the word they received was false, insufficient, or not genuine. In fact, he clearly says that they receive it with joy. To continue on, Jesus says they believe for a while. Jesus is calling them believers and acknowledges that they believe for a while. Time is always a question in the bible. What is a while; a couple of hours, days, months, or years? But when temptation comes, they fall away. An argument OSAS subscribers offer when a person spends any amount of time “Producing spiritual Fruit” is that they were never really saved. They were good people, but all of their work, all of their service was actually Idolatry. They served themselves because they were never saved and the spirit was not in them. However, for the days, months, or years of service, while a person is producing fruit, exhibiting Christian behavior, there is never any question. We thank they, praise the LORD for them, testify what great examples of Christians they are. We call each other brother/sister. We put people in office in the church. We make people go through classes before they join the church, and when they graduate we welcome them as members. We make people agree to denominational rules or regulations. And most importantly, we always say that we cannot judge the faithfulness of a person. However, when a person falls, all of this work seems to dissipate. When the flesh takes over, and the believer “falls” and rejects Christ, the cry has to be that the original conversion was not genuine. That person was never really saved because if they were they would never walk away from God. All that time, we were fooled. The spirit that is in us was unable to see the total lack of the spirit in the other person. What would happen if we had a rule that said that a Pastor, the shepherd of the flock must be removed if he allowed an elder to be in a position of authority in the church and was not able to discern the genuineness of the conversion? I mean really, who wants a leader who so bad at seeing a fake. After all, they are to be called by God, not simply someone who choses ministry as a career path. There must be a blessing from God, right. The pastor or preacher even must be above reproach, and held to a higher standard. So how are so many fooled by this? I don’t think they are fooled, I think they have no control over another human being’s free will and that they are not to blame at all. The bible clearly states that there will be believers who will fall away from the faith, who will be led away by false prophets/teachers/preachers so the admonition is for use to be aware, stay awake, be on guard, hold steadfast to the faith, and remain in constant prayer and communion with God and so on.
We see in 1 Timothy 1, Paul telling Timothy about Alexander and Hymeneaus who Paul turned over to Satan because they made a “Shipwreck” of their salvation. How does one do that if once upon the ship of faith one cannot wreck that ship of faith? In 1 Timothy 5, Paul is declaring how widows should be treated, and how Christians should care for and love one another. In verse 8 Paul declares anyone who fails to provide for their house has turned from the faith. How does one turn from something they never had. If OSAS is a true doctrine, why does Paul say they turned from the faith instead of saying their faith was in vein, or that it was not a sincere faith? That’s not what he says at all. Not only does he say that they turn from their faith, but he says that this apostate is worse in the eyes of God than a person who has never believed at all. There are so many stories as these in the bible that talk about falling from grace. Many!! But I will end this particular thought with 1 Corinthians 10: 1-12. In his letter to the church of Corrin, Paul is addressing the believers. He is reminding them of their fathers (ancestors). These people were believers. Paul specifically takes note that they were baptized, that they ate of the spiritual meat, that they drank of the spiritual drink which Paul specifically came from the spiritual rock which is Christ. Paul makes specific reference to the acceptance of Christ and taking communion. He never once says that this was all fake, or not genuine conversions. What he does say, and what he does do, is he puts this out there for the audience to whom he is speaking. Believers! He is reminding them that just because they are saved, does not mean they cannot fall from grace. He goes on to mention sin. Paul specifically uses the real example of the sins of lust, as they lusted after evil things, idolatry, as they entertained themselves instead of the LORD, tempting Jesus, and the murmurings or complaining. My favorite is the fornication piece. It is my favorite because sexual immorality is so rampant in this present day. There is adultery happening in the very houses of God. But hey, what does it matter right? OSAS!!! In verse 8 Paul tells why it all matters. In this day, Paul tells of 23,000 who committed some form of fornication and fell. He did not say they were never really saved, he says they fell. And in Verse 12 Paul clearly says, “Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall”. This is why it is important to me that the real teaching be spoken. There are many walking who thinks he is standing, and is NOT taking heed. Everything is good; everything is okay, because I am saved. I do not need to do any work. I do not need to allow the spirit to work through me. I am good. I will just pray and God will make it right, I don’t need to do anything. I will love my lost loved ones or friends by not telling them the gospel, not talking to them about their sin and about hell which will consume them some day because that is not my job. I am saved and forever saved; I don’t have to do anything. Oh but brother, oh but sister, you are the brethren to whom Paul is speaking. You are prime to fall for you are not aware.
In my observations of OSAS sermons, I often see a contradiction. I will hear the sermon of how great eternal salvation is, but then (usually in the same sermon) hear something that talks about being aware of satan’s attractive lies. Instead of preaching about how Satan is trying to steal your soul, the consequence is less rewards in heaven. To me, what I hear in that sermon or conversation is that Satan is concerned about me receiving my full reward in heaven. To me, that makes Satan’s efforts to make me fall about me. But I thought everything was supposed to be about God? I am nothing without Him. I literally hear that, and have people come right out and tell me that as a saved person it is important to be obedient so that we can receive our full rewards. I do agree that the bible clearly indicates that those who finish the race well will receive rewards and those rewards will be based on our degrees of obedience to God while here on earth. I do not believe in works righteousness, but I do believe that once we have the Holy Spirit He brings forth work that Glorifies Almighty God. How obedient we are, and how much work we give over to God earns those rewards, and everybody will be different. However, in my mind, to say that Satan cares about those rewards and wants to get in the way of me receiving my full reward makes those rewards all about me instead of God. That sounds a lot like Idolatry to me and that is why I choose to call OSAS heretical teaching. Let’s get something straight right now. Satan does not only NOT care about your rewards, he doesn’t care about you period. The bible says that he travels “to and fro looking for whom he may devour”. The last time I checked, devour does not mean to nibble away at some rewards. He is looking to make you fail, to take you totally and eternally away from everlasting life with our Heavenly Father. Satan is not doing that because of you, he is doing that to you because of God. That’s right, this is not about you or me; this is about God. Satan’s objective is not you, it’s to inflict as much pain and sadness on God as possible. Satan knows how this is going to end, he is going to fight, and he is going to go down swinging. He is also going to take as many souls with him as he can. He is not going to do that so he can have some party in hell, some festival of friends, and he is not doing his work so he can have some trophy case of all the rewards he took from us. God is the creator, He created us all, so to not have us in heaven with Him, makes Him infinitely sadder than we are when our kids don’t make it home for Thanksgiving or Christmas. But He is righteous and knows that we all had a choice and so guilt is something He will not feel. We make choices to come to the alter, and we make choices to walk away. We are creatures of FREE WILL. So NO, this is not about our rewards. This is about total separation. Make no mistake about that. Again, you lose one reward and then maybe another and then maybe another, the next thing you know even your rewards in heaven become insignificant. This is the warning coming true. This is us not staying awake and seeing that this is not about going to heaven with a plethora of awards. It is simply about getting to heaven. Do not let OSAS prevent you from going to heaven by letting it convince you that Satan is only interested in your rewards. Satan wants you away from God to hurt God. You are just a tool to help him meets his goal. To satan, we all are nothing but a means to an end.
I don’t agree with OSAS because it indicates that you have free will to go to the alter but you do not have free will to walk away. Jesus is the perfect gentleman. Have you ever heard that? He does not make anyone follow him. He stands at the door and he knocks, but there is no door knob on His side, you have to open the door to let Him. Once you let Him in, then you are a hostage. No matter how much you may want to walk away, no matter how much you may sin, you are His forever. It is that, or you were never his to begin with. I have literally watched too many people serve with a servant’s heart, and after a tragedy, the loss of a child or spouse, a devastating divorce, or an affair that led to the divorce that created such guilt that the person would rather throw everything away than try to make sense of their own behavior. They are the reasons for the warning. We are to be zealous in our faith. We are to be excited about being servants of God. The problem is that we are not. Churches as a whole have stopped engaging the community, in fact, have been, for a while now, permitted the communities and the world to come inside the house of God and change how they do things. They are no longer the house of God, but a social hall for worldly people. I believe OSAS is a teaching that has allowed us to become weak. In our weakness, tragedy and satan has the upper hand. We are too weak to handle our own consequences. God doesn’t cause divorce, sin does. God did not bring death into this world man did through sin. In our daily exercise of life and choices, we set into motion consequences. Everyday we are to exercise faith so that when consequences come, or when persecution comes, we are firm in our faith, we are awake and aware, we are steadfast, and we are dressed in the full armor of God so that we may stand and endure unto the end.
In closing OSAS just does not make any biblical sense. The devil looks for whom he may devour, not interrupt. We must be aware so that we do not fall, not stumble. We must remain steadfast so that we may enter in. We must be aware of false teachers so that we are not led astray. I don’t believe that all who subscribe to OSAS are not going to heaven. I do believe that most do understand that there is obedience to our faith. But I also fear that there are some who do not understand that God wants a reciprocal relationship with us. This means that He said He will always honor his end of the promise, so we must too. We must live a holy life to the best of our ability. We must NOT become friends with the world. We must reject our flesh, and die to ourselves daily. We must spread the Gospel, even to the members of our own families even if it means they chose to never speak to us again. We don’t make any exceptions here on earth because He did not make any exceptions when He went to the cross. Once we accept with our mouths we have work to do. Yes, the greatest gift is love, but make no mistake; that love spoken of is God’s love. Human love is flawed, it is emotional, it is temporary, and it is conditional. God’s love is perfect and that is the gift! We love our neighbors by not stepping on their feet, by not telling them the truth, by letting them live in their sin without even peaking one word of God’s love for them and we call that love. We are to love people to heaven, not to hell. OSAS does teach that there is room for error, and promotes a laziness that is mentioned NO WHERE in the bible. You cannot live in sin, go to church on Sundays, and think you are saved. Living in sin and sinning are two different things. Once again, teaching is important. We all fall short of God’s glory. But to slip up, knowingly or unknowing, is different than living in it day after day. I witness church going folks promoting alcohol in the vicinity of addicts, I know religious people in church who leave a Sunday sermon and then go get drunk during watching a pro sporting event. I know Christians who praise professional athletes more than they ever talk about God. I see men and women come to church dressed so scantly that watching them walk is like watching some soft porn show. I know many people living in idolatry, thinking they are the center of the world who use the God-on-a-shelf doll whenever they need to. Otherwise, they are in control. OSAS promotes this through its teaching that all you had to do is truly mean that you want Christ in your life and you are saved. Sin is these big things, but the smaller things are just personal choices. No they are not. Jesus says, “If you love me you will keep my commandments” These are not Moses Ten, these are his. Dress modestly, love your neighbor, do not drink to excess, come out from among the world and be separate, and so on. Friends, please hear me, I cannot steal your salvation. Satan cannot steal your salvation. God will not fail on His promise of salvation. You, and only you, can make the choice to walk away from the greatest gift you will ever have. Please be aware, please be steadfast, please endure until the end, and please finish well!
If you stand in the mirror what will the reflection tell you about yourself, and what are you going to do about it? May the peace of God be abundantly heaped upon you and your house, straight from the cross to the Christian!
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