Eternal Security; John 10:27-30
When it
comes to the doctrine of eternal security there are couple of things we need to
understand as background. First of all, there is one theological school that is
generally referred to as Arminian theology. It basically teaches that man has a
will or volition that is unaffected by sin. We believe that man can still
exercise positive volition toward God but it is still hindered. He cannot
understand the gospel, the Holy Spirit has to make it
clear, all of these things. But in their view man has a completely unhindered
will, and man is basically the same as Adam was when Adam was created before
the fall. There are various other aspects such as the way they treat election,
that it is conditioned. Their view says that God in eternity past looked down
through time and sees who will trust Christ as saviour
and then, key word here, because they have faith God then selects them. So that
election or selection is because of faith. But the Bible never says that. In
fact, in Ephesians 2:8, 9: “By grace you have been saved through faith,” it
uses the Greek preposition dia
plus the genitive case. If dia is
used with an accusative it means cause, but the cause of our salvation is not
our faith in Christ, it is the love of God who sent Jesus Christ to die on the
cross as a substitute for our sins. That is the cause of our salvation. We are
never saved because we believe; never once in the Scriptures does it use that
kind of construction. So that is what is wrong with the Arminian view. There is
a moderate Calvinist view that would look at it in terms of foreknowledge, that
God knows who would under whatever circumstances would
exercise positive volition. Then God in His sovereignty would make sure that
that person who would exercise positive volition at the moment of gospel
hearing will hear the gospel and the circumstances necessary to bring about
that amount of response will be present and they will respond in faith. But
they are saved through faith and God is still viewed as the efficient cause and
doesn’t tamper with our volition. The hyper-Calvinist view says that God in
essence is the one who moves the believer to be positive, and He doesn’t do
that for everybody. As a result of that the Arminian view is that because you
do something to be saved you can do something to lose your salvation. In both
moderate and hyper-Calvinism you can do nothing to lose your salvation, you
have eternal security. The Arminian will come to John
To properly interpret this
verse we have to understand what happened in John chapter nine with the blind
man. When Jesus came He was like the shepherd. In
The doctrine
of eternal security (cont.)
3)
God the Father’s
omnipotence is more powerful than any human attempt to negate salvation. God is
the one who saves, faith is merely the means by which we
appropriate the work of Christ on the cross into our life. Jude 24 NASB
“Now to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in
the presence of His glory blameless with great joy.” It is God the Father who
keeps us. Cf. John 10:28, 29.
4)
God is
omniscient. He knows all the knowable simultaneously and has always known all
the knowable. This means that in eternity past God knew every single sin that
we would ever commit. There is nothing that we can do that will surprise God. So
he was able in His omniscience to devise a plan that was broad enough, complex
enough and deep enough to include the solution for every single sin. Nothing
that we will ever do will be something that wasn’t accounted for in the plan of
God. God is omnipotent and has the ability to do whatever is necessary to bring
His plan to completion. So when we combine God’s omniscience with His
omnipotence we see that because God knew all the facts He was able to devise a
plan vast enough and detailed enough to include the solution for every sin. To
say or think that we can do something that jeopardises our salvation is one of
the greatest acts of blasphemy that can ever be committed.
5)
No one, angelic
or human, can bring a charge against or condemn those who are saved. Since
Christ covers all their sins and we possess the imputed righteousness of
Christ, imputed on the basis of faith alone in Christ alone, nothing can be charged
against a child of God. If any sin could undo a believer’s salvation then
either a) Christ’s death did not pay for that sin, or b) His payment was not
enough and it had to be added to by our obedience. Both of those statements
accuse the death of Christ of being inadequate or insufficient for our
salvation, and they are false. Romans
6)
To think that we
can help out God is nothing more than arrogance. God doesn’t need out help, doesn’t
want our help; in fact Scripture says that whenever we try to add to God’s plan
it nullifies the grace of God and cancels His plan.
7)
When we
understand the dynamics and complexities of what God must do to save even one
unbeliever we realise how complex the whole process is and how impossible it is
to reverse it. At salvation something metaphysical or ontological takes place. There
is a radical transformation that takes place in our immaterial being at the
moment of salvation that is so vast and so complex, and God has to do so many
things that to even think that it is reversible is impossible. We are given 39
irrevocable things at salvation.
8)
Jesus Christ
continually prays for us to be kept in salvation, and His prayers are answered.
So because His prayers fulfil all the conditions that God sets forth for prayer
God always answer His prayers and therefore we will be kept in salvation. John
9)
Christ is the
head of the body. One of the 39 irrevocable things that happen at the moment of
salvation is that we are placed in the body of Christ. Christ cannot be severed
from a member of the body once it has been joined to the body. There are no
spiritual amputations. 1 Corinthians
10)
The character of
God means that God keeps His promises. Because God is immutable, eternal,
infinite and perfect righteousness He cannot cancel the gift once it is given,
no matter how disobedient, rebellious or obnoxious the believer’s conduct might
be. 2 Timothy 2:11-13 NASB “It is a trustworthy statement: For if we
died with Him, we will also live with Him;
11)
The Holy Spirit
seals us at the moment of salvation which is our guarantee for protection and
salvation. There is a seal placed on us and we are identified as owned by
Christ. 2 Corinthians 1:22; Ephesians
12)
Retroactive positional
truth means that at the moment of salvation through the ministry of God the
Holy Spirit known as baptism—which means we are identified with Christ in His
death, burial and resurrection—everything we are as an unregenerate person is
crucified with Christ. Therefore what is broken is the power of the sin nature,
and because we are identified with Christ in His death, burial are resurrection
every sin is dealt with, and that is not reversible. That is why Jesus says in
John 10:28, 29: “I give eternal life to them and they shall never perish… My
Father, who has given {them} to Me, is greater than
all; and no one is able to snatch {them} out of the Father’s hand.” Then He
concludes by saying, “I and the Father are one,” a profound statement of His
unity with God the Father but in context what He is saying is that it is God’s
plan to bring us to salvation, and my plan is to bring us to salvation. There
is a doubly protection here for the believer, that we cannot be taken away from
either the Father or the Son, and the believer can never lose his salvation.