Seven questions about “Once Saved Always Safe”

…and they shall never perish….” (John 10:28)

(What follows is not Baptist doctrine.  This has nothing to do with denominationalism.  This is about the Bible.  It’s about the clear teaching of Jesus.  Thank you.)

Can you unfry an egg?  Can you uncook a casserole? Return a house to the trees it once was? Can you be unborn and stop being your father’s child?

After being saved, coming to know Christ and being genuinely forgiven and accepted and transformed by the Holy Spirit of God into something far different from what you were, you cannot undo that.

Once saved, always.

Once saved, always that.  Once saved, always safe.

To say otherwise, and to preach it as gospel, might be something akin to insulting the Holy Spirit.

It might be. Certainly, it’s worth giving this some serious thought.

My friend and her husband have been trying to find the church where the Lord wants them.  She sent me a message.

“We found a great church that we really like in a lot of ways. But we found out they believe a person can lose his salvation. That troubles us.”

She asked me to remind her what Scripture says on this subject. I was glad to do so.

Question 1. What are some primary scriptures teaching the security of believers?

John 10:28-29 is as solid as one could ever ask for. For that matter, so is John 3:16. In fact, every scripture calling our salvation “eternal” or “everlasting” is making this claim, that salvation is forever and cannot be undone. (To say, “Well, it’s eternal so long as I keep up my end of the bargain” is insulting to the Lord. To do that is to treat Him like a flashy used-car salesman who hides the fine print in the contract.)

But there are plenty of others which speak of the eternal and lasting nature of the salvation we have in Christ.

Luke 10:20 —  Disciples should not focus their thanksgiving on variable blessings (like results, numbers, baptisms, etc) since they are inconsistent, present sometimes and absent at other times, but should rejoice in this, “that your names are written in heaven.”  Jesus clearly thought salvation was secure and unvarying, not dependent on anything external, and thus was everlasting.  (I suspect it upsets Him to see how little people value what He achieved on Calvary, to think it’s a temporary situation won or lost by our doings.)

Ephesians 1:13 Believers were “sealed in Him with the Holy Spirit of promise.”  If that’s not eternal security, it’s nothing. He has literally made believers “tamper-proof.”  How good is that!

–Ephesians 2:8-9. Everyone agrees that this teaches salvation is not of works, but of faith.  The funny thing, however, is that some will turn around and teach that, while good works cannot get us saved, bad ones can undo the Lord’s salvation.  Interesting logic. I suspect they’ve just not thought this matter through. If that’s the case, then we are indeed saved by our works.

Hebrews. The entire Epistle to the Hebrews addresses this in numerous places. For instance, Jesus is a better priest and a superior sacrifice than under the former system because while those priests were forever slaughtering sacrificial animals, “through His own blood, He entered the holy place one for all, having obtained eternal salvation” (9:12).  One for all.  One time for all time.

The priests of the temple had no chairs because their work was never done. “But He, having offered one sacrifice for all time, sat down at the right hand of God….”(10:12). “For by one offering He has perfected for all time those who are sanctified” (10:14).  And then, after saying in 10:17 that our sins would be remembered no more, Scripture says, “Now where there is forgiveness of these things, there is no longer any offering for sin.” Get it? No more offering because there’s no need. Once saved, forever safe.

We could stop right here, couldn’t we?  Scripture is clear.

Question 2. What about Hebrews 6:4-6? Doesn’t that teach one can lose his salvation?

On a television broadcast where teachers in a certain denomination were spouting their flawed doctrine in answer to rigged questions (purported to have been called in by listeners), they gave their spin on this text.  The teacher said, “Hebrews 6:4-6 teaches it’s possible to lose your salvation.”  And he quickly moved on to other subjects.

Not so fast, friend. That scripture states that something is impossible.  It says, “In the case of (a number of things), then if they have fallen away, it is impossible to renew them again to repentance.”  See that?

Please look it up in your Bible.  I’ll wait…

I grant you this is not an easy text for any of us, regardless of the position you take on this subject. If you believe, as I do, that the Bible presents salvation as an irrevocable gift from God which cannot be taken back or undone, then you have to admit this passage seems to teach the possibility of “falling away.”  I answer that a) it does not say someone has done that, only that “if” they did, so the writer is posing a theoretical situation; and b) “if” they did fall away, getting them saved the second time is impossible.  For that to happen, it would be necessary for Christ to return to the cross and die all over again.

On the other hand, if you believe one can lose his/her salvation, this passage says it’s impossible for them to be saved again.

Interesting that the television teacher’s denomination, which teaches one can lose his salvation and get it back, lose it again and regain it, does not baptize the person each time he/she “gets saved” again, even though they teach baptism is an essential part of salvation.  Anyone looking for consistency in many denominations’ doctrines will be endlessly frustrated.

Question 3. Is there any place in Scripture that flat-out teaches about some saved person losing his salvation and getting it back?

I know of none. In fact, when the Apostle John spoke of people who had departed from the faith, he said, “they went out from us because they were not of us” (I John 2:19).  He adds, “If they had been of us, they would have remained with us.”

They were never truly saved in the first place.  That’s what he’s saying.

Question 4. Are there Old Testament allusions to the security of believers?

The best one I know concerns the priesthood.  When a man became a priest, he was given a ceremonial bath. From head to toe, he was drenched.  He stood there, passively “taking it.”  However, the process was never repeated. From then on, every time he arrived at the tabernacle (and later the temple) to do his priestly work, on entering he went first to the laver (wash basin) and washed his hands and sometimes his feet.  No one did it to him; he did it himself.

This is a picture of believers–in Christ we are priests of God (I Peter 2:9)–receiving salvation as a gift from God, through no works of our own. We stand there and take it. Thereafter, we never need to be saved again. However, each day of our lives, on our own initiative we come to Him and receive the daily cleansing as we pray, confess, and recommit ourselves.

See Exodus 40:12-15  for the initial washing of Aaron and his sons, and then 40:32 for the daily hand-washing.  I cannot take credit for this. Woodrow Flynn, the man who preached the ordination sermon for Billy Graham, spoke to our seminary class one day in the 1960s and shared this insight with us.  I think it’s pure gold.

Question 5. Why then do some entire denominations (and a lot of wonderful pastors and churches) teach the possibility of losing one’s salvation?

I’ll give you my opinion.  There are two issues here.  One: I think it just makes sense to think, “Hey, I came in on my own and I can walk out on my own.”  It’s all about free will. It just seems it would be this way. And two: there are some scriptures that on the surface at least suggest saved people can be lost.  The first is the big one, methinks.  “It seems to me…”

We look around at people who once were faithful church members and now are living in big-time sin, and it seems logical to think they’re no longer saved.  However, applying that test–concluding that what seems logical must be so–would also lead us to a doctrine of works salvation. It seems logical to the average person that good people go to heaven and bad people to hell.

This is why Scripture says “The natural man does not receive the things of the Spirit of God” (I Corinthians 2:14). They are foolishness to him.

My wife’s step-grandmother, a lifelong resident of New Orleans and a devoted Catholic if ever there was one, said, “Joe, don’t you think when we stand before the Lord, He will add up our good works on one side and our bad works on the other and if the good outweighs the bad, we’re in?”  All over her apartment, Grandma Ethel had pictures and images of Jesus on the cross.  I gently asked, “What do you think the point of the cross was all about?”  She recited the proper words–“He died for our sins”–but the meaning of  that seemed not  to penetrate the mind of this one who had spent a lifetime believing in works salvation. (Was Ethel saved or not? I vote for “saved.”  We are not saved by proper doctrine or correct understanding, but by faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. And don’t we thank Him for that!!)

Question 6. Are people who get this wrong bad people? Or do good people disagree on it?

Clearly, there are good people (as we say) on both sides of this issue. And yet both cannot be right.  We are not calling “the other side” bad people or saying they are ignorant.  We love the brethren. We believe they are mistaken because they choose to discount some of the great teachings of Scripture for the simple reason that “it doesn’t seem right to me.”

And yes, I would not be surprised if when we stand before the Lord, we find that my denomination, Southern Baptists, will have been mistaken on some things too. (I have an idea what, but we’ll save that.  lol)  So, we should all exercise humility and show love.

Question 7. Are there other reasons for believing in the security of believers?

Let me give you two that mean a lot to me.

First. Scripture teaches that the saved are “sons of God” and “children of God.” (See John 1:12, Romans 8:16; and I John 3:10.)  Now, if we can have salvation and become God’s children, then lose salvation because of what we did or did not do, and thus are no longer God’s children, it’s a terrible metaphor the Lord chose to use.  And yet Scripture uses it repeatedly.  (See 2 Corinthians 6:18 and Galatians 4:7.)

Or should we believe that God will have sons and daughters in hell?

My wife and I have three adult children. We love them dearly, but as they were growing up each one gave us their share of headaches and worries.  We spent sleepless nights worrying about them and praying relentlessly. They went through periods of rebellion against us and God (and came through it, thankfully). At no point did they cease being our children.  Once my child, always my child.

Second. When we come to Christ and are genuinely saved, something happens at that moment which is divine, life-changing, eternal, and irreversible. We become children of the Heavenly Father, our names are written in the Book of Life, our sins are forgiven, the Holy Spirit indwells us, and nothing is ever the same again.  This is why one cannot walk out the way he walked in.  From this moment on, he/she is not the same person. In Christ, we are “new creations” (2 Corinthians 5:17).

I hope this helps.

It does not answer every objection, of course. Huge books would be required to do that. But it’s important to emphasize this is not (as some accuse) a man-made doctrine to give sinning church members carte blanche to come and go and they please and still go to heaven.  Far from it.

The person who goes on sinning as before, as I John puts it in several places, is not saved and never was.  (The wonderful Adrian Rogers used to say, “The unbeliever leaps into sin and loves it.  The believer lapses into sin and loathes it.”)

The person who has no desire to live close to the Lord Jesus and to please Him and never has had, is probably not saved and never was.

However, that said, we say without fear of contradiction that in Heaven there will be people we never expected to be received.  We will be surprised again and again.  And, just as certain, there will be people we expected to find in Heaven who never made it.

God is the judge and not us.  We see through a glass darkly, the same way we do everything else.  We see doctrine through that darkened glass also, and no doubt get some things wrong.

Let us always come with humility to these matters of eternal significance. And let us pull back from the foolish who have all the answers and tolerate no dissent.

Help us, Lord.  And help us to encourage one another.

2 thoughts on “Seven questions about “Once Saved Always Safe”

  1. This was/is the “sermon” or the litmus test I seek when deciding to listen to a pastor/teacher/friend. You passed!

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