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December 3, 2008
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Home > 2007 > DecemberChristianity Today, December, 2007  |   |  
GOOD QUESTION
Hour of Decision
"How can I know I'm a Christian if I can't remember when I first responded to the gospel?"



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My favorite question to ask Christians is how they came to trust in Christ. The answers I've heard testify to the diverse experiences God uses to bring people into a relationship with himself. Most commonly, people say they trusted him as a child at camp or at Sunday school or while praying with a parent. They often follow with something like, "But my faith really became my own when I was a junior in high school."

How are we to understand this variety of experiences and the apparent two-stage process many seem to undergo in arriving at saving faith?

The term saved is popularly used to refer to regeneration and justification. But when the Bible uses the word salvation in a spiritual sense, it describes the broad range of God's activity in rescuing people from sin and restoring them to a right relationship with himself. Salvation in the Bible thus has past, present, and future tenses. A believer has been saved from the guilt of sin (justification, see ), is being saved from the power of sin (sanctification, see ), and will be saved from the judgment and presence of sin (glorification, see ).

While the subjective experience of being saved may look very different from person to person, the objective state of being saved is definite and absolute. From God's perspective, there is a definitive point in time when those who have trusted in Christ pass from death into life ().

Whether or not one can remember the moment of spiritual rebirth, it is a miracle that initiates a number of new realities. Through the work of the Holy Spirit in regeneration, the spiritually dead person is made alive in Christ (). The convert's filthy rags of self-righteousness have been traded for the perfect righteousness of Christ (). He or she can cease striving to be justified, resting instead in the finished work of Christ (). As Paul writes, "There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus" (). The believer has "crossed over from death to life" (), which means the person can "have confidence on the day of judgment" ().

Much of American Protestantism has been influenced by revivalism, which places great emphasis on "making a decision for Christ" in a public, definitive way. These "moments of decision" often become the crucial evidence that one is saved. Other Protestant traditions, less influenced by revivalism (including some Reformed and Lutheran churches), may be content to leave the conversion experience unclearly identified, putting the focus on identification with the church. Both of these traditions have benefits, as well as potential problems.

The decision approach rightly emphasizes the need for a personal commitment to Jesus Christ and the idea that regeneration takes place at a specific time. The potential downside is that this view can lead to a simplistic, human-centered understanding of being saved, where one depends too heavily on the specific act of trusting Christ as the primary evidence of conversion. As a result, one can doubt the "decision" was real, leading to numerous journeys down the aisle (just in case). Also, one can depend on the walk down the aisle alone, even in the absence of spiritual fruit.

On the other hand, Reformed traditions appreciate the sovereignty of God and the role of the church in the salvation process. Yet they can leave conversion so vague that the need for personal trust in Christ and a changed life is neglected.





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Displaying 1 - 3 of 43 comments.See all comments
Robert   Posted: December 28, 2007 8:09 AM
Monte - Respectfully or not you are unfortunately mistaken. The biblical text is 100% clear that if you believe in Jesus you will have eternal life. You may add what you would like to this. You may redefine belief and faith to mean obedience, baptism or whatever you would like, but you are unfortunately adding to the straight forward and quite unambiguous requirement set forth by God in his word, ie, belief in Jesus that he died for your sins and that he rose again, bodily resurrection, demonstrating that he was Israel's Messiah and savior of all people who believe in him. End of story. I do not understand why any one wants to make what God quite clearly made very straight forward has made quite simply, complicated and difficult, but this is where most of what passes as Christianity has devolved into religion, ie, a man made system, most which tell us what we must do for God, when the Christian faith is 100% about what God has done for us, and in the person of Jesus.

F McDonald   Posted: December 28, 2007 8:40 AM
Experience is everything. ie Experiencing salvation. Not working it out ... yet working it out. The best part of the authors submission is indeed the following, < Salvation in the Bible thus has past, present, and future tenses. A believer has been saved from the guilt of sin (justification, see Eph. 2:8), is being saved from the power of sin (sanctification, see 1 Cor. 1:18), and will be saved from the judgment and presence of sin (glorification, see Acts 15:11).> The comments by others show how so many get it wrong.. only because of the diversity of opinions. Belief cannot be seperated from action where God is concerned. Only man tries hard to seperate them in order to justify another means of salvation. If scripture states 'believe and be baptised to be saved' and scripture states, as it does, that baptism saves, then scripture speaks about a different water baptism than many have conjured by their own means.Today man has distorted conversion experience.

Chuck   Posted: December 26, 2007 3:01 PM
Two writers take issue with the author's claim that the reformed tradition tends to "...leave the moment of salvation vague..." and go on to articulate the Holy Spirit's impact as evidence of salvation. You've evidenced Thoenness' assertion in your own writings. Each conversion takes place at a specific time. Whether one records that moment on a calendar for future reference is irrelevant just as my memorization of my date-of-hire has no relevance to my employment. What does matter is that we acknowledege the moment's significance and importance in the changed life. Change does have a beginning. When that moment is unattended, it leaves the impression that the "change" is one choosing to be like Jesus (in personally defined increments of behavior and belief) rather than one submiting to the will of God and thus becoming like Jesus (in worldview, applied to behavior and belief).

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