| Theology Q&ABy Dr. J. Rodman WilliamsTheologian
 
 Dr. J. Rodman Williams answers theological questions, exclusively on CBN.com.   More 
        from Dr. J. Rodman Williams  
 8. Salvation - Calling, Regeneration, 
        Justification
 
   
          Does there have to be an order? 
            Like, first, you get saved. Second, youget baptized in water. Third, you get filled with the Holy Spirit. Does 
            it
 have to be in that exact order?
The Bible refers to the Jews 
            as the "chosen people." Does that necessarily mean that they will enter 
            the kingdom of God, even if they reject Christ?In the chapter on "Calling" 
            in volume two of your Renewal Theology book under the Excursus 
            I, you described Calvinism and Arminianism, and then in section 3 you 
            use the phrase "elected to believe." Could you expand on this? I am 
            not sure how this is different from Calvin if some are elected to believe 
            and others are not.In John 3:16, Jesus says that 
            "He that believeth on Me hath everlasting life," yet in Matthew 7:21 
            He says that "not everyone who says 'Lord, Lord,' shall enter into the 
            kingdom of heaven." Could you please help me see how this is not contradictory?Can one who has committed adultery 
            still be saved? I have prayed for forgiveness but still feel lost. Can 
            I be helped?As we've all heard the old saying, 
            "A leopard can't change his spots." Is this true with man? I want so 
            badly to change the person that I am, I want to be a better spouse, 
            a better parent. I have sinned in all aspects of my life. All I want 
            to do is become a different person, and stop doing the same things that 
            I struggle with daily. Is this possible? Can God literally change a 
            person? Is there really such a thing as "a new lease on life?"The Bible says all who know 
            Jesus as Savior are saved. But what about Jews?My friends believe that certain 
            Muslims, Mormons, Jews, etc. will go to heaven. What scripturally can 
            I tell them to refute this theory?Do you believe that Christians 
            from different churches -- like Seventh-Day, Baptist, Pentecostal -- 
            will all be saved?I believe that you are saved by 
            faith but I get hung up on "works."What is the difference between 
            Regeneration, Justification, and Sanctification?What gives me the right to impose 
            my beliefs on others?What is "Regeneration"?How can I have eternal life?Is sanctification through your 
            own efforts with support from Jesus essential for salvation?Should I try to divide the Godhead 
            by exalting the Comforter?Are the Ten Commandments still 
            binding on us who are saved by faith in Jesus?Please explain the doctrine 
            of unconditional election. If the Bible states that we only 
            come to Jesus if drawn, do we have free will?How are faith and works to be applied 
            in our daily living?As Christians we are saved through 
            Christ. What about the Jews?If we are chosen, then does 
            prayer help for a non-Christian's salvation?Do we have to do away with the law 
            if we are saved by grace? Do we need to go to a priest 
            to really be forgiven and saved?  Can a person who has unforgiveness 
            in his heart still go to heaven?What about the God-fearers who 
            lived before the time of Jesus?Do children who die before the 
            age of accountability go to heaven or not?
       Does there have to be an order? Like, first, you get saved. Second, 
              you get baptized in water. Third, you get filled with the Holy Spirit. 
              Does it have to be in that exact order?
 You have well spoken of three separate elements that make up the Christian 
          walk, and also you have listed the usual order of their occurrence. However, 
          for example, water baptism may on occasion be the third element that follows 
          being filled with the Spirit. It is only important that all three of these 
          elements be present for the full Christian life. Back | Top     The Bible refers to the Jews as the "chosen people." Does that necessarily 
              mean that they will enter the kingdom of God, even if they reject Christ?
 It was to the Jews that the Gospel was first proclaimed and all the first 
          Christians were Jews (see the Book of Acts). Their standing as in some 
          sense God's "chosen people" did not suffice. They needed, along with Gentiles, 
          salvation to enter the kingdom of God. Rejection of Christ would surely 
          prevent this from happening. Back | Top     In the chapter on "Calling" in volume two of your Renewal 
              Theology book under the Excursus I, you described Calvinism and Arminianism, 
              and then in section 3 you use the phrase "elected to believe." Could you 
              expand on this? I am not sure how this is different from Calvin if some 
              are elected to believe and others are not.
 I did not say "elected to believe," which I agree with you would be a 
          thoroughly Calvinistic statement, but "elected as believers." See my italicized 
          words on page 19. Thus a close correlation is maintained between election 
          and faith. Else one tends to slip off into extreme Calvinism on the one 
          hand or Arminianism on the other. (See Renewal 
            Theology, 2)  Back | Top   In John 3:16, Jesus says that "He that believeth on Me hath everlasting 
              life," yet in Matthew 7:21 He says that "not everyone who says 'Lord, 
              Lord,' shall enter into the kingdom of heaven." Could you please help 
              me see how this is not contradictory?
 There is no contradiction here. Believing in Christ is the way of salvation. 
          Calling on His name, even to saying "Lord, Lord," is not enough. Rather, 
          in this latter case, the person who does the will of the Father shall 
          enter the kingdom of heaven. Believing in Christ includes commitment to 
          the Father's will, a saying of 'Lord, Lord' from the heart. Back | Top     Can one who has committed adultery still be saved? I have prayed for 
              forgiveness but still feel lost. Can I be helped?
 We read in the Bible: "Let marriage be held in honor among all, and let 
          the marriage bed be undefiled; for fornicators and adulterers God will 
          judge" (Hebrews 13:4). Thus your situation of adultery is a very serious 
          matter. However, God delights to forgive the truly penitent soul: "If 
          we confess our sins, He is faithful and righteous to forgive our sins 
          and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness" (1 John 1:9). Back | Top     As we've all heard the old saying, "A leopard can't change his spots." 
              Is this true with man? I want so badly to change the person that I am, 
              I want to be a better spouse, a better parent. I have sinned in all aspects 
              of my life. All I want to do is become a different person, and stop doing 
              the same things that I struggle with daily. Is this possible? Can God 
              literally change a person? Is there really such a thing as "a new lease 
              on life?"
 Hear the New Testament: "If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: 
          old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new" (2 Corinthians 
          5:17). The leopard may not be able to change his spots, but Christ in 
          you can change your whole life into a new one. It is not so much that 
          you should want to be a better person as rather to become a new person 
          wherein all aspects of your life can be changed. Not better but new! Back | Top   I myself am a Christian, but I have an interesting question. 
              The Bible says all who know Jesus Christ as their Savior will go to heaven. 
              But what about Jews?
 Paul writes about the status of the Jews in Romans 9 through 11. He says 
          at one point, "My heart's desire and my prayer to God for them is for 
          their salvation" (10:1). Jews have a special place in God's plan. This 
          does not mean they are automatically saved. Jew and Gentile alike need 
          faith in Christ for salvation to occur. Back | Top   My friends, who call themselves Christians, believe that certain 
              Muslims, Mormons, Jews, etc. will go to heaven. Their reasoning, if you 
              can call it that, is God is so infinite how do we know He doesn't reach 
              other people through these religionssort of a many roads to salvation 
              theory. What scripturally can I tell them to refute this theory?
 By way of refutation, see, for example, the following Scriptures: John 
          14:6, Jesus said, "I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes 
          to the Father, but through Me" (note, the way not one of several ways); 
          Acts 4:12, Simon Peter declared about Jesus, "And there is salvation in 
          no one else; for there is no other name under heaven that has been given 
          among men, by which we must be saved"; Romans 10:9, Paul writes, "If you 
          confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord, and believe in your heart that 
          God raised Him from the dead, you shall be saved." Such verses as these, 
          and many more could be cited, contradict the "many roads to salvation" 
          theory. Back | Top   Do you believe that Christians from different churcheslike Seventh-Day, 
              Baptist, Pentecostal...will all be saved?
 Surely, Christians from many different churches will be saved. It is 
          a personal matter. Romans 10:9 declares: "If you confess with your mouth 
          Jesus as Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the 
          dead, you shall be saved." It is not a question of which church you belong 
          to but whether you have genuinely made a personal statement of faith in 
          Christ. It is important that the church you attend be a believers' church, 
          one that steadfastly proclaims the way of salvation. Back | Top    I believe that you are saved by faith but I get hung up 
              on "works."
  I am a born again Christian and everything and believe that 
          you are saved by faith and Jesus' death on the cross. But sometimes I 
          get really hung up on the works stuff. Like a lot of times in the Bible 
          in the New Testament it seems to be saying that you get to Heaven by doing 
          good works. Faith always has the primacy over works in terms of salvation. We are 
          saved not by works; but also we are not saved without them. A lively faith 
          will always demonstrate itself through good works. "For just as the 
          body without the spirit is dead, so also faith without works is dead" 
          (James 2:26). In Paul's words, it is a matter of "faith working through 
          love" (Galatians 5:6). Back | Top      What is the difference between Regeneration, Justification, and Sanctification?
 All three are ways of talking about salvation. Regeneration means to 
          be born again. Justification means to be declared righteous by what Christ 
          has done by His death on the cross. Sanctification refers to the new life 
          of holiness that has begun. (See Renewal 
            Theology, 2, chapters 2-4.)  Back | Top      I believe in Jesus and want to "share" the good news with others but 
              the question that others keep asking me is why do I say that Jesus is 
              the only way to the Father and what gives me the right to impose my beliefs 
              on others? I can show scripture references to why Jesus is the only way 
              to the Father with no success but my main question is what gives me the 
              right to as they say "impose" my belief on them? Not wanting to impose 
              anything but to share.
 A proper presentation of the gospel must be done without imposition. 
          We truly have good news to share. The joy of your faith should be so present 
          as to be almost contagious. After all, there is nothing else that comes 
          close to the blessing of salvation that you have received. So let the 
          non-coercive joy of the good news be present in all your witness.  Back | Top     What is "Regeneration"?
 Regeneration means essentially rebirth: it is re-generation. Hence regeneration 
          is a being born again or anew. The classic New Testament passage is these 
          words of Jesus: "You must be born again" (John 3:7). We may 
          also note Peter's words to Christians: "you have been born again" 
          (1 Peter 1:23). Paul declares to Titus that God "saved us
by 
          the washing of regeneration and renewing by the Holy Spirit" (Titus 
          3:5). These three passages stand out in their testimony to regeneration; 
          and the last (in Titus) specifically relates this to salvation. It is apparent that this is a spiritual rebirth. It is not a second physical 
          birth, but a rebirth that is spiritual. Jesus emphasized this in His words 
          just prior to those about rebirth: "That which is born of the flesh 
          is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit" (John 3:6). 
          Thus, through the Holy Spirit there is spiritual rebirth. The Old Testament 
          looked forward to this. God spoke through Ezekiel concerning Israel: "I 
          will give them one heart, and put a new spirit within them" (Ezekiel 
          11:19; see also 36:26). Jeremiah says: "I will give them a heart 
          to know that I am the Lord" (Jeremiah 24:7). And the psalmist prays, 
          "Create in me a clean heart, O God, and put a new and right spirit 
          within me" (Psalm 51:10). Although the language of the Old Testament 
          is not precisely that of rebirth, it points in the direction of a spiritual 
          renovation for which the word "regeneration" is the fulfillment. Regeneration, however, cannot be limited to one area of human nature. 
          It is not only that the spirit, or heart, is made new, but the person 
          himself is thereby a new being. As noted, Paul writes that God "saved 
          us"--not just our spirits--as persons: we have been born again. Paul 
          writes similarly elsewhere, "If any one is in Christ, he is a new 
          creation; the old has passed away, behold, the new has come" (2 Corinthians 
          5:17). The person is a new creature. This is the wonder of regeneration. (For more on Regeneration, see Renewal 
          Theology, 2: chapter 2.) Back | Top      How can I have eternal life?
 The answer to your question may be found in John 3:16: "For God 
          so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes 
          in Him should not perish, but have eternal life." Believing in Christ 
          is the key: accepting Him, trusting Him, committing yourself totally to 
          Him. This includes also repentance for past sins in the strength that 
          Christ provides. I suggest that you talk about all this with some pastor 
          or spiritual leader and, in that person's presence, you declare your faith 
          in Christ as your Savior and Lord. Back | Top     
 Is sanctification of yourself through your own efforts with 
              support from
 Jesus essential for salvation?
 By your question, I am afraid that you have made salvation basically 
          a matter of your own achievement. However, salvation is more than support 
          from Jesus, thankfully. Salvation is a matter of grace not works, relying 
          totally on Jesus as Savior and Lord. Sanctification also is more than 
          your own efforts with support from Jesus. It is likewise not a matter 
          of your own achievement but of Christ working in you.  Back | Top     Are people baptized by the blood of Christ at conversion 
    or is it a separate experience? If the Trinity is in Christ, should I 
    pray for Holy Spirit baptism? Should I try to divide the Godhead by exalting 
    the Comforter?
 People are saved by the blood of Christ at conversion. The Trinity is 
          not in Christ, but Christ is in the Trinity. So is the Holy Spirit. Yes, 
          you may surely pray for Holy Spirit baptism without dividing the Godhead 
          or exalting the Comforter. Back | Top     Are the Ten Commandments still binding on us who are saved 
          by faith in Christ Jesus? Paul in Romans 3:31 seems to indicate that they 
          are when he says, "Do we then nullify the Law through faith? May 
          it never be! On the contrary, we establish the Law."
 Paul is speaking here against antinomianism, namely, the view that because 
          of our salvation through faith the law is void, or nullified. His reaction 
          is very strong against such a viewpoint ("May it never be!"). 
          The fact that we are not "under law, but under grace" (Romans 
          6:14) does not mean the voiding of the law. The law, especially as embodied 
          in the Ten Commandments and in our moral consciousness (see Romans 2:15), 
          is God's law for all people. However, until salvation came, the law could 
          not be truly fulfilled. Now there is the inner motivation and ability 
          to accomplish such. Grace amazingly establishes the law! Back | Top     Please explain the doctrine of unconditional election. Can 
          the unelected still be saved?
 The doctrine of unconditional election as affirmed particularly by Calvinistic 
          churches declares that salvation is wholly God's doing. He elects those 
          whom He wills unconditionally, and man has nothing to contribute to it. 
          This, I believe, is an extreme view of the sovereignty of God that leaves 
          nothing to the human decision. On the contrary, God's election stands in close correlation with faith. 
          The elect are those who believe. God surely has the priority, but there 
          must be the response of faith. We are elected by God as believers. Without 
          faith there is no election. Unconditional election too much omits the 
          human side. (For more on Election see Renewal 
            Theology, 1: pages 18-21.) Back | Top     If the Bible states that we can only come to Jesus if we 
    are drawn by the Spirit, then do we actually have free will? In other 
    words, the Bible states that He chooses us. Did we not choose Him? So 
    where is the free will?
 According to Matthew 22:14, Jesus says, "Many are called but few 
          are chosen." Hence, though His calling is primary, not all are chosen. 
          In Jesus' own ministry He called many to follow Him but not all did. See 
          for example Luke 9:59 where Jesus says to a man, "Follow Me," 
          but the response was negative with the excuse, "Permit me first to 
          go and bury my father." The man was called but not chosen by virtue 
          of his own free decision. Hence the choosing by God always includes the 
          willing response of faith. Back | Top     My question pertains to faith and works and how the two concepts 
          should be applied in our daily living. Romans 3:28, Galatians 2:16, and 
          Ephesians 2:8 state that by grace we are saved through faith but not by 
          works. How does this agree with James 2:14-26?
 According to James 2:21, "Abraham our Father was justified by works." 
          Does this contradict other words such as those of Paul in Romans 4:2, 
          "If Abraham was justified by works, he has something to boast about; 
          but not before God"? There is no contradiction here. Further on James 
          adds, "Faith without works is dead" (verse 26). This means that, 
          although we are justified by faith alone, true faith is never alone. Paul 
          speaks elsewhere of "faith working through love" (Galatians 
          5:6). A living faith will always overflow in good deeds. (See Renewal 
            Theology, 2: pages 76-78, on "Place of Works.") Back | Top     As Christians we are saved through Christ. What about the 
    Jews? Will they be judged differently from others?
 Jews and Gentiles alike are saved through Christ. There is no difference 
          for, in Paul's words, "Both Jews and Gentiles are all under sin" 
          (Romans 3:9) and "God will justify the circumcised by faith and the 
          uncircumcised through faith" (verse 30). The same faith in Christ 
          is necessary for both Gentiles and Jews to be saved. Back | Top     It is a serious error to say that "we are chosen to be saved or not" 
      as if God arbitrarily excludes a person from coming to Christ. In one of 
      His parables Jesus declared, "Many are called, but few are chosen" 
      (Matthew 22:14). "Many" refers to all to whom the gospel is preached-it 
      is the universal call for salvation. The chosen ones are those who respond 
      affirmatively to the call and thus are saved. God chooses those who respond 
      in faith; if anyone is bypassed, it is not God's doing, but is due to the 
      negative response to His call. Praying for your daughter's salvation is 
      much in order! Such may help her come to a living faith and be among God's 
      chosen ones. (See Renewal 
      Theology, 2: pages 15-17.)If we are chosen to be saved or not, then does prayer help 
    for a non-Christian's salvation? I was told that if I pray for my daughter's 
    salvation but the Lord has not chosen her, it would do no good. Please 
    advise.
 Back | Top     Do we have to do away with the law if we are saved by grace?
 Not at all. The law, referring particularly to the moral law (to which 
        our consciences and the Ten Commandments bear witness) is from God and 
        is binding upon all people. Yet, because of the sin of the human race, 
        the law cannot be kept; indeed, as Paul puts it, the law has become a 
        curse ("the curse of the law," Galatians 3:13). Now, however, 
        when we are saved by grace (not by law!), the law for the first time can 
        be maintained. As Augustine said long ago, "Grace was given that 
        the law might be fulfilled." The law is by no means done away by 
        grace; instead, by the indwelling Spirit the law may at last be kept (even 
        if there is still continuing sin). Rather than the law being a curse, 
        we can now joyfully say, with the Psalmist, "O how I love Thy law!" 
        (119:97). Back | Top     Do we need to go to a priest to really be forgiven and saved?
  In the Bible, the risen Jesus said to His disciples, "If you forgive 
        the sins of any, their sins have been forgiven" (John 20:23). Catholics 
        believe that this means you must go to the priest to get forgiveness for 
        your sins, (as well as asking Jesus yourself). Does this mean that we 
        need to go to a priest to really be forgiven and saved? I know that I'm 
        saved, but this still bothers me. John 20:23 does not mean that we must go to a priest to get forgiveness 
        for sins. Jesus is speaking to His disciples in general (see verses 19 
        and 20-"disciples" twice used). As Christians, we may pray for 
        others, forgive and receive forgiveness, and also individually pray directly 
        to the Lord for our own forgiveness. According to 1 John 1:9, "If 
        we confess our sins, He is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins 
        and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness." Christ is "the 
        high priest of our confession" (Hebrews 3:1). We need not go to any 
        other! Back | Top     Can a person who is born again but has unforgiveness in 
    his or her heart towards another believer still go to heaven?
 Jesus Himself placed a very high premium on forgiving sins in the Lord's 
        Prayer. He taught His disciples to pray, "Forgive us our trespasses 
        as we also forgive those who trespass against us" (Matthew 6:12). 
        Note the word "as." "As" signifies "in proportion 
        to." At the conclusion of the Lord's Prayer, Jesus stressed again 
        the need to practice forgiveness: "For if you forgive men when they 
        sin against you, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you 
        do not forgive men their sins, your Father will not forgive your sins" 
        (Matthew 6:14-15). Also, in Jesus' ministry He emphasized that there is no limit to the 
        number of times one should forgive, "seventy times seven" (Matthew 
        18:22). Finally, Jesus demonstrated the ultimate forgiveness from the 
        cross when He cried out, "Father, forgive them for they know not 
        what they do" (Luke 23:34). So unforgiveness is a very serious matter and should be dealt with by 
        every sincere believer. Back | Top     What about the God-fearers who lived before the time of 
            Jesus?
  If Jesus is truly the ONLY way and we need His sacrifice in order 
        to be saved, what about those who lived before the crucifixion? Are we 
        to assume that none of them were saved or made it to heaven? Or, are we 
        to infer that it was possible to make it to heaven without the work of 
        Christ? We must always bear in mind that Christ's sacrifice was sufficient to 
        cover the entire human race past, present, and future. What happened at 
        Calvary was, of course, the objective event that makes salvation possible 
        for all people. We do need His sacrifice in order to be saved. Verses 
        like Genesis 3:15 point from the beginning to the future hope and promise 
        of One who would someday "crush the serpent's head" (NIV). Believing 
        in God's promise was basically the way of salvation in the Old Testament. 
        The Old Testament worthies did not make it to heaven without the work 
        of Christ in redemption. Back | Top     Do children who die before the age of accountability go to 
        heaven or not?
  I'm writing to further your discussion of a question on CBN.com about 
        infant baptism and salvation. I agree with your perspective that baptism 
        alone does not save. However, I would like to get your thoughts on this 
        follow-up question: Do children who die before the age of accountability 
        go to heaven or not? On the matter of children that die before the age of accountability, 
        there is little Scripture to go on. The closest approximation would be 
        the words of Jesus in Luke 18:16, "Let the little children come to 
        Me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such 
        as these" (NIV), and Christ embraced them all. This does not mean 
        that little children are innocent, but by a special act of God's grace 
        they are taken into His presence. Back | Top   
 
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