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Free Will And Giving Back Salvation
Open the
Bible Question Form to send your own question.
Q:
I
read about the 14 steps of losing your salvation and I totally
agree, but one of the arguments some Christians have is,
What about your free will? Can you give the free gift of
salvation back once have received it from God by announcing
that you don't believe and want it anymore?
Will God accept his free gift back? Is our Free Will
so strong and powerful, that God has to honour it?
A: Thank you for this excellent
question. I apologize for being so slow in getting to
it. I fear that in a desire to avoid the
fatalism of strict Calvinism (something Calvinists would
deny), many have gone to the other extreme. I have begun
to hear "free will" being proposed as one of the
unquestionable truths that must be accepted when it is
applied to a discussion no matter how ridiculous the
outcome. [Please understand, I am not personally
accusing you of this.] However, the Bible does not seem
to give the authority to "free will" that many do today.
Just for instance, consider these three scriptures:
- Matthew 26:41 Watch
and pray, that ye enter
not into temptation: the
spirit indeed is willing,
but the flesh is weak.
-
Romans 7:18 For
I know that in me (that
is, in my flesh,) dwelleth
no good thing: for to will
is present with me; but
how to perform that which
is good I find not.
- Philippians 2:13
For it is God which worketh
in you both to will and
to do of his good pleasure.
In the first two references, we see that whatever the operation
of the will is, it is not able to perform what it wishes to do.
So, although the will may have a freedom to desire a certain action,
it does not have the power to perform the desired action without
the help of the Lord. In the last reference (Philippians 2:13),
we see that both the willing and the doing of the right thing comes
from God. Yet, I sense that many people use free will as complete
liberty by the individual to choose and perform any action that
has been chosen. This is not true in our personal experience and
it is not true in Bible teaching. Why, therefore, should it be
accepted as absolute Bible doctrine? I can choose to accept
Christ and I can choose to obey Him because He enables me to do
so. Free will has two applications to us. First, I have a certain
limited free will in earthly decisions. I can choose chocolate
ice cream instead of vanilla. I can choose to ask God for His help
in a particular matter. Though this free will is very limited,
our small minds assume it to be larger than it is because of the
seemingly infinite varieties of earthly actions we can choose to
make. But we are much more limited than most people understand.
I cannot will to fly or to be President of the United States or
to refuse to think a wrong thought all day and expect to be
successful. Free will has serious limitations. Second, I
have the free will to reject the working of God in my heart. That
is, God (of His own choice) does not remove my ability to say "no" to
the wooing of His Holy Spirit. Therefore, although Christ has promised
to draw all men to Him through the cross (John 12:32), He does
not force me to accept His call. As Christ told Jerusalem and the
people in it, "how often would I have gathered thy children
together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings,
and ye would not!" (Matthew 23:37). The word "would" is
a form of "willing." He was willing to gather them, but
they were not willing and therefore they were lost. There is no
irresistible grace here. However, there is no absolute "free
will"
either. No doubt, they needed Him to be willing before they could
be willing. As to your question about salvation, free will
is not a right someone has to lose their salvation. We cannot will
ourselves new parents. When in heaven, we will not be able to will
ourselves out of heaven. If we are saved, we have become members
of the body, flesh, and bones of Jesus Christ (Ephesians 5:30).
This is not simply a condition that we can reverse by an act of
the will. We have elevated the "decision" too
much in salvation. I am not denying that we decide to accept the
offer of salvation. But this is not what saves us. Our salvation
is all of God and all our decision does is allow God to apply His
redemption to our souls. We spend too much time thinking about
what we did. Salvation is of the Lord! (See Jonah 2:10). I had
no "right" to be saved. I simply trusted in what Christ
did for me. He called and I responded to His enabling power. I
did not will myself in and I cannot will myself out.
I hope
this helps.
Pastor David Reagan
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