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Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

Can Anyone Actually Know They Will Go to Heaven?

Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

J.D. Greear

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.9624 Ratings

🗓️ 6 March 2023

⏱️ 11 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, Pastor J.D. continues our Ask Me Anything series based on his new book, "Essential Christianity." The fourth question is, "Can anyone actually know they will go to heaven?"

Show Notes:

I’ve talked about this before, but if there were a Guinness World Record for the amount of times someone asked Jesus to save them, I’m pretty sure I’d hold it.

By the time I was 19, I’d “become a Christian” about 5,000 times. Every time my church gave an invitation to pray a prayer to “accept Jesus,” I did it right away. One year my church had a goal of 300 conversions and I think I fulfilled that goal all by myself.

I know that sounds neurotic, but I just wanted to be sure that I was saved. I was plagued with questions like “Last time I prayed that, did I feel sorry enough about my sins?” and “Since praying the prayer, have I followed Jesus closely enough?”

I knew the Bible said that we were “saved [by] faith,” (Ephesians 2:8) but I wanted to know: what was the faith that saves, and how could I be sure I had it?

I’ve since found that a lot of Christians have these same questions. Ask 20 different people what “faith” is, and you’ll likely get as many different answers. Some think of it as a general sense that God is real. Others think it means sincerity in religion. They say, “I’m getting more serious about my faith.” Some think having faith just means adopting a positive, hopeful outlook on life. Others think it just means that at some point you prayed the infamous “sinner’s prayer,” asking Jesus into your heart.

So here’s the question we want to consider: what is the faith that saves, and how can we know that we have it?

In the book, I used the example of Abraham. How was Abraham saved? He was saved by faith. And his faith was credited to him as righteousness.
The faith that saves is believing God’s promise and resting on it. The only difference between our faith and Abraham’s is that Abraham looked forward, believing God’s promise to send salvation; you and I look backward, believing he has sent it.
Christians trust God to keep his promise to them just as Abraham trusted God to keep his promise to him. If we believe that God has forgiven our sins in Jesus, just as he promised (v 25), then, like Abraham, our faith is credited to us as righteousness. That’s the faith that saves.
We know that faith doesn’t exclude effort, but it does exclude earning. In other words, we’ll never earn our salvation – but saving faith shows evidence (fruit) in the life of the believer.

As Martin Luther said, “The law says, ‘Do this,’ and it is never done. Grace says, ‘Believe in this,’ and everything is already done.”



You know, preachers often ask people the question: “If you died tonight and God were to say, ‘Why should I let you into heaven?’ what would you say?” The question has become a cliché, but it’s actually a good one to consider. What would you say?

Many say, “Well, because I was a good person.” Or “Because I tried my best.” “Because I was a sincere Christian and always tried to live out what I believed.”


But faith that saves always starts its answer with “Because Jesus…” It would never start with “Because I…” Why? Because any answer that starts with me is going to reveal faith in my work, not faith in his. The faith that saves is the faith that leans all its hope for heaven, and for life, on Jesus Christ.

How you answer that question, then, is how you can know whether you have the faith that saves. This is how the younger, sinner’s-prayer-praying, baptism-junkie J.D. could have stopped worrying about whether he’d prayed some prayer well enough or felt sorry deeply enough or gotten committed to Jesus strongly enough to be saved. I could have rested in the fact that he did what he said he did....

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, everybody, welcome to Ask Me Anything. My name is Matt Love. I am here with Pastor J.D. Greer,

0:24.0

and we are continuing our series that is highlighting some of the questions that J.D.

0:29.5

Unpacks in his book that just came out called Essential Christianity. A great book for people

0:35.1

that are new to their faith. If you're discipling somebody, if you're just wanting to explore kind of helpful, quick

0:41.7

answers to some really big questions that come up for everybody who's walking with God.

0:46.3

This is a really great resource.

0:47.5

So we're kind of going through that, asking some of the questions from the books, highlighting

0:50.9

from the book, highlighting some chapters.

0:53.1

And so we're going to continue on with that. And the question we have today is, can anyone actually know they will go to heaven?

1:01.4

Yeah, you know, Matt, we've talked about this on this podcast before. It's a very important

1:05.9

question and one that I actually struggle with a lot myself. In fact, not to do a shameless book promo, but I wrote a whole book called Stop Asking Jesus into your heart on this very question.

1:16.0

And probably it was one of the things that when I started to talk about it at our church, like how much I struggled with the assurance of salvation.

1:23.2

I always kind of joke that, you know, if there were a Guinness Book of World's Records for how many times someone could say the sinner's prayer, I would hold that record. Probably, you know, I am, no

1:31.9

lie, 5,000 times when I was in high school and college, you know, praying to ask Jesus into my heart.

1:37.9

I got saved in every youth camp I ever went to. I think every denomination in America has a record of a J.D. Greer's salvation. I got baptized four

1:45.8

different times. When I started to talk about that, the look of relief on people's faces

1:50.9

saying, that's how I was. And I think there's something about the way that we preach and explain

1:56.6

the gospel that some of it is well-intentioned some of it is just a little sloppy that ends up

2:02.2

giving false assurance to those who shouldn't have it and then keeping assurance from those who

2:07.7

should and so in working through the essentials of Christianity from the book of romans

2:13.5

paul actually deals with that question in rom Romans 4 of what is the faith that saves

2:18.7

and how do you know that you have it. Let me just say, there really is no more important

...

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