Thursday, April 28, 2016

The Importance Of The Eternal Salvation Doctrine

By Andrew Jones


Eternal salvation is the central theme of God's word, the Bible. Not only is the eternal salvation doctrine the central theme, it is the most important doctrine of all. Because of its truth, every person can know for sure where they will spend eternity.

This doctrine begins in the very first book of the Bible. The creation of Adam and Eve took place, and God placed them in the Garden of Eden. They were given free reign of the garden except for one thing. They were told not to eat the fruit of one specific tree. This was not something hard to remember. In fact it was easy.

As Eve was alone in the garden one day, the devil approached her and encouraged her to eat the fruit of the tree that God had strictly forbidden them to eat. He used a number of lies to convince Eve that it would not hurt a thing if she disobeyed God. After all, the fruit looked delicious. Eve succumbed, ate the fruit and disobeyed God. She not only ate it herself, but she convinced Adam to eat it, too. Little did they know the drastic change that would take place when sin entered the world.

From that time on every baby that is born into the world is born a sinner. God has made it very clear that no sin can enter into heaven, because He is perfect and cannot tolerate sin in his presence. There is no doubt that every person has a personal debt to pay for his sin, and there is no way that he can pay his own sin debt. Good works are simply not enough.

Because of sin, God knew man would need a perfect, blood sacrifice to pay his sin debt. God's son, Jesus, was the only one qualified to make that sacrifice. God's unwavering love for mankind, caused him to give Jesus to die on the cross in order to pay the sin of every woman, child and man.

When Jesus died on the cross and shed his blood for people who were lost spiritually in their sin, he paid for all of the sins of mankind: those in the past, present and future. When Jesus rose from the grave, God proved that the sin debt had been paid in full.

God wanted people to have a choice in their eternal destiny, so he made Jesus' death on the cross a gift to anyone who wanted to believe and receive it for himself. Those who believe God and receive this wonderful gift are promised eternal life in heaven when they die. Those who choose to live their lives without God and attempt to reach heaven on their own will ultimately fail and will spend eternity in hell, separated from God for all eternity.

The importance of this doctrine cannot be minimized. Jesus is the only one who can pay the sin debt for a person, and thereby, give him eternal life when he accepts God's perfect gift of salvation. When a person makes that decision in his life, his sin is washed away, his life is made new and he knows without a doubt that his sins have been forgiven. His soul is flooded with contentment, peace and joy.




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