Examine Yourselves
2 Corinthians 13:5
There are a great many people in hell today who, while they lived upon the earth, presumed with great confidence that they were God's children. They lived and died under the delusion that all was well when nothing was well. And now they suffer the horrible wrath of God in hell. There are also many who live in peace today, confident that they are born of God, who are yet strangers to grace. They are religious, zealous, and outwardly righteous. But they are without Christ. And the wrath of God is upon them.
These things concern me! If you honestly think about them, I am sure they will concern you as well.
"`Tis a point I long to know,
Oft it causes anxious thought:
Do I love the Lord, or no?
Am I His, or am I not?"
No one can settle this issue for me, or for you, but the Spirit of God. And he will settle it only by the Word he has given. So I urge you (and myself) to do what he tells us to do.
"Examine Yourselves"
We are not to examine one another. And we are not to subject ourselves to the examination of others. If you examine others, you will become hardened in self-righteousness, harsh and judgmental, arrogantly making yourself the standard by which you judge others. If you subject yourself to the examinations of others, you will have nothing but the words and opinions of men as the basis of your faith. Your assurance, if you get any, will be nothing but a temporary, self-righteous confidence, varying with the opinions of the preacher to whom you are listening.
The point of
examination is this ― "Whether ye be in
the faith." It does not
matter when, where, or how you came to be in the faith, or even who was
preaching when you believed. It only matters that "ye be in the faith.” For most of God's people, conversion is
not a climatic experience, but a gradual process. Some, like Saul of Tarsus,
have great, climatic experiences. But most are brought to Christ one faltering
step at a time. And even those who have
“Prove Your Own Selves”
The only way to know "whether ye be in the faith" is to bring your faith to the Word of God, crying with David, "Search me, O God, and know my heart: try (prove) me, and know my thoughts: and see if there be any wicked way in me (see if I am in the way of the wicked), and lead me in the way everlasting" (Psa. 139:23-24). If God will "say unto my soul, I am thy salvation” (Psa. 35:3), I want no other proof.
God has given us in his Word seven essential characteristics of saving faith. If these seven things are consistent with my faith, then my faith is genuine and I am a child of God. If these things are not consistent with my faith, then my faith is false and I am not a child of God.
1.
Saving
faith confesses personal depravity and sin before God (Psa.51:3; Lk.
2.
Saving
faith looks to the blood of Christ alone for acceptance with God. Christ's
precious blood represents the whole of his obedience to God as the sinners'
Substitute. And faith sees everything it needs, everything God requires, in the
blood of Christ alone: Redemption (Eph. 1:7), Forgiveness (Col. 1:14), Justification
(Rom.
3.
Saving
faith knows that salvation is by grace alone (Eph. 2:8-9). I do not
say that a person must be a Calvinist to be saved. Calvinism has no more to do
with salvation than Arminianism. Salvation is not in a system of doctrine, but
in a Person, the Lord Jesus Christ! And all who know that Person know that "Salvation is of the Lord"
(Gal. 5:1-4; I Cor.
4.
Saving
faith willingly submits to the dominion of Christ as Lord (Lk.
5.
Saving faith
works by love (Gal. 5:6). Good works attain nothing. And the lack of good
works prevents nothing. In the
6.
Saving faith is
involved in a warfare (Gal.
7.
Saving faith
perseveres to the end (Col. 1:21-23; Heb.
Don Fortner