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Free! Take One!
Can You Fall From Grace
By Jack Critchfield
Most of our friends in the religious community want to tell us
that when God decides to bestow His grace upon us, we have no choice
in the matter. And once a man has entered into God’s favor (been
saved), his continuing to receive God’s grace is not conditional at
all upon mans teaching, actions or will. Article 9 of the Methodist
Discipline states, “Justification by faith alone is a most wholesome
doctrine and full of comfort.” I can see where “faith alone” would
be a very comforting idea, can’t you? If that were true, you
wouldn’t have to worry about anything you might do. In fact, it
would leave you the option of doing anything you might desire.
Things such as cheating, lying, committing sexual immorality (and
all that it implies) or even murder might be engaged in without fear
of any repercussions from God.
It seems somewhat strange that people believe this, in that we
have so much evidence in the Bible, of God placing conditions on
mankind. In Gen. 2:16-17 God told Adam, “Of every tree of the garden
you may freely eat; but of the tree of the knowledge of good and
evil you shall not eat...” Is this not a command from God that Adam
and Eve were required to keep? Because of the fact that they
transgressed that command (sinned), Adam (and Eve) were driven out
of the garden and man was separated from God.
We see conditions placed on man’s continued salvation all the way
through the Bible. Most of the time the little word “if” is the
signal of some conditions. In 2 Peter 1:10, Peter says, “for if you
do these this, you shall never fall.” In this verse never falling is
conditioned by the word “if’.
In Acts 8:13 Simon obeyed the gospel (called gospel of God’s grace
in Acts 20:24). Yet after entering into a saved state he fell into
sin as to be (1) doomed to parish, (2) having a heart not right with
God, (3) needing to repent, (4) being guilty of wickedness, (5)
poisoned by bitterness and (6) bound by iniquity. Some will tell us
that he was not really saved, but the scriptures do not support such
statements. Here is a man who entered into the grace of God then
turned to his own will and committed sin, refusing to abide by the
conditions of the Lord and thus falling from grace. Either that, or
with all of the things mentioned here against him, he still goes to
heaven. But in Revelation 21:24 we read, “But there shall by no
means enter it (heaven, jlc) anything that defiles, or causes a
abomination or a lie....” That means sin cannot enter heaven.
Also, in Heb. 6:4-6 we read, “For it is impossible for those who
were once enlightened, and have tasted the heavenly gift, and have
become partakers of the Holy Spirit, and have tasted the good word
of God and the powers of the age to come, if they fall away, to
renew them again to repentance, since they crucify again for
themselves the Son of God, and put Him to an open shame. The writer
here is speaking to those who need to go beyond the first principles
of Christ (Heb. 5:12-14). It could not be the alien sinner since the
sinner needs to obey the first principles not go beyond them. The
writer is speaking to those (1) once enlightened, (2) who have
tasted the heavenly gift, (3) partook of the Holy Spirit and (4)
tasted the good word of God. Not one of these can apply to the alien
sinner because the alien sinner has not tasted nor partaken of any
of these and certainly not been enlightened, as the Bible throughout
speaks of his state as “darkness”. Instead this is describing the
child of God who has not born the proper fruits, with the warning he
can fall away.
Peter addressed his second letter to those who have already
obtained faith of the same value (just as strong) as the apostles (2
Pet. 1:1). Would I be wrong in assuming that they were saved? After
saying that they can pursue the course that will cause them to never
fall (2 Pet. 2:10), he then points out that they can be “led away
with the error of the wicked”(2 Pet. 3:17). Surely it is clear that
remaining in God’s favor (grace) is conditioned on continued
obedience to Him. Either these spoken of could fall and be lost or
Heaven will have some who have left faithfulness and embraced the
error of the wicked. God knew that man would attempt to tamper with
His will, so he left us clear statements to disprove these human
theories. Read 1 Tim. 4:1-2 and Gal. 5:4.
John 10:28-29 reads, “And I give them eternal life, and they
shall never perish; neither shall anyone snatch them out of My hand.
My Father, who has given them to Me, is greater than all; and no one
is able to snatch them out of My Father’s hand.” Some will raise the
question; “doesn’t this prove that one cannot fall?” The forces of
error will use many passages to try and lull people into security.
What is said in John 10:28-29 is absolutely true; no man, no force,
not even Satan himself, can forcibly remove a child of God from
God’s care. No one who hears the voice of the Lord and follows Him
is going to fall. And no power can remove such from God’s hand. But
in the points we have already made God’s Word speaks of those who
make a decision to refuse to hear, refuse to follow, and willfully
persist in entering into a sinful way. No one snatched them from the
Lord’s hand: they willfully departed.
There is not doubt that one who abides by the conditions of God
is enjoying God’s grace, and will be saved eternally. Conversely one
who decides to not continue in God’s Word will fall from grace
(favor) and be eternally lost. Remember Peter’s admonition: “If you
continue to do these things.” |