P. Andrew Sandlin
Feb. 26, 2002
My youngest daughter
Peace is participating
in a missionary trip to
Mexico next month with
a local evangelical church.
This is a basically good
group, as far as I can
tell, though I would,
of course, disagree with
some of their theological
distinctives.
Yesterday
she asked me, "Dad,
before we go, we're required
to give the group a public
testimony of our salvation
experience. I know I'm
saved. What should I say?
A lot of the other kids
have really spectacular
testimonies, but mine
is so boring. I
was trained in a Christian
home and heard the gospel
from an infant and trusted
the Lord. I wish my testimony
were more exciting!"
I smiled with gratification,
and told her of the blessing
of a boring testimony.
One
of the great heresies
(the word is not too strong)
of the church today is
the notion that one must
fall into deep depravity
in order to be "truly
saved by grace," and
that since this usually
excludes small children,
they need to "grow
up" and "sin
real good" before
they can become real Christians.
One is immediately reminded
of Paul's dire comment
to the Romans:
For if the truth of
God hath more abounded
through my lie unto
his glory; why yet am
I also judged as a sinner?
And not rather,
(as we be slanderously
reported, and as some
affirm that we say,)
Let us do evil, that
good may come? whose
damnation is just. (Rom.
3:7-8)
God's grace is not glorified
because of sin; it is
glorified in spite of
sin. Obedience is better
than sacrifice (1 Sam.
15:22).
Many are ignorant of
the vital truth that God's
preventive grace is to
be more highly prized
than H is reclaiming grace.
It is glorious grace in
both cases, but God's
grace is exalted more
in what it prevents than
in what it repairs.
The
wise Solomon declared, "Remember
now thy Creator in
the days of thy youth,
while the evil days come
not, nor the years draw
nigh (Ecc. 12:1).
We
learn of Timothy, to
whom Paul writes, "And
that from a child thou
hast known the holy scriptures, which
are able to make thee
wise unto salvation through
faith which is in Christ
Jesus" (2 Tim.
3:15).
My
daughter's paternal
grandmother was converted
as a Sunday school child
at nine years old. Her
father himself was converted
at two or three years
old, and cannot even remember
the glorious experience.
Some overzealous but ignorant
Christians have told me
this is proof I'm not
a Christian. I ask them, "Do
you believe that salvation
presupposes the new birth?"
"Yes, of course
it does," they reply
I
then pose: "Is
physical birth a rather
precise metaphor for the
new birth."
"Well,
yes, that's why God
used it."
"Well,
did you remember your
physical birth?"
End of argument.
No one, of course, is
born a Christian. From
birth we are all the children
of the first Adam and
are headed to Hell (Rom.
5:12-21). No one is
saved by anything other
than the grace of God
manifested in the death
and resurrection of our
Lord and Savior, Jesus
Christ. We are either
saved or we are lost (Rom.
14:6). There is no
third category.
But we can experience
salvation from a very
young age, in fact, from
our youth. Little children
who, as it were, bounced
on Jesus' lap, believed
on Him (Mt. 18:6).
Indeed, while the modern
evangelical message is
generally that children
must have an "adult" conversion
experience, Jesus taught
just the opposite: adults
must have a child's conversion
experience (Mt. 18:3).
May God give us a massive
harvest of young people
nourished in the gospel
from their infancy! May
we, by the grace of God,
raise up an entire generation
of warriors for the Faith,
protected from many of
the tragic consequences
of sin into which those
not blessed with a Christian
upbringing have fallen.
One of the most moving
statements I've ever read
is that of the French
Reformed baptismal liturgy,
recorded in Philip J.
Lee's masterful Against
the Protestant Gnostics:
Little
child, for you Jesus
Christ has come, He
has fought, He has
suffered. For you
he entered into the
shadows of Gethsemane
and the terror of Calvary;
for you He uttered the
cry "it is finished." For
you He rose from the
dead and ascended into
heaven, and there for
you He intercedes. For
you, even though you
do not know it, little
child, but in this way
the Word of the Gospel
is made true, "We
love Him because He
first loved us."
Amen and Amen!
Rev. P. Andrew Sandlin has written hundreds of scholarly and popular articles
and several monographs. He holds degrees in English, English literature, history
and political science. He is married and has five children and lives in rural
northern California. |