Sunday, 1 May 2016

The Importance Of The Eternal Salvation Doctrine

By Andrew Jones


The main theme that runs through the entire Bible is eternal salvation. Because of that, the eternal salvation doctrine is the most important of all of the Bible doctrines. Based on its truth and teaching, each individual can know where he or she will spend his life after death.

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 the moment Adam and Eve sinned, every baby that has been born has been a sinner. Sadly, sin cannot be present in heaven, because God is perfect, and he cannot permit sin in his presence. Each individual has a sin debt that must be paid. It is impossible for a person to pay that debt on his own. He cannot do enough good works to cancel it.

God knew that it would take a perfect sacrifice to save man from his sin. The only one who was perfect was Jesus. God loved mankind so much that he willingly sent his only son, Jesus, to die on the cross, and pay the sin debt of every man, woman and child.

All of mankind's sins were paid for when Jesus died and shed his blood on the cross. The resurrection of Jesus, proved to the world that man's sin debt had been paid. God had provided salvation for each individual.

God did not want robots who were programmed to go to heaven. He wanted each person to have the opportunity to choose whether or not they would go to heaven or to hell. Mankind was offered Jesus' death on the cross as a gift that each individual could choose to accept or reject. If the gift is accepted, the person will go straight to heaven when he dies and will spend eternity there. If a person chooses not to accept God's gift of eternal life and decides to live his life the way he wants to, trying to do his best to reach heaven, he will not succeed and will go to hell when he dies. He will be separated from God forever and ever.

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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