Personal
Evangelism Handbook
CHAPTER II

Eternal security is not a
separate doctrine from salvation.
If you are not saved
forever, you are not saved.
Those who think they are saved
now but could lose their salvation later, have one of
two problems: (1) either they are trusting to some
degree in their works to save them, or (2) they do not
understand that by trusting Christ as their Saviour,
their destiny is in God's hands. Perhaps they have had
little or no Bible teaching and do not realize that God
has determined that all who believe will go to heaven
when they die.
The first group, those who
think leading a poor Christian life will result in a
loss of their salvation, actually need to have the plan
of salvation made clear to them. Somewhere they have not
fully understood that Christ's death paid for ALL their
sin, that their works have NOTHING to do with their
salvation, and that only their FAITH IN CHRIST will save
them. You would answer their questions just as you would
almost any lost person's; it is a clear-cut problem of
"grace and works." You just stay with the
gospel until they see the light.
An illustration that has
clarified the issue for many with this problem deals
with the definition of the word "Saviour."
What is a Saviour? Suppose you are drowning. There you
are out in the middle of the ocean. Suppose someone were
to throw you a book, Three Easy Lessons on How to Swim.
Would he be a Saviour? No! Perhaps he could be called an
"educator."
Now suppose a man got out of
his boat, jumped in along side you, and demonstrated
various swimming strokes showing you just how you ought
to do it. Would he be a Saviour? Of course not. He would
merely be an "example."
All right, what if he took you
into his boat, dried you off, fed you, took you ten
miles from shore-and then threw you out again into the
ocean? Would he be a Saviour? By all means, no! He would
be as a "deceiver," a "probation
officer,'' one who starts a heroic act and then quits
right in the middle. He certainly would not be a Saviour!
A Saviour is one who takes you
safely all the way to shore! When God says He gives you
eternal life and that He will never cast you out or lose
you, He means it because He is the true Saviour! If you
do not trust Christ to take you all the way to heaven,
then you have not trusted Him as your Saviour. Let's
examine Christ's own promise in John 6:37, "All
that the Father giveth Me shall come to Me; and him that
cometh to Me I will in no wise cast out." He says
those who come to Him will not be cast out for any
reason.
To bring home this truth, use
an illustration from family life. What kind of a parent
would you be if, when your child was disobedient, you
kicked him out and said, "Go to hell, I'm through
with you!" Rather, the proper parent says,
"Come on in!" and the parent has ways and
means to deal with the disobedient child.
God never casts out His
children! God has other ways and means to deal with
them, which we will discuss in Chapter Three.
Some would say, "All
right, God won't cast me out, but I could get out of my
own will and choice." The Lord anticipated such
doubts and answers them clearly in John 6:39, "And
this is the Father's will which hath sent Me, that of
all which he hath given Me I should lose nothing, but
should raise it up again at the last day." It is
God's will that no saved person would ever become lost.
He says He will "lose nothing,'' and you are at
least something! You could never be saved and lost
again. God saves you forever. This is HIS will!
In witnessing you should use
only as many verses as are necessary for the person to
see the truth. (Too many verses will confuse the
person.) On this point of not losing salvation, you will
usually find that John 6:37 and 6:39 are sufficient.
They are certainly clear. At times you might sense that
certain cases require additional verses, and the
Scriptures abound with clear teaching. Study the
passages thoroughly so you will know which verses will
best answer the need of the person. I Peter 1:4, 5,
"To an inheritance incorruptible, and undefiled,
and that fadeth not away, reserved in heaven for you,
who are kept by the power of God through faith unto
salvation ready to be revealed in the last time."
Notice who is keeping our salvation . . . God Himself,
by His own almighty power! And He is reserving place in
heaven for us.
I Cor. 6:19, "What? Know
ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost,
which is in you, which ye have of God . . .?" The
Holy Spirit lives inside of every believer. John 14:16,
17 says, "And I will pray the Father, and He shall
give you another Comforter, that He may abide with you
forever; even the Spirit of truth . . . for He dwelleth
with you, and shall be in you." The Holy Spirit is
in believers forever. If a saved person could go to
hell, the Holy Spirit would have to go to hell, too.
Eph. 1:13, 14, "In whom ye
also trusted, after that ye heard the Word of truth, the
gospel of your salvation: in whom also after that ye
believed, ye were sealed with that Holy Spirit of
promise, which is the earnest of our inheritance until
the redemption of the purchased possession, unto the
praise of His glory." The Holy Spirit indwells
every believer from the moment he trusts Christ as his
Saviour for evermore. One important reason for this is
to keep us saved and protected until we receive our
glorified body. The term "earnest of our
inheritance" is like when we make a "down
payment on a house." It is a guarantee that the
rest is coming later-now we have the new birth-later we
will have our new body.
I Cor. 12:27, "Now ye are
the body of Christ, and members in particular." The
moment you are saved, you become a member of the body of
Christ. If you could ever become unsaved, part of
Christ's own body would go to hell.
John 10:28, "And I give
unto them eternal life; and they shall never perish,
neither shall any man pluck them out of My hand."
Notice again that Christ gives eternal life, and they
who receive this eternal life shall never perish! When
you look up the word "never" which occurs in
John 10:28 in Strong's Concordance, you find that it
comes from five different Greek words which are spelled
in English: OU, ME, EIS, HO, and AION. The words OU and
ME form a double negative meaning "Not at all, by
no means, in no case, never." This double negative
was used to state denials or prohibitions emphatically
(Dana and Mantey, A Manual Grammar of the Greek New
Testament, p. 266). The remaining three words combine to
form an idiomatic expression meaning "forever"
(The Englishman's Greek New 'Testament, p. 276).
When you put all of these
meanings together, you find that when Christ says
"never" here in this verse it carries with it
very powerful assurance-much more than one word
"never" ordinarily carries with it in our
minds. If we were to take this most emphatic way of
saying "never" in the Greek and try to bring
it across into the English, John 10:28 would read
something like this: "And I give unto them eternal
life and they shall not at all, by any means, male or
female, in any case, forever perish."
Christians are sanctified
through the death of Christ (Heb. 10:10), and Hebrews
10:14 tells us, "For by one offering He hath
perfected forever them that are sanctified."
Believers are sanctified, and Christ gives them the
perfection they need to go to heaven. The word
"sanctified" means to be made "holy, pure
and blameless" (Strong's Concordance, Greek #37).
God would never send a believer to hell . . . He has
made the believer holy and blameless and has given him a
perfection which will last FOREVER.
John 5:24, "Verily,
verily, I say unto you, He that heareth My word, and
believeth on Him that sent Me, hath everlasting life,
and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from
death unto life." Christ says those who have
everlasting life (they already have it) shall not be
condemned (promise for the future). Since God promises
believers will not be condemned, why not take Him at His
Word and realize they will not be condemned? Believers
cannot go to hell: They have already "PASSED from
death unto life"!
Philippians 3:9, "And be
found in Him, not having mine own righteousness which is
of the law, but that which is through the faith of
Christ, the righteousness which is of God by
faith." Christ's own righteousness is given to
believers. Who would dare say Christ's righteousness
isn't good enough for heaven?!?
Colossians 2:13 and Acts 13:39
say the believer is already justified and forgiven of
all sins. So what sin could send you to hell? In fact,
when Christ died on the cross for our sins, ALL our sins
were future. Romans 8:28-39 teaches nothing can separate
believers from God. HE justified us; nobody could charge
a single thing against us! What a Saviour we have!
I John 5:10~13 is as clear a
passage as could be written. Christ's death on the cross
does not do anything for you unless it gives you
everlasting life. If you have Christ as your Saviour,
you have this life. Anyone who doubts that God gives
eternal life is calling God a liar. Don't you think it
would be very unwise to call God a liar? Personally, I
wouldn't want to be in that category.
There is an illustration which
you might find will interest people along this subject.
One evening a man was having trouble with doubts about
his salvation. His wife came into the bedroom and found
her husband running his Bible back and forth under the
bed, and she asked him what in the world he was doing.
He said he knew Satan was in the darkest places, so he
was showing Satan I John 5:13! (And this is a good idea
when you have a doubt. Just claim the promise from the
Word of God, and Satan will have no ground to give you
doubts any more. The Word of God silences Satan.)
Since God tells me I can know I
have eternal life, I say, "Thank you!" and I
know I have eternal life. I am taking God at His Word.
God said it . . . I believe it . . . that settles it! I
base my whole eternity on the fact that God cannot lie
and His Word cannot fail.
"God is not a man, that He
should lie . . . hath He said, and shall He not do it?
Or hath He spoken, and shall He not make it good?"
(Numbers 23:19)
You will discover that when a
person really understands the plan of salvation, he
rarely will have a problem with "eternal
security." It has been our experience that the most
effective way to deal with those who still doubt their
eternal life, after they seemingly understand the
gospel, is to go over one or two verses, perhaps John
6:37 and 39, and lovingly and firmly keep going over
them until the person really believes what God is
saying.

MEMORY VERSES
FOR CHAPTER TWO
* John 6:37, 39
* I Peter l:4,5
I Corinthians 6: 19
Ephesians 1: 13, 14
John 14:16, 17
* John 10:28
* Hebrews 10:10, 14
* John 5:24
Colossians 2: 13
* Acts 13 :39
Romans 8:38, 39
* I John 5:10-13
Numbers 23:19
NOTE: If you are unaccustomed
to memorizing Scripture, we recommend you start with the
verses marked*.