Lordship of Christ
by
John MacArthur
All Rights Reserved
The following is an excerpt from a message that was
delivered at Grace Community Church in Panorama City, California, By John
MacArthur Jr. It was transcribed from the tape, GC 80-54, titled "Issues of
the Heart" A copy of the tape can be received by writing, Word of Grace,
P.O. Box 4000, Panorama City, CA 91412.
I am concerned about the gospel we preach, somebody said, a Calvinist said,
"Sometimes we don't present the gospel well enough for the non-elect to
reject it. Kind of an interesting statement isn't it? I didn't say
that, someone else said that.
There is a very great amount of confusion today about the gospel. Take it
from me folks, I am in the middle of a battle on this right now. The
little tape series we did on examine yourselves, the new book, "The Gospel
According to Jesus," which I have been working on, really for ten years,
just came out
this week. The most significant book I ever written in my life. The
gospel is under attack.
There are people going across this country, widespread, in fundamentalist, and
evangelical circles, saying, "All you have to do to be a Christian, is to
believe the facts of the gospel in one moment of time, and if you never believe
it again, and you become an agnostic, and apostate, or an atheist, you are still
saved. You don't ever have to bear any fruit, you life doesn't have to
change, it has nothing to do with salvation.
Do you know what that kind of gospel does? That puts people on the broad
road who finally wind up saying, "Lord, Lord," and they hear,
"Depart from
me, I never knew you." The most frightening thing in the world to me,
would be the reality of Matthew, Chapter 7, and verses 20 and following, to
think
you are going to Heaven, and you wind up in Hell. Because, someone gave
the gospel, that wasn't the true gospel.
I have just written this book to counter the argument that they say you should
never ever call on anyone to repent from their sin. You should never call
on anyone to submit to Jesus Christ as Lord. You should never say to
anyone, "Follow Jesus Christ in obedience." Salvation is just
believing and that's it. Later on, they can get serious about "Making
Jesus Lord." Wait a minute, you don't make Jesus Lord, Jesus is Lord!
You don't say, "Look, I'll let you in my life, but you can't be Lord.
You have got to be who I am telling you to be." Ridiculous!
I am convinced that the Church of Jesus Christ, visible, is filled with
unconverted people. Unconverted people! And we accept some,
"Raised Hand,"
"Signed Card," "Walk the Aisle," some moment of whatever,
emotion, to be true salvation. And we say, "Well, I know they
divorced their wife, and I know they are adulterous, and I know they drink a
lot, and I know they don't come to church, but I remember the day they,
"Walked the Aisle." Well, "What in the world" does
that mean? What does that mean?
Jesus preached repentance, Jesus preached submission to Him. One last
Scripture, in Matthew 19, don't turn to it, I'll just mention it, the rich young
ruler said, "What must I do to have eternal life?" And Jesus
said, "Sell all you have," and do what? "Give it to the
poor." Jesus said, "Come follow me." Here's a guy who
comes to Jesus and says, "What do I do to get eternal life?"
Jesus said, "Give your money away." Is that the right answer?
You put that on your quiz at Bible College and you will flunk! What do you
mean, "Give your money away," is that salvation by philanthropy?
And if you get saved by giving your money away to a poor guy, then he's lost,
because he's got it! You can stand there and hand it back and forth and
hope that you don't have it at the Second Coming. "Sort of like"
musical chairs.
What is Jesus saying? The young man said, "I want eternal life."
Jesus said, "Yeah, that's fine, but we are going to deal with something
else first.
Are you willing to follow me?" He could of asked him anything.
This was an arbitrary command, "Sell all, give to the poor."
Because He knew that money was the god of this man's life. And he said,
"Let's deal with the issue, I know that you want eternal life, but are you
willing to give up everything,
if I ask you?" And he went away. Salvation is an exchange of
all that I am for all that He is. It's saying, "I won't follow me,
I'll follow you."
I wish that Evangelists would stop saying, "Make a decision for
Christ," and call on people to follow Jesus Christ. It is a life
commitment. The man
went away, he didn't want to follow Jesus Christ, he wanted to rule his own
life. He didn't even want to admit his sin. Jesus said, "Keep
the commandments," and he said, "I've kept them all!" He
wouldn't acknowledge his sin and he wouldn't submit to the authority of Christ.
And Jesus said,
"He went away."
Two things basic to salvation, turning from sin and following Christ. That's
true salvation. And I am so burdened, because I know there are churches
were people are sitting deceived, who think they are saved. Look at your
life. Look at your life. Do you follow Christ? Let me put it
simpler, do you
want to follow Christ? Do you desire to follow Christ? And when you
don't, are you saddened by that? Are you grieved by your sin? That's
the mark of salvation. It's not that following Christ is the
perfection of your life, but it is at least the direction. The truly
saved, very simple, "Love Christ and hate sin." Love Christ,
hate sin. It doesn't say, "They don't sin," it says, "When
they do sin, they hate it." Paul says in Romans 7, "The things
that I don't want to do, I do. The things I want to do, I don't do.
Oh, wretched man!
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Lordship Salvation -- Two Views
John F. MacArthur, Jr. v. Charles C. Ryrie
This material has been excerpted and/or adapted from an
Al Dager's 3/90
Media Spotlight book review by the same name. The favorable comments by Mr.
Dager concerning John MacArthur's views on Lordship Salvation should in no
way be construed as an endorsement by BDM of either John MacArthur or his
book. This review is presented primarily as evidence of the unbiblical
easy-believism gospel being taught by the likes of Charles Ryrie, Zane
Hodges, etc., and their attacks on anyone who might approximate a Biblical
approach to Lordship Salvation.
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The Gospel According to Jesus v. So Great Salvation
Can a person receive Jesus as his Savior without receiving Him as his Lord? This
is the question dealt with in the two most popular books on the subject
of lordship salvation. One is John F. MacArthur, Jr.'s The Gospel According to
Jesus (Zondervan:1988), and the other is Charles C. Ryrie's So Great
Salvation (Victor Books:1989). It was decided to combine them in one review, not
only because they deal with the same subject (MacArthur espousing the
"lordship salvation" position, Ryrie challenging it), but primarily
because Ryrie's book attempts to answer MacArthur's writing.
The subject of lordship salvation is not easily delineated. Its basic premise,
that Jesus cannot be one's Savior without also being his Lord, has been taken by
some to mean that salvation is attained by works rather than by God's grace.
The issue as seen by those who believe in lordship salvation (e.g., MacArthur)
is that someone who is truly saved will produce fruit that will attest to the
genuineness of his faith, because he will have acknowledged Jesus not only as
his Savior, but as his Lord as well.
Those who reject lordship salvation (e.g., Ryrie), believe that someone may have
genuine faith in Christ, but the fact that he continues in his sin
demonstrates that he has not made Jesus his Lord, only his Savior. According to
Ryrie, just because someone sins or acts in disobedience (even habitually)
doesn't mean he doesn't have saving faith.
But the issue is not whether we sin or not; the issue is our attitude toward our
sin. And this is where MacArthur is careful to point out that it is willful
rejection of Christ's Lordship that proves one's confession of faith not valid.
In making this point, MacArthur challenges the contemporary "gospel"
that merely calls people to make a decision without telling them the full
implications of that decision.
Yet God even uses this form of what one can call the "inadequate
gospel" to initiate one into the full truth of the Gospel of salvation at a
later date. In this respect, MacArthur's concern is not with the Lord's ability
to use man's failures, but with man's failure to use what God has provided in
His Word to communicate the full extent of Christ's work on the Cross.
"The gospel Jesus proclaimed was a call to discipleship, a call to follow
Him in submissive obedience, not just a plea to make a decision or pray a
prayer. Jesus' message liberated people from the bondage of their sin while it
confronted and condemned hypocrisy. It was an offer of eternal life and
forgiveness for repentant sinners, but at the same time it was a rebuke to
outwardly religious people whose lives were devoid of true righteousness. It
put sinners on notice that they must turn from sin and embrace God's
righteousness. It was in every sense good news, yet it was anything but easy-believism"
(p. 21, GATJ).
In his attempt to refute MacArthur's premise, Ryrie selects certain passages,
then implies that MacArthur's statements are ambiguous and give the impression
that MacArthur is saying that works must precede salvation:
"Those who hold to a lordship/discipleship/mastery salvation viewpoint do
not (perhaps it would be more accurate to say 'cannot') send an unambiguous
message about this matter. On the one hand, they say that the essence of saving
faith is 'unconditional surrender, a complete resignation of self and
absolute submission.' True faith, we are told, 'starts with humility and reaches
fruition in obedience.' 'Salvation is for those who are willing to forsake
everything.' 'Saving faith is a commitment to leave sin and follow Jesus Christ
at all costs. Jesus takes no one unwilling to come on those terms.' 'Eternal
life brings immediate death to self.' 'Forsaking oneself for Christ's sake is
not an optional step of discipleship subsequent to conversion; it is the sine
qua non of saving faith.'
"But what if I do not follow Christ at all costs? What if later on in life
I become unwilling to forsake something? Suppose I lack full obedience? What if
I take something back that earlier in my experience I had given to Him? How do I
quantify the amount of fruit necessary to be sure I truly 'believed' in the
lordship/mastery sense of the term? Or how do I quantify the amount of defection
that can be tolerated without wondering if I have saving faith or if I in fact
lost what I formerly had?" (p. 29, SGS)
Perhaps Ryrie's did not read MacArthur's book in total. For MacArthur does allow
for Christians to be in various stages of growth in their walk. The
point is that, if someone's conversion is genuine, he will exhibit growth,
however meager and however faltering, during his lifetime.
Quoting MacArthur as Ryrie did, and his subsequent remark, demonstrate an
inaccurate assessment of what MacArthur was saying. In fact, every single
quote by Ryrie has been taken out of context in order to create a straw man
(salvation by works) to attack, a tactic which Ryrie himself denigrates (p.
29, SGS).
To demonstrate, we'll take each quote out of context as Ryrie did, then put it
in the proper context by quoting MacArthur or referring to the total context of
MacArthur's remarks:
(1) Saving faith is "unconditional surrender, a complete resignation of
self and absolute submission" (p. 153, GATJ).
Actually, MacArthur was explaining the lesson of the prodigal son. It is not an
ambiguous message as Ryrie claims. Not if taken in context. Nor does it
say that the prodigal son never again failed his father. What MacArthur was
saying is that a change of heart attitude, not perfection in works, is
necessary for salvation.
(2) "True faith, we are told, 'starts with humility and reaches fruition in
obedience'" (pp. 176-177, GATJ).
MacArthur was explaining the Beatitudes of Matthew 5:3-12. Again, this is not
ambiguous. If that single statement is taken out of context and combined
with other out-of-context statements, it might be ambiguous. But there is no
ambiguity in MacArthur's overall exegesis of the Sermon on the Mount.
(3) "Salvation is for those who are willing to forsake everything" (p.
78, GATJ).
Here MacArthur is referring to the rich young ruler who asked Jesus,
"Teacher, what good thing shall I do that I may obtain eternal life?"
(Matt.
19:16-22). Again, we can see that Ryrie's out-of-context use of MacArthur's
statement was less than scholarly.
(4) "Saving faith is a commitment to leave sin and follow Jesus Christ at
all costs. Jesus takes no one unwilling to come on those terms" (p 87,
GATJ).
Here's the same statement in context:
"Salvation is by grace through faith (Eph. 2:8). That is the consistent and
unambiguous teaching of Scripture. But people with genuine faith do not refuse
to acknowledge their sinfulness. They sense that they have offended the holiness
of God, and do not reject the lordship of Christ. They do not cling to the
things of the world. Real faith lacks none of these attributes. Saving faith is
a commitment to leave sin and follow Jesus Christ at all costs. Jesus takes no
one unwilling to come on those terms."
Taken in context, we again find no ambiguity in MacArthur's statement. What he
is saying is quite clear: "Faith without works is dead, being alone"
(James 2:17).
(5) "Eternal life brings immediate death to self" (p. 140, GATJ).
MacArthur states that there is no cost for salvation, but there is a definite
cost in terms of salvation's impact. Read MacArthur's entire statement and see
if Ryrie did not give the wrong impression about what MacArthur was saying by
taking the statement out of context:
"Eternal life is indeed a free gift (Rom. 6:23). Salvation cannot be earned
with good deeds or purchased with money. It has already been bought by Christ,
who paid the ransom with His blood. But that does not mean there is not cost in
terms of salvation's impact on the sinner's life. This paradox
may be difficult but it is nevertheless true: salvation is both free and costly.
Eternal life brings immediate death to self. 'Knowing this, that our old self
was crucified with Him, that our body of sin might be done away with, that we
should no longer be slaves to sin' (Rom 6:6).
"Thus in a sense we pay the ultimate price for salvation when our sinful
self is nailed to a cross. It is a total abandonment of self-will, like the
grain of wheat that falls to the ground and dies so that it can bear much fruit
(cf. John 12:24). It is an exchange of all that we are for all that Christ is.
And it denotes implicit obedience, full surrender to the lordship of Christ.
Nothing less can qualify as saving faith.
"Death to self does not mean immediate sanctification and glorification.
But just as Adam died on the day he disobeyed God (yet did not see the
completion of the death for many years), so we die on the day that we truly
believe on the Son of Man (though the completion of that death will not be
realized until we go to be with the Lord). And in dying we live unto eternal
life."
(6) "Forsaking oneself for Christ's sake is not an optional step of
discipleship subsequent to conversion; it is the sine qua non of saving
faith" (p. 135, GATJ).
Like all the other Ryrie quotes, MacArthur's statement must be read in context.
In accusing MacArthur of ambiguity, it is Ryrie who is being ambiguous. In fact,
taking MacArthur's statements out of context to fit his claim is an abandonment
of Warren Wiersbe's "Foreword" in Ryrie's book -- that changing one's
meaning by taking his words out of context is amateurish. In building Ryrie's
status in the eyes of the reader, Wiersbe states:
"This book is not only important, but it is also dependable. To begin with,
the author is a theologian who has two earned doctorates in his field of study.
He has served effectively on the faculty of one of America's leading evangelical
seminaries and is widely recognized and respected as a teacher, preacher, and
writer. As you read these pages, you will appreciate Dr. Ryrie's accurate
exegesis and his clear explanations of biblical texts. An experienced and mature
scholar, Dr. Ryrie quotes carefully and accurately from a wide range of writers;
but his final authority is the Word of God. The cynic Ambrose Bierce once
defined 'quoting' as 'the act of repeating erroneously the words of another.'
Dr. Ryrie is too seasoned a scholar to make that mistake. You can read these
pages with confidence; they are not written by an amateur" (p. 9, SGS).
One thing anyone can tell you who has spent more than just a few years walking
with the Lord is that scholarship, while having certain merits, is not the
be-all or end-all of every question. Remember that in the eyes of
"scholars," Jesus, and almost every one of His apostles, were viewed
as "unlearned."
No, it is not scholarship that guarantees accuracy, it is the anointing of the
Holy Spirit. If one's scholarship is submitted to the Word of God as illumined
by the Spirit of God -- with a willingness to disbelieve everything one's
scholarship holds true -- then the scholar may say that he is acknowledging
Jesus as Lord of his scholarship.
I do not question Dr. Ryrie's credentials, but I am concerned that he would take
MacArthur's comments out of context to prove a point that, in full circle, comes
to the same conclusion as MacArthur:
"Every Christian will bear spiritual fruit. Somewhere, sometime, somehow.
Otherwise that person is not a believer. Every born-again individual will be
fruitful. Not to be fruitful is to be faithless, without faith, and therefore
without salvation" (p 45, SGS).
This is precisely MacArthur's point. So too, are Ryrie's "caveats":
"Having said that, some caveats are in order. One, this does not mean that
a believer will always be fruitful ... Two, this does not mean that a certain
person's fruit will necessarily be outwardly evident ... Three, my understanding
of what fruit is and therefore what I expect others to bear may be faulty and/or
incomplete. ... Nevertheless, every Christian will bear fruit; otherwise he or
she is not a true believer" (p 45, SGS).
It appears as if Ryrie believes in lordship salvation, too. But he just doesn't
like the way MacArthur states it. Logically, he would have to use his own
arguments against himself. Particularly his example of a deathbed conversion
that doesn't allow someone to bear fruit afterward. And his excuse that the
person may bear fruit through someone else believing as a result of his
conversion is not what is meant by bearing fruit. Otherwise we could say that
everyone who professes Christ, regardless of his attitude toward his sin, bears
fruit on the basis that someone who hears that he has professed Christ also
decides to trust Christ.
Here it is necessary to differentiate between "fruit" and
"works." Briefly, fruit is the result of an inward conversion
experience that is manifested in a change of heart attitude towards God.
Generally, we are speaking about the fruit of the Spirit. Even if it takes many
years of chastisement and difficulty on the part of the believer to work even a
modicum of the fruit into his life, there will be some response out of a heart
of desire to be obedient to God.
Works, on the other hand, are the result of putting that attitude into practice.
Some works are performed in obedience to God; Other works are performed in
response to one's concept of righteousness, but not in obedience to God -- works
of the flesh that are not sinful per se. An example would be to do a good work
out of a motive of self-desire rather than in response to the leading of the
Holy Spirit. These "works" are wood, hay, and stubble.
MacArthur seems to grasp this concept well enough. Ryrie demonstrates a lack of
understanding. This is not said to take sides. I entered into the reading
of these two books with an open mind. But in the final analysis, I had to agree
almost totally with MacArthur's position. He consistently worked from
Scripture to build his case for lordship salvation, whereas Ryrie consistently
worked from MacArthur's text to "prove" that the lordship salvation
message is tantamount to salvation by works.
Nor are the quotes referred to above the only ones involved. Ryrie's poor
scholarship runs rampant throughout his book. And it's a shame that a
theologian of his "stature" should come to such a sad state. It's as
if he just threw something together in haste in order to capitalize on the
success of MacArthur's book and the contrived controversy that has been
propagated by those who see little or no merit in living as if Jesus is Lord.
And Wiersbe's glowing account of Ryrie's exegesis must prove an embarrassment in
view of Ryrie's claim that the repentance God calls us to is a changing of our
minds about Jesus, and not about sin:
"Second, there is a repentance that is unto eternal salvation. What kind of
repentance saves? Not a sorrow for sins or even a sorrow that results in a
cleaning up of one's life. People who reform have repented; that is, they have
changed their minds about their past lives, but that kind of repentance, albeit
genuine, does not of itself save them. The only kind of repentance that saves is
a change of mind about Jesus Christ. People can weep; people can resolve to turn
from their past sins; but those things in themselves cannot save. The only kind
of repentance that saves anyone, anywhere, anytime is a change of mind about
Jesus Christ. The sense of sin and sorrow because of sin may stir up a person's
mind or conscience so that he or she realizes the need for a Savior, but if
there is not change of mind about Jesus Christ there will be no salvation"
(p. 94, SGS).
Actually, one cannot disagree entirely with what Ryrie says. It is necessary for
us to have a change of mind about Jesus Christ -- that is, to believe what the
gospel says about Him, as opposed to what religious or philosophical traditions
(or personal feelings) say about Him. But what does the Gospel say about Jesus?
That He came to save us from our sins -- not only the consequences, but the
enslavement to them. We cannot believe that unless we are confronted with our
sins. And confrontation under the anointing of the Holy Spirit will always
result in one of two conclusions: to either reject the Christ who saves us from
our sins, and thus continue in them, or to believe in the Christ who saves us
from our sins and turn away from them (i.e., repent from sin and turn to
Christ).
We see, then, that repentance has a two-fold meaning: repentance from our
misconceived ideas about Jesus, as Ryrie points out, but also repentance from
sin. Ryrie's premise that repentance does not mean repentance from sin, but only
repentance from a wrong concept of Christ, cannot stand the test of Scripture.
Almost every Bible mention of repentance unto salvation is in the context of
repentance from sin. Now, Ryrie does says that repentance from
sin is important. But to say that it is not essential to salvation is to say
that Christ died for nothing more than recognition of his office as Savior.
To sum up these two books, MacArthur's is scholarly, accurate in its exegesis,
and honest in its approach to a difficult subject. Ryrie's book, on the other
hand, contains about half the content of MacArthur's for about the same price,
is poorly exegeted, and, while much of what he says is true, those truths are
already stated by MacArthur. You won't miss anything by passing it up.
Finally, it should be reiterated that lordship salvation does not say--nor does
MacArthur say -- that repentance is a precondition to faith. Rather,
repentance from sin proceeds from faith. We are saved by grace through faith.
Thus the writer of Hebrews asks that all-important question that forms the basis
for the title of Ryrie's book, "How can we escape if we neglect so
great a salvation?" (Hebrews 2:3).
Indeed, how can we escape if we neglect so great a salvation that transforms
those it touches into the image of Christ -- a lordship salvation?
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