Don’t misunderstand the title of
this article! I don’t presume to have a clue about God’s will for you in the
day-to-day events of your life. If I claim I do, that’s presumptuous and
foolish of me! In fact, don’t let anyone ever presume to know what God’s will
is for you in the day-to-day events of your life. If they do, they’re a “false
prophet,” period! But I can tell you with absolute certainty what God’s will is
for your salvation. So…read on. What you are about to read for the next few
moments might be a very pleasant surprise for you. I promise you it’s not what
you might ordinarily expect to read about the subject of salvation…
Some matters we learn about from
the Bible are very clear, specific, and plain--easy to understand. Some matters
are not, having to be dug out, comparing reference to reference and digging deep
until the matter becomes clear.
One matter that’s simple and
easy to understand is God’s will for all people. It couldn’t be any clearer. A
Bible reference, 1 Timothy 2: 3-6, plainly states “…God
our Savior’s will is that all people be saved and come to know the truth. There
is only one God, and only one Reconciler between God and people, the Man Christ
Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom for all people….“
To me, that statement seems
simple and easily understood, but some people have been attempting to explain it
away for centuries because it’s contrary to most “orthodox” thinking.
For example, some people have
tried to dilute the word “will” in that statement, translating it as “wish,” so
it reads “…God our Savior’s wish is that all people be saved….”
They say the Greek word thelo from which the word is translated could
mean either “wish” or “will.” Let’s give that view the benefit of the doubt.
For sake of enlightened debate, let’s say it does mean “wish” instead of
“will.” I ask you: “Even if God wishes for something to occur--rather than
wills it to occur--won’t God’s wish be fulfilled? After all, he’s the Creator,
the All-Powerful God. Whatever he wishes for, he gets!” So, regardless how
the word thelo is translated the end result is the same: God wishes to
save everyone—and he will save everyone!--and bring them to his truth.
The definition of the word
will in this reference in Timothy is God’s strong, fixed, determined,
unrelenting, unalterable plans and purposes for every human being. May I
ask this simple question: “If that’s what God’s will
means, do you think anything or anyone can stop God from accomplishing it?”
Other detractors might say,
“Even if it is God’s will for everyone to be saved, humans have free will--so
they can thwart God’s will.” C’mon now, you don’t really believe that, do
you? How can a limited, finite, created being thwart the will of it’s
unlimited, infinite, All-powerful Creator? People don’t have free will to
thwart God’s will as far as their salvation is concerned. Oh, we have free
will in the matter of day-to-day life choices and decisions (such as what color
toothbrush to purchase), but in such an important matter as our salvation,
humans don’t have free will.
Yes, people can stubbornly
resist God’s will for a time, but in the end his will will prevail
and he will save everyone. You see, our salvation is not based on what we do or
don’t do, upon what we believe or don’t believe, upon whether or not we resist
God‘s will. It’s based entirely upon everything God has already done on our
behalf to save us. He’s done it all for us; there’s nothing we can do to change
that. From his all-seeing vantage point of eternity--outside of and beyond the
limitations of time and space--God has already saved us. In the vernacular,
It’s a done deal!”
Having said that about the word
“will,“ let’s examine that statement in Timothy in more detail. First, it
states clearly that God’s pre-determined, fixed will is for all people to be
saved. It seems to me if God pre-determines something, then it will be
accomplished, period! Can any part of God’s vast creation do anything contrary
to his will? Not if God really is all-mighty, all-powerful God. Some years ago
a book was written entitled Your God Is Too Small. If you
mistakenly believe God’s will can be thwarted in any manner, then your
God is too small. God’s will will be done--“on earth as it is in
heaven,” as God’s people have prayed for centuries. God’s will is for all
people to be saved. That will happen, period! I don’t presume to know
how or when God will complete working out his plan of salvation for all people,
but it will occur because God has pre-determined it.
The French language contains an
expression, fait accompli, meaning something is an accomplished
fact, something is undeniably completed and put into effect, whether or not one
agrees with it. Dear reader, God’s salvation for you--and for everyone
everywhere--is fait accompli!
Next, let’s look at the word
“saved” in the statement written in Timothy. Let’s let the Bible be it’s own
commentary in defining what it means to be saved. Elsewhere in the Bible we
read that the apostle Paul had been imprisoned for his faith in the city of
Philippi, when a miraculous earthquake occurred opening all the prison doors.
The jailor was so frightened the prisoners might escape he was ready to commit
suicide rather than face his anticipated punishment for letting them escape.
Paul urged the jailor not to take his own life. Surprised and grateful, the
jailor fell to his knees in front of Paul and pleaded, “What must I do to be
saved?!“ There’s that word “saved“ again. What was Paul’s response to the
jailor’s urgent plea about how to be saved? Paul declared, “Believe in the
Lord Jesus Christ--entrust yourself to him--and you will be saved.” (Acts
16:25-31)
Being saved means to believe in
the Lord Jesus Christ and entrust one’s life to him. It means asking Jesus to
take up permanent residence in a person in his “unbodied other self” in the
“form” of God‘s Spirit. The Bible uses other terms to describe the same
life-changing phenomenon: be converted, receive Jesus, trust in the Lord,
repent, be born again, be regenerated, accept Jesus, follow Jesus,
etc. All such terms mean essentially the same thing: entrusting one’s life to
Jesus Christ as one’s Savior and Lord for all time and eternity and having him
take up permanent residence in that person.
Another biblical reference,
Revelation 3:20, sheds more insight into this important salvation phenomenon.
In that reference, Jesus is speaking and says: “Look, I am standing at the
door of your inner being and knocking. If you hear my voice and open your life
to me, I will come in and the two of us will permanently become the closest of
friends for all time and eternity.”
Let’s return to our reference
in Timothy again. It teaches that Jesus Christ gave himself as a ransom for all
people. What does that mean? Let’s put ourselves in the minds of the
first-century readers who read Paul’s letter to Timothy. The concept of paying
a ransom was tragically familiar to such readers. In fact, Jesus himself used
the term, stating he came to give his life a ransom for many (Matthew 20:28;
Mark 10:45). Most first-century readers knew all too well about captives and
ransoms. Many people in the world of that day were slaves and captives,
enduring horrible bondage and slavery throughout their lifetimes. On occasion,
someone might pay a ransom price for a slave, thus setting the slave free. It
wasn’t common but it did happen. Yes, the concept of ransom was very clear and
understandable in the minds of Paul’s first century readers.
Today we have some familiarity
with the concept of ransom, although it‘s much more distant from the daily lives
of most of us. From time to time we read in the newspapers or see on television
news that someone has kidnapped an important person and then demands some sort
of monetary payment before they will release the person who had been kidnapped.
And we know about various types of slavery still practiced throughout our modern
world. In fact, there are various organizations working throughout the world to
pay ransom in order to free people who have been enslaved. Yes, we know what
ransom means.
Jesus paid a ransom to liberate
us from slavery to sin. To whom did Jesus pay the ransom? There are differing
teachings, but many feel he paid the ransom to Satan who held all people in
cruel bondage and slavery to sin. Others feel the ransom was paid to God
because all humanity had sinned against him. I’m sure there’s much more to it
on a cosmic scale than our finite minds can grasp. Regardless of how and to
whom the ransom was paid, Jesus Christ paid it in full and released all people
from their captivity to sin and death. His ransom payment saved all people.
How can I make such a statement
that his ransom payment saved all people? On one occasion John the Baptizer,
pointing to Jesus, proclaimed: “Look, there’s God’s sacrificial lamb who
takes away the sin of the entire world!” (John 1:29) Could any
proclamation be more clear? Jesus Christ, as God’s sacrificial lamb, by paying
the full ransom for all humanity, took away the sin of all people. He did not
take away the sin of just religious people. He did not take away the sin of
just good people. He did not take away the sin of only some people. He did not
take away the sin of only those who name themselves Christians. No! He took
away the sin of all people! He took away your sin! If you’re
still clinging to your sin, I encourage you to release it to God and let go of
it….
Another biblical reference
informs us that “He [Jesus] bore all our sins in his own body on the tree….”
(1 Peter 2:24) I am not attempting to explain all this means--all
this involves--but it seems quite clear to me that when Jesus died on the cross,
he died with all our sins heaped on him. And I mean all the sins of
all of us.
The horror of the sinless
Savior’s death was not simply that he died an ugly, painful, lingering death on
a Roman cross one afternoon many centuries ago. Thousands of criminals died in
that manner in those days; Roman crucifixion was almost commonplace. The true
horror of Jesus’ death is that he died carrying the awesome, horrible,
incalculable weight of all our sins upon him--yours, mine,
everyone’s--the sins of billions and billions of people! Don’t ask me to
explain how he did that. But he did.
Suffering under the weight of
all our sins is what Jesus meant when he screamed from the cross: “It is
finished!!“ (John 19:30) Earlier, he had told God in the presence of his
followers, “I have completed the work you gave me to do.“ (John 17:4)
What was Jesus saying? “I’ve done it. It’s over. I’ve completely finished
paying the total ransom price for the sin of all people. Nothing more can be
done. My work on behalf of all people is total and complete. I’ve saved all
humanity. It’s over and done, bought and paid for by my shed blood, never to be
repeated.” God accepted the ransom payment, and ever since then his
mission among all people is telling everyone everywhere the good news of their
full, complete, and abundant salvation purchased for them by Jesus Christ!
Still another reference in the
Bible furnishes us this startling good news: “God was personally present in
Christ reconciling and restoring everyone to favor with himself, not holding
anyone’s sins against them. God has given us--as his ambassadors--this message
of reconciliation, declaring to everyone that they have been restored to favor
with him. God made Jesus Christ--who was absolutely sinless--to be sin for all
people, so that through him God might replace everyone’s sin with his own
righteousness.” (2 Corinthians 5: 19-21) Think of it! God not only
removed all our sin through Jesus’ death on the cross, he also reconciled
everyone to himself--and replaced our sinful natures with his own
righteousness! That’s too much for any human mind to grasp, but it’s true!
After his cruel death on the
cross, Jesus’ resurrection from the dead three days later, his ascension back to
his Father in the heavenlies, and his appearing again in 70 A.D. was God’s seal
of approval--his stamp of acceptance--of Jesus’ work on behalf of all people.
Placing his Spirit inside people was God’s additional guarantee or “down
payment” that he accepted Jesus’ work as being full, total, and complete on
behalf of all humanity. (2 Corinthians 1:22; Ephesians 1:14) Dear reader:
it’s done!
Another response I often receive
when I teach this view is people question me asking:
“Are you telling me that God is going to arbitrarily save everyone? Are you
claiming that everyone who has ever been born--or will be born--will be saved?
Are you saying that’s God’s will? Doesn’t that make it too easy--for God just
to sort of wave his hand like a magician over the masses of humanity and say to
everyone, ‘Okay, now you’re saved‘? That’s just cheap salvation for everyone.”
No, no, no! That’s not cheap
salvation for everyone! How can a rational person even suggest God’s salvation
is cheap and easy when Jesus, God’s dearly beloved Son, paid such a horrible,
painful ransom price for our sins? How can a person logically suggest this view
weakens and cheapens God’s full salvation for all people! On the contrary, this
view discloses the unimaginable lengths God was willing to go to save all
people. He was willing to heap all our horrible, dark sins upon his own beloved
Son in order that he could pay the ransom price for them and take away those
sins completely and forever. God’s salvation is cheapened only when someone
suggests Jesus died for only some, not all. The plain truth is Jesus either
died to save all…or his death was tragically ineffective and futile, saving
none. He died for all…or he died for none!
Yet another response I often get
when I teach this view is: “Well, what if someone doesn’t want to be saved?
My response is the same as my children sometimes gave me when they were
young and unthinking: “Sooo,” meaning “So, what does that have to do
with anything?” God’s will is for everyone to be saved. So what if someone
doesn’t want to be saved? They’ll eventually change their mind and accept God’s
salvation. That’s God’s will! Please don’t fall into the trap of thinking mere
human beings can thwart God’s will. Yes, they may stubbornly resist it for a
time, but in the end they can’t stop God’s will from eventually being completely
and totally fulfilled in their lives. If you happen to be resisting God’s
salvation, you might as well stop it right now, because eventually--one way or
another--you will receive Jesus into your life and accept God’s salvation for
you.
Here--in composite form--is the
Big Question that is always asked when people first have this view presented to
them: “What about atheists, agnostics, and people who are anti-Christ? What
about pagans or heathens who have never heard about God’s salvation? What about
people who lived many thousands of years ago who never had the opportunity to
hear about God and his salvation. What about people who follow or practice
other religions? What about the Jews who reject Jesus? What about Hitler?”
Here’s how I always respond to
such questions: 1 Timothy 2: 3-6 plainly states “…God
our Savior’s will is that all people be saved and come to know the truth. There
is only one God, and only one Reconciler between God and people, the Man Christ
Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom for all people….“
In response, some people angrily
shout at me: “If God is going to save someone like Hitler, then I want
nothing to do with that kind of God!” What is my immediate response to such
an outburst? 1 Timothy 2: 3-6 plainly states “…God our
Savior’s will is that all people be saved and come to know the truth. There is
only one God, and only one Reconciler between God and people, the Man Christ
Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom for all people….“
The Bible clearly teaches there
will come a point in time when--because Jesus died on the cross for everyone--“all
people everywhere will bow their knees before Jesus and with their mouths
confess him as Lord and Savior to the glory of God the Father.”
(Philippians 2: 8-10). Some might argue, “Sure everyone will do that, but
it’s only because God will force most of them to do so.” Not true!
Elsewhere the Bible clearly teaches no person can openly and honestly proclaim
Jesus as Lord unless they are influenced to do so by the Spirit of God who lives
in them. (1 Corinthians 12:3) Someday every human being who has ever been born
will accept God’s salvation and proclaim Jesus as Lord because they willingly
choose to do so--encouraged and influenced to do so because God’s Spirit resides
permanently in them. And because it’s God’s will!
I understand this view is
contrary to “orthodox” biblical views of God and salvation. My response is that
if you come to understand even in a limited, finite way the true character,
nature, and attributes of God--and if you come to understand the Bible’s
teachings as a whole--you cannot help but embrace this view. We must see the
matter from Almighty God’s eternal, infinite vantage point and from the
comprehensive, overall teachings of the Bible.
We must not limit
ourselves to our pre-conceived notions, to our extremely limited view from “down
here,” to what we’ve been taught and simply accepted as true without examining
the “big picture,” and to our finite thinking. The German language contains the
word, Weltanschauung, meaning one’s comprehensive world view. I
am suggesting that if we can understand just a little of God’s
Weltanschauung--his comprehensive universal view--we will begin to
understand much more clearly how it is God’s will for everyone to be saved…and
that everyone will be saved.
God’s will is for all people to
be saved--because he loves all people equally. After all, he created all people
and he loves what he creates. There is nothing you or I can do to make him love
us more. There is nothing you or I can do to make him love us less. His love
for us--for you, for me--is all power-full, all-encompassing, all-knowing,
all-embracing, all-welcoming, all-drawing, for all time and all eternity! God’s
love forgives all. God’s love conquers all. God’s love draws all to himself.
God’s love wins all. God’s will flows from God’s love and is one and the same
as God’s love.
I’ve been teaching the Bible and
related subjects for many years. Recently a friend jokingly asked me if I could
summarize everything I believe and teach in 10 words or less. I accepted the
challenge; here it is: God saves everyone. Those who know, tell those
who don’t. That’s why I wrote this article. God wants me to tell you
this g-r-e-a-t news about your bought-and-paid-for salvation!
God, I pray your will be done in the life of the
person reading this article!
If you wish to contact me for
assistance or advice with this article, please hit the “Contact Us” button
on our Home Page and let me know what I can do to help you. I will be pleased to
be in touch with you by E-Mail, FAX, by regular mail, or by telephone to help
you in any way I can with the important principles and concepts taught in this
article.