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THE SALVATION OF THE UNBELIEVER
AS GOD is the Saviour of all mankind, especially of those who believe
(1 Tim.4:10), we may confidently rest on one grand and glorious foundation
truth–that all salvation is of God, and neither believer nor unbeliever
has any part in it. On the one hand this assures us of the possibility of
saving all men, for God alone is able, and, on the other, it bars out all
human schemes for their restoration, whether by works, or suffering, by
giving them a second chance, or by any cause whatever which originates in
man. Those who believe are saved by His grace (Rom.4:16); those who do not
believe are saved through His judgments, but in both it is He alone Who is
Saviour. Faith is but the channel of grace; it does not produce
salvation. Judgment is but a means He uses, a process which leads to the
opening of the unbeliever’s eyes. It does not remove his guilt or cleanse
a single sin. That is done wholly and solely by the blood of Christ. Every
effort to bring about the ultimate salvation of all through the
purgatorial or penitential sufferings of the sinner is a denial of this
great truth. Judgments do not save, but the God Who judges is also the
Saviour, and all His dealings with mankind are governed by the grand goal
which He has set before Him–to become All in all His creatures. In
setting forth the process by means of which God brings the unbeliever back
to Himself we must remember that few believers are able to analyze the
method used in their own salvation. Now, if we are not able to explain our
own experience, how shall we understand His method with others? Yet,
strange as it may seem, God’s dealings with the unbeliever are much more
easily apprehended than His way with us. The very simplicity of faith
baffles us. Most theological systems seek to base belief on evidence, and
speak of “Christian evidences” as the foundation of the believer’s
salvation. This is, rather, the method He uses in the deliverance of the
unbeliever.
FAITH AND EVIDENCES
The case of Thomas is an example of the overpowering force of evidence
where faith is wanting (John 20:26-29). No man can long withstand the
testimony of his senses, even when (unlike Thomas) his interests may be
opposed. The tangible proofs given to support the proclamation of the
kingdom affords a rich field for the study of the effect of evidence on
the human heart. The unbeliever will be saved by sight. He will yield to
the force of facts. He will be convinced by logic. What evidence is most
suited for this purpose? In our Lord’s ministry we can see both the helps
and the hindrances offered by the senses. The consideration of a few cases
will reveal what most moves men and what makes them obstinate. The rich
young man was hindered by his possessions. The Samaritans were helped by
the Lord’s words. The resurrection of Lazarus led many Jews to rely on His
acts. These illustrate God’s method in the judgment of the unbeliever. He
removes hindrances–no earthly acquisitions interfere with the decisions of
the heart, for both heaven and earth flee from the face of Him Who sits on
the throne. He works the greatest possible miracle, by raising them from
the dead. He reads the inmost secret of their hearts. He appears in their
very presence in soul-dismaying splendor. They cannot doubt His power or
His perfections, and no motive remains to lead them to deceive
themselves. The judgment of unbelievers takes place in the interval
between the passing of this present earth and the creation of the new.
Every tie which bound them to the earth has been burned up. They are the
subjects of the most astounding miracle ever wrought, having been raised
from the dead. They are in the presence of the Divine Majesty. Their
secrets are bared to His awful gaze. The character of their judgment,
being adjusted to their acts, not simply as to severity but so as to
correct them, will reveal God’s purpose to save and reconcile them to
Himself. This, followed by their death in the lake of fire and subsequent
vivification at the consummation, is the basis of their reconciliation
through the blood of the cross (Col.1:20). The excuses offered by those
who were bidden to the great supper (Luke 14:18) are all removed before
the great white throne. No fields or oxen or wives will intrude between
the spirit and the great Judge. In the judgment day God will judge the
hidden things of humanity (Rom.2:16). We are prone to consider this a mere
exhibition of His omniscience, to facilitate the trial of the sinner and
to insure his condemnation. But more than this, it cannot but have a most
powerful effect on the unbeliever’s attitude toward Christ. What was it
that impressed the woman of Samaria (John 4:19,29)? It was His knowledge
of her hidden secrets. As a result we read that many of the Samaritans of
that city believe in Him because of the woman’s word that He told her all
that she had done (John 4:39). The blessed results achieved by His
exposure of the woman at Sychar’s spring will be multiplied by many
millions at the great white throne. There is nothing hidden that shall not
be manifested (Matt.10:26). As in Corinth, the hidden things of the
unbeliever’s heart become apparent, and, falling on his face, he will
worship God (1 Cor.14:25). Perhaps no miracle wrought by our Lord and
His apostles created a stronger conviction than that of raising the dead.
When Lazarus was raised many of the rulers believed, and the chief priests
were concerned lest all should believe on Him because of this sign (John
11:45,48). When Peter raised Dorcas it also was used to convince many who
believed on the Lord. Can we imagine what conviction it must have brought
to Lazarus and to Dorcas themselves, if they should have had the slightest
tendency to doubt? Could there have been any stronger proof of divine
power than that their very life had come back to them at the bidding of
One Who is stronger than death? In the process of winning the unbeliever
we judge their resurrection and final vivification to be ample to account
for salvation and reconciliation entering their
lives.
SAUL OF TARSUS
The apostle Paul’s case is of surpassing significance in its bearing
on the salvation of unbelievers. He was the foremost of sinners, and it
cannot be denied that, among men, there was no case quite as desperate as
his. All question as to God’s ability to save vanishes in the light of his
call on the Damascus road. The miraculous means employed in his case
surely would suffice for every one of God’s enemies. And who will deny, on
sober reflection, that the appalling power and glory of the august
judgment session into which the unbeliever is ushered by his resurrection
will be unutterably more impressive? The apostle’s vision passed. He
came back to a scene where all was as before. He alone had changed. But
the unbeliever sees the power and presence of God not only in his own
deliverance from death, but in all around him. The vision does not vanish.
The divine presence
abides.
GOD AS JUDGE
The change which eventuates in the ultimate salvation of the
unbeliever is wrought, not only by his resurrection, but by the august
judgment session, when he stands in the presence of Christ, with all his
unbelief swept away by the awful realization of His power and the justice
of His throne. We are asked, Is it possible for them to repent? Rather, we
would like to know, Is it possible for them not to repent, or change their
minds? We cannot conceive an unrepentant sinner before the great white
throne. God’s thoughts and man’s imaginations are nowhere more at
variance than on the subject of judgment, or punishment. God is love; man
is hate. David was wise when he was given the choice of fleeing before his
enemies or falling into the hand of Yahweh. He uttered a great truth when
he exclaimed “Let us fall, I pray, into the hand of Yahweh, for His
compassions are abundant; but let me not fall into the hand of humanity.”
And surely his choice was vindicated, for when the messenger was
stretching out his hand in destruction toward Jerusalem, Yahweh showed
Himself merciful, and said, “Enough, now hold back your hand” (2
Sam.24:10-16).
NINEVEH
Jonah went through the streets of Nineveh, crying: “Forty days more
and Nineveh shall be overturned!” (Jonah 3:4). But God saw their works,
that they turned from their evil way; and He regretted the evil He said He
would do unto them. “And He did it not” (Jonah 3:10). And what did Jonah
do? Was he not pleased at the success of his mission? Did he not glory in
the character of His God? Alas! he was like the many today. Like Jonah,
they imagine that God has a streak of hate in His character and that He
wanted to destroy Nineveh to give it exercise. But He had an object in
threatening its destruction. Now that they repented and the object was
attained, why should He belie His character and destroy them from sheer
vindictiveness? Jonah’s God was a gracious God, and merciful, slow to
anger, and of much benignity, and regretting of the evil which He had
threatened (Jonah
4:2).
DESTRUCTION
The thought that the resurrection and judgment of the unbeliever is
only a prelude to his final “destruction” in the lake of fire must be
judged by its moral effect, for it has no support whatever in the
Scriptures. In the first place “destruction” (by which annihilation or
extinction of being is intended), is never used of the lake of fire or of
the second death. It is always used of the sinner before his resurrection
at the great white throne. Those who are “destroyed” in Gehenna will be
there. Those who “perished” in the wilderness and at the flood will be
raised. “Destruction” is never annihilation. It never precludes
resurrection and salvation. Indeed, it is a necessary precursor of
salvation. The Lord came to seek and to save the “destroyed” (lost). So
that, even if there were a single passage telling us that the unbeliever
is “destroyed” in the second death (which there is not) we would still
have every reason to believe God when He assured us that all who are dying
in Adam shall be made alive in Christ (1 Cor.15:22). Let no one suppose
that we plead for the repeal of God’s word regarding the doom of the
unbeliever. Far from it. But we do plead for the removal of those harsh,
human perversions of His word, which seek to make Him a man like
ourselves, hateful and hating one another, vindictive and vicious in our
views of the so-called “penalties” of sin. We plead for a revision of our
vocabulary on this important theme. The terms destroy and destruction
are so often used of irrecoverable ruin that a few examples will be given
to show how far this is from the truth. The rendering “lost” is always the
translation of the word for destroy. It would be the utmost folly for the
Son of Mankind to seek, much less to save those who are annihilated. The
lost sheep and the lost coin and the lost prodigal all had been destroyed,
yet all were found and saved. Were the whole world lost or destroyed in
the lake of fire, that would be no hindrance to salvation. Rather, it
would be the very sphere in which alone salvation can operate. Christ
cannot save anyone unless first he is destroyed, or
lost.
GOD IS THE SAVIOUR
Such is the salvation of the unbeliever. It is not only in absolute
accord with every passage in the word of God, but in utmost harmony with
the God Who is revealed through that word. How can anyone who truly loves
Him rest satisfied with less than this, the only true, the only scriptural
solution? Let those who are fond of reasoning about the destiny of the
universe accept their own premises and follow them out logically and the
inevitable conclusion will be a universal reconciliation. Try it and see.
All will acknowledge these premises: God is love, therefore God is
omnipotent, therefore
God is not love if He will not do all He can for His creatures,
neither is He omnipotent if He is unable to save them. Both revelation and
reason are arrayed against the false delusion of unending torment for the
unbeliever. It degrades the sacrifice of Christ to a mere attempt to
remedy an evil which it cannot cure. O, my brethren, why do you limit His
love, why do you paralyze His power? Is the Christ Who saved you capable
of completing His work by saving all like you? Or, if He can, why will He
not? Confess that this terrible doctrine cannot but lead you to doubt
His perfections. It brings you up to a blank wall, to a pit of dense
darkness. But the blessed truth opens up a glorious vista flooded with the
love light of
God.
THE JUST JUDGMENT OF GOD
But, we are told, God’s justice demands judgment. There is truth in
this. But if God’s justice must be displayed at the expense of His love,
the extinction of the unbeliever in the lake of fire, far from forever
removing an eyesore from the universe, places a blot upon His character
which eternity itself can never erase. If we do not doubt His willingness
to save them, then we must acknowledge His inability. If we cannot
question His power, then we must limit His love, and then we endanger the
very foundation on which all eternal bliss must be established. But we
do not need to rest on reason. At best, it is usually the refuge of
unbelief. God has spoken, and real reason rests on His revelation. He is
the Saviour of all mankind, especially of those who believe. God give us
grace to glory in such a God! In the opening chapters of Romans Paul
lays the foundation on which God’s just judgment is based. He closes his
indictment of mankind with these words: “. . . God’s just statute, that
such as are committing them are deserving of death . . .” (Rom.1:32). As
the first death cannot be the effect of any judicial procedure on God’s
part, it is evident that the death penalty awaits all who come into the
judgment. Whatever may be the variety and degree of the tribulation and
anguish meted out to each, one common end awaits them all–the second
death.
VIVIFIED IN CHRIST
But, some will ask, if they were condemned to death, how can they be
raised again? What right have they to the grace and life that will be
their portion? We answer, none. They will have no more claim on the
ecstatic bliss of that unending day than I or you, or any believer! What
right have we? None at all. But in Christ we have a perfect title to every
favor. So it will be with the unbeliever. It is not written that “Even as,
in Adam, all are dying, thus also shall all be vivified,” but “thus also,
in Christ, shall all be vivified” (1 Cor.15:22). Adam’s death involves
all, irrespective of their deserts. Christ’s life extends to all, apart
from their personal merits. And here is where the unbeliever learns to
love God. The judgment has exposed his own unworthiness. The grace of
vivification will illumine his heart with the love of God in Christ. Then
shall be fulfilled God’s universal goal: “. . . to Me will bow every
knee, And every tongue will be acclaiming God.” This is the
method He will use to bend the stubborn knees. He will not use physical
force but moral suasion. Neither will He wring out a confession of sin
from every tongue. The Greek word as here used means acclaim, which
involves a complete acknowledgment and acquiescence in the divine
will. The crowning and conclusive exhibition of God’s power and love
toward the unbeliever awaits the consummation. The eons are past. All sin
is banished. Evil is no more. The Son of God has nearly completed His
mediatorial work. All the living are in perfect accord with God. Nothing
remains but the conquest of death and the reconciliation of its denizens.
It is the only enemy left in all God’s universe. Then, and not till then
will the vast concourse of mankind emerge from the domain of death never
to enter it again. Then death will be despoiled, the last enemy laid low.
Then shall all awake to live in the light and love of Him Who will have
become the Saviour of all mankind. A. E. Knoch
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