KJV Sermon Outlines
The Logic of
Salvation
The following points are useful for explaining grace to skeptical
hearers. Students should learn the logic of salvation and memorize the
relevant verses to back up each point.
I. The Rationale for Salvation
Jn. 3:16 ". . .for God so loved the world that He gave His only
begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have
eternal life."
A. "God. . .loved the world" (What is God's attitude toward people?)
• God loves all people and desires a relationship with them.
B. ". . .that. . .(we) should not perish. . ." (What is man's dilemma
with God?)
• God is absolutely righteous and absolute righteousness.
• James 2:10 - the Law is like a chain--only one link needs to break
and the chain is broken, not all of them or even most of them; God
does not grade on the curve.
• The payment for sin is death - separation from God (Rom. 6:20).
• Gen. 2:17 - refers to separation from God (spiritual death) rather
than mere physical death.
• God cannot merely forgive or forget sin - it must be paid for.
• The purpose of the Law is not to provide a "ladder" of good works,
but rather:
• to show man clearly that he cannot be saved by his works. Like an
X-ray, it only shows the problem - it does not give power to heal it.
• to show the way God would provide a solution - the Old Testament
sacrificial system teaches that God will provide an blameless
substitute to pay for our sins.
C. ". . .that He gave His. . .Son. . ." (How did God resolve our
dilemma?)
• Jn. 1:29 - Jesus was the fulfillment of the sacrificial system.
• Mk. 15:34 - Jesus experienced separation from God because He was
identified with our sins and punished for them (II Cor. 5:21a).
• Jn. 19:30 - He paid for all of man's sins in full (see also I Jn
2:2).
Q: How could He pay for all our sins in a short period of time?
A: Man, being finite, can endure the infinite wrath of God only by
experiencing it for an infinite amount of time (thus the eternal
duration of hell). Jesus, being infinite by virtue of His deity, could
endure God's infinite wrath in a finite amount of time.
D. ". . .that whoever believes should. . .have eternal life" (How do
we receive this salvation?)
• Jesus' death was sufficient to pay for everyone's sins, but it
becomes effective only when we choose to receive it for ourselves.
• ILLUSTRATION: A man is in debt to the IRS $1 million. It's April
15th and they permit no extension of deadline and are sending an agent
at midnight to receive payment or take him into custody. The man could
raise only $43--hopelessly short. A knock on the door and a man comes
in offering a check for $10 million made out to the debtor. The check
is sufficient to pay the man's debt, but effective only if he receives
it, endorses it and deposits it.
• See II Cor. 5:19,20 - the cross did all that is necessary to pay for
the world's sins, but Paul goes on to entreat people to "be reconciled
to God" (vs 20) - they must receive the work of the cross to make it
apply to them.
• The word "believe" needs some definition:
• The Greek word (pisteuo) means to "to trust in" - to personally
trust Christ's work to pay the penalty for your sins.
• Jn. 1:12 links this word to receiving Christ (see also Rev. 3:20).
• To sum up:
• Eph. 2:8,9 - Salvation is "by grace. . .through faith." Vs. 8b, 9
explain this in greater detail. Salvation is "not of ourselves" - that
is, it does not come from us or by our power, but from God's power and
work. "Grace" means "it is the gift of God" - not a wage, but a free,
undeserved gift. "Faith" means "not as a result of works" - not labor,
but simply humbly receiving the gift.
• Gal. 2:16 also shows clearly that salvation is by faith, not good
works. Vs. 21 goes on to point out that if men could get back to God
by good works, God committed the greatest crime in history - He sent
His Son to die needlessly.
• ILLUSTRATION: The pope could go to hell while Charles Manson could
go to heaven. What kind of people are offended by this? Why? What kind
of people are glad to hear this? Why? The parable of the Pharisee and
the publican (Lk. 18:9-14) illustrates this well.
II. How God Views Us Now
A. Complete forgiveness of our sins - past, present and future.
• Eph. 4:32 "has forgiven"; Col. 2:13 "all our transgressions"
• Rom. 8:1 "no condemnation" - period
• Jn. 5:24 - "does not come into judgment" - we do not even appear at
this judgment
B. Unconditional acceptance, regardless of our behavior.
• II Cor. 5:21b - "that we might become the righteousness of God in
Him" - God is free to view us as having Christ's righteousness because
Christ took on our sins.
• Heb. 10:10-17 - vs. 14 "has perfected for all time those who are
sanctified". We have been "brought to completion" (meaning of
"perfected") in regard to our acceptance before God. Therefore, God
does not remember our sins against us as far as our acceptance with
Him is concerned.
• ILLUSTRATION: One day you wake up praising God, witnessing to your
neighbor, going to fellowship, studying your Bible and ending with
long prayer. The next day you wake up in a foul mood, get in a fight
with your spouse, goof up at work, and get so depressed that you don't
show up at fellowship. Which day are you more/less acceptable to God??
C. Eternal Security
• Eph. 1:13,14; 4:30 - God has "sealed" us in Christ with the Holy
Spirit for heaven. Paul is using a term familiar to all in the Roman
Empire. When a Roman official sent a document, he put the seal of Rome
on it. That seal was the tangible proof that all the power of Rome
guaranteed safe passage of the document to its destination. In the
same way, God has put His seal on us (the indwelling of the Holy
Spirit) to give us tangible proof that all the power of God guarantees
safe passage of His property (us) to its destination (heaven).
• Rom. 8:29; Eph. 1:4,5 - The term "predestined" means to set or fix
someone's ultimate destiny. God has set the believers ultimate destiny
- we will be conformed to Christ, or made holy and blameless at
Christ's return (see also Phil. 3:21; I Jn 3:2).
• Note that this does not teach that God predestines us to believe in
Christ. God fixes our ultimate destiny as believers, having foreknown
that we would choose to believe in Christ.
• ILLUSTRATION: A man walks up to the edge of a cliff. He can choose
to back off from the edge, or he can choose to jump. If he jumps,
certain other laws take over which fix his ultimate destiny - namely,
that he will hit the bottom of the cliff. Now if I could know
beforehand that he would jump, I could safely predict beforehand his
ultimate destiny - even though he made a free will decision. In the
same way, God does not make us choose Him. But if we do, He tells us
that our ultimate destiny is fixed - we will be conformed to Christ in
heaven. Since God knew how I would choose even before the foundation
of the world, He could safely predict my ultimate destiny, even though
He did not make me choose Him.
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