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The One Thing That
Determines Salvation
By
Dr. Curtis Hutson
(1934–1995)
“He that
believeth on the Son hath everlasting
life: and he that believeth not the Son
shall not see life; but the wrath of God
abideth on him.”—John 3:36.
What is the
determining factor in salvation? Exactly
what does a person have to do to be
saved? The Bible doesn’t leave us in the
dark. The answer is found in the Word of
God.
In Acts 16:30,31
the Philippian jailer asked Paul and
Silas, “Sirs, what must I do to be
saved? And they said, Believe on the
Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be
saved.”
The jailer was
asking, “What one thing is absolutely
necessary for my salvation?” and the
Bible answer was, “Believe on the Lord
Jesus Christ.”
In John 3:36 Jesus
divides the world into two groups: “He
that believeth on the Son hath
everlasting life: and he that believeth
not the Son shall not see life; but the
wrath of God abideth on him.” Here you
have those who are believing on the Son
and those who believe not on the Son.
Those who are believing have everlasting
life, according to the promise of God;
and those who believe not shall not see
life, but the wrath of God abides on
them.
In John 3:18, again
Jesus divides the world into two groups:
“He that believeth on him is not
condemned [is not under sentence]: but
he that believeth not is condemned
already, because he hath not believed in
the name of the only begotten Son of
God.” Here again Jesus says there are
two groups: those who believe and those
who believe not. Those who believe have
the sentence lifted. They are not
condemned. And those who believe not are
under the sentence of sin, which is the
second death, because they are not
believing on “the name of the only
begotten Son of God.”
Galatians 3:26
says, “For ye are all the children of
God by faith in Christ Jesus.” This
passage plainly says that everybody who
is a child of God is a child of God by
faith. Romans 5:1 says, “Therefore being
justified by faith, we have peace with
God through our Lord Jesus Christ.”
Neither time nor
space permits me to share with you all
the verses that say believing, or faith,
is the determining factor in salvation.
There are at least 153 verses in the
Bible that make believing the
determining factor in salvation. Mark
16:16 says, “He that believeth not shall
be damned.” So if the Bible is true,
faith in the Lord Jesus Christ is the
determining factor in salvation.
I’ve heard or read
a number of sermons on “saving faith”;
but the Bible never puts the word
“saving” before faith. Faith is not the
Saviour. Jesus is the Saviour. Faith is
an attitude of the soul through which
Jesus saves.
The Bible never
tells us to believe and be saved. It is
always careful to say, “Believe on the
Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be
saved,” or, “Whosoever believeth in him
should not perish, but have everlasting
life,” or, “He that believeth on the Son
hath everlasting life.” It’s the Object
of faith that makes faith important.
Faith in the wrong thing could result in
a person’s damnation.
Now since faith is
the determining factor in salvation, it
is important to know what faith is.
So far as I know,
there’s only one definition of faith in
the Bible. It’s found in Hebrews 11:1.
But while there’s only one definition,
there are many illustrations of faith in
the Bible. I think the best illustration
of faith is found in Hebrews 12:2, where
we find the expression, “Looking unto
Jesus.”
I. Faith Is Not Looking At Jesus But
Looking Unto Jesus
Almost everyone
will admit that Jesus Christ existed,
that He was a real person. Every time we
date a check, we admit the existence of
Christ. Faith is not looking at Jesus as
a historical personage.
James 2:19 says,
“The devils also believe, and tremble.”
Even the demons admit the existence of
Christ. In Acts 19:15 the evil spirit in
the man said, “…Jesus I know, and Paul I
know; but who are ye?” No, faith is not
looking at Jesus; it’s looking unto
Jesus, which is another way of saying
depending on Jesus.
Suppose someone
cosigned for you to borrow money, and if
you didn’t pay, the authorities would
put you in jail. And suppose the money
came due and you had nothing with which
to pay. You called your cosigner and
said, “Bob, I’ve got problems. You know
that note you signed for me—well, the
money is due, and I can’t pay it.”
Your friend
replied, “Don’t worry about it. Just
look to me!” He means by that, “Just
depend on me. I’ll pay it.”
Jesus Christ says
that we owe a sin debt. Romans 6:23
says, “The wages of sin is death.” To
pay what we owe, we would have to die
and go into Hell and stay there forever.
But He says, “Don’t worry about it. You
just look to Me.”
Isaiah 53:6 says,
“The Lord hath laid on him the iniquity
of us all.” Two thousand years ago God
took every sin you have ever committed
and every one you will ever commit, and
God Almighty laid those sins on Jesus
Christ. While Jesus Christ was bearing
your sins in His own body, God punished
Him in your place to pay the debt that
you owe as a sinner.
Jesus uttered seven
things while He hung on the cross. Just
before dying He said, “It is finished.”
Nothing can be added to it, and nothing
can be taken from it. It’s complete!
His death on the
cross made full payment for your sins.
And now He says to you, “Look to Me!
Believe that I did die on the cross for
you. Believe that I did pay your sin
debt and look to Me. Look to Me, and all
is well.” Faith is not looking at Jesus;
it’s looking unto Jesus, depending on
Jesus, relying on Jesus, putting the
matter of your salvation in His hands
and trusting Him to get you to Heaven.
II. Faith Is Looking Away From
Everything Else and Looking Only to
Jesus
Martin Luther
translated Hebrews 12:2: “Aufsehen zu
Jesus,” which means “looking up to
Jesus”; in other words, looking away
from everything else and looking only to
Jesus. It means that you look away from
your works.
How long do you
think you’d have to work to earn Heaven?
Read the description of Heaven in
Revelation 21 and 22. Why, the Bible
says the street in Heaven is made of
pure gold. The gold is so pure it’s like
transparent glass. You can see through
it. Earth has no way of refining gold
that pure. If you worked ten million
lifetimes, you couldn’t begin to earn
Heaven. And the Bible says in Ephesians
2:8,9, “For by grace are ye saved
through faith; and that not of
yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not
of works, lest any man should boast.”
And consider this:
If a man worked to stay out of Hell, the
very motive would render the work
ineffective. He would be working from a
motive of fear. According to I
Corinthians 13, all work must be
motivated by love. Paul said in verse 3,
“And though I bestow all my goods to
feed the poor, and though I give my body
to be burned, and have not charity [or
love], it profiteth me nothing.” So if a
person worked to stay out of Hell, the
motive would render the work
ineffective.
A boy once asked an
old preacher, “Sir, what can I do to be
saved?”
The preacher
replied, “Son, you’re too late.”
“What!” exclaimed
the boy, “too late to be saved?”
“No,” said the
preacher, “too late to do anything. You
see, son, Jesus did it all two thousand
years ago.”
Now wait a minute!
I believe in good works, but not as an
instrument of salvation. You don’t work
to be saved; you work because you are
saved.
I would not work my
soul to save,
For
that my Lord hath done,
But I would work
like any slave
For
love of God’s dear Son!
“Looking up to
Jesus” means I look away from my
righteousness and only to Jesus. I’m for
living right. You ought to live as
clean, as moral and as pure as you
possibly can. But Titus 3:5 says, “Not
by works of righteousness which we have
done, but according to his mercy he
saved us, by the washing of
regeneration, and renewing of the Holy
Ghost.” Isaiah 64:6 says, “All our
righteousnesses are as filthy rags.”
Now just a minute,
friend. The Bible doesn’t say the worst
you do is like filthy rags, but the best
you do. There is no way that anyone
could ever be righteous enough to go to
Heaven. You would have to be perfect,
and there are no perfect people.
Sam Jones, the
Methodist evangelist, once asked a
congregation, “Does anyone here know a
perfect person?” A lady raised her hand.
“Yes.”
“Do you know a
perfect person?”
“Well,” answered
the lady, “I’ve never met her, but my
husband talks about her all the time.
She was his first wife.”
The truth is, no
one is perfect. Jesus said, “They that
are whole have no need of the physician,
but they that are sick: I came not to
call the righteous, but sinners to
repentance” (Mark 2:17). Faith is
looking away from our righteousness and
looking only to Jesus. You don’t get
better to get saved. You get saved to
get better, and you can’t get better
until you do get saved.
A stanza from my
favorite hymn says:
My hope is built on
nothing less
Than Jesus’ blood
and righteousness;
I dare not trust
the sweetest frame
But wholly lean on
Jesus’ name.
“Looking up to
Jesus” means looking away from our
church membership and looking only to
Jesus. Everyone who accepts Jesus Christ
as Saviour should join a church. But you
don’t join the church to become a
Christian. Being in the church won’t
make a Christian out of you any more
than getting into the garage will make
an automobile out of you. I’m a church
member, and everybody who’s saved ought
to join a Bible-believing church. Acts
2:41 says, “Then they that gladly
received his word were baptized: and the
same day there were added unto them
about three thousand souls.”
On the other hand,
if you’re depending on the fact that you
belong to the church to get you to
Heaven, you’ll go to Hell through the
church. In Matthew 7:22,23 Jesus said,
“Many will say to me in that day, Lord,
Lord, have we not prophesied in thy
name? and in thy name have cast out
devils? and in thy name done many
wonderful works? And then will I profess
unto them, I never knew you: depart from
me, ye that work iniquity.”
According to the
Bible, many will miss Heaven even though
they were church members and worked
hard, even preaching or prophesying in
Jesus’ name. But they will miss Heaven
because they did not totally, fully,
completely trust Jesus Christ. They
trusted their works.
“Looking up to
Jesus” means you look away from your
baptism and look only to Jesus. I’m for
baptism. Every person who accepts Jesus
Christ as Saviour ought to be baptized,
but baptism is not an instrument of
salvation. It’s an outward expression of
an inward experience. It’s like putting
the wedding band on the finger after you
are married. It doesn’t marry you, but
it shows everybody that you are married.
Being baptized doesn’t save you. It’s an
outward symbol telling others that you
believe in the death, burial and
resurrection of Christ.
The man who’s
depending on his baptism to get him to
Heaven will go to Hell through the
baptistry. Now why do I say that?
Because John 3:36 says, “He that
believeth not the Son shall not see
life; but the wrath of God abideth on
him.” Wait a minute, friend, Jesus
Christ says if you’re not depending on,
believing, trusting, relying on the Son,
you “shall not see life; but the wrath
of God” abides on you. The man who’s
trusting his church membership or his
baptism or his reformation or anything
else other than Jesus Christ, will not
go to Heaven. John 3:18 says, “He that
believeth not is condemned already,
because he hath not believed in the name
of the only begotten Son of God.” There
is no promise to those who partly
believe on Christ and partly on
something else.
Someone asked me,
“But doesn’t the Bible say in Mark
16:16, ‘He that believeth and is
baptized shall be saved…’?”
“Yes,” I replied,
“but the next expression says, ‘…he that
believth not shall be damned.’” You see,
believing is the determining factor, not
being baptized. That’s like saying, “He
that getteth on the jet plane and
sitteth down, shall fly to Jacksonville,
Florida; but he that getteth not on the
plane, shall not fly to Jacksonville.”
It’s the getting
on that gets you there, not the sitting
down. But any fool knows if you get on,
you ought to sit down. If you don’t sit
down, you’ll wish you had sat down
before you reach your final destination.
If you’ve trusted
Jesus Christ as Saviour, you ought to be
baptized. But you should not be baptized
thinking that baptism saves you. If you
do, you’re not trusting Jesus Christ;
you’re trusting baptism. Faith is
looking away from everything else and
looking only to Jesus Christ.
III. Faith Is Not Experiencing a Feeling
But Relying on a Fact
I’ve dealt with
people who doubted their salvation
because they did not think they had the
proper feelings at the time of
conversion. There is not a verse in the
Bible that tells a man exactly how he
has to feel in order to be saved. As a
matter of fact, the Bible never says you
have to feel any way to be saved. Acts
16:31 says, “Believe on the Lord Jesus
Christ, and thou shalt be saved.”
I remember when I
was first married. We drove back to my
wife’s home, and there were some friends
in the yard. When we got out of the
automobile, someone asked me, “How does
it feel to be married?”
I said, “I feel
exactly like I did a few minutes ago.”
But you know something? I was just as
married as the fellow who had some great
feeling.
Not everyone reacts
the same to the same experience. I
remember one night I was driving home
from a revival meeting when a car
overturned in front of us. Several
people were badly injured. Some who saw
it cried, others ran to help, while some
buried their faces in their hands. One
lady fainted. Now they all saw the same
thing and had the same experience but
reacted differently. I’ve seen people
cry when they trusted Christ as Saviour.
I’ve been with others who smiled, while
others laughed and some even shouted;
but they all had the same experience.
They all trusted Jesus Christ as
Saviour. No, faith is not having some
particular feeling. Faith is depending
on a fact.
Now here’s the
fact: Two thousand years ago Jesus
Christ died for you. He bore your sins
in His own body. God punished Him in
your place to pay the debt that you owe.
That’s a fact. Whether you ever do
anything about it or not, it’s still a
fact.
What you must do is
believe that fact and not only believe
in your head that Jesus Christ died on
the cross to pay your sin debt, but
depend on, rely on, trust Him and what
He did for your salvation.
If I were not a
Christian and wanted to be, I would
simply pray this prayer:
Dear Lord Jesus, I
know that I am a sinner. I do believe
that You died for me. And here and now I
do trust You as my Saviour. From this
minute on, I’m depending on You to get
me to Heaven. Help me to live for You
and to be a good Christian.
After praying the
prayer, I would accept what God says in
the Bible—that I do have everlasting
life because I’m trusting Jesus Christ
for my salvation: “He that believeth on
the Son hath everlasting life” (John
3:36). I mean I’d accept what God says,
whether or not I ever had any feelings.
Once you make that
decision and trust Christ, perhaps
there’ll be some feeling. But whether or
not the feeling comes, the Word of God
is still true. God cannot lie!
When you trust Him,
you will have everlasting life. The
determining factor in salvation is
believing, trusting, depending on,
relying on the Lord Jesus Christ.
F. G. Pentecost
said, “Two and two is four—that’s
mathematics. Hydrogen and oxygen form
water—that’s chemistry. ‘Believe on the
Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be
saved’—that’s revelation.”
You ask, “How do I
know?”
“Well,” he said,
“the burden of proof lies with you. Put
two and two together and see if you
don’t have four. Put hydrogen and oxygen
together and see if you don’t have
water. And believe on the Lord Jesus
Christ and see if you won’t be saved.”
Won’t you trust Him
now? If you will, sign the form below
and mail it to:
Dr. Shelton Smith
Sword of the Lord
P. O. Box 1099
Murfreesboro, TN
37133-1099
We have some free
literature we’d like to send to you that
would be helpful in your Christian life.
Dr. Smith:
I have read Dr.
Curtis Hutson’s sermon “The One Thing
That Determines Salvation,” and I do
trust Christ as my personal Saviour.
Please send me the free literature.
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