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Simple Salvation
By Dr. Curtis Hutson
In the book, Life and
Works of Spurgeon, published in 1890, Mr. Spurgeon gives the following
account of his conversion:
It pleased God in my
childhood to convince me of sin.… My heart was broken in pieces. Six months
did I pray—prayed agonizingly with all my heart, and never had an answer.
I resolved that, in the town where I lived, I would visit every place of
worship in order to find out the way of salvation. I felt I was willing
to do anything and be anything if God would only forgive me.
I set off, determined
to go round to all the chapels; and I went to all the places of worship;
and though I dearly venerate the men that occupy those pulpits now, and
did so then, I am bound to say that I never heard them once fully preach
the Gospel. I mean by that, they preached truth, great truths, many good
truths that were fitting to many of their congregation—spiritually-minded
people; but what I wanted to know was, How can I get my sins forgiven?
And they never once told me that. I wanted to hear how a poor sinner, under
a sense of sin, might find peace with God; and when I went I heard a sermon
on "Be not deceived: God is not mocked," which cut me up worse, but did
not say how I might escape. I went again another day, and the text was
something about the glories of the righteous: nothing for poor me.…
At last, one snowy
day—it snowed so much I could not go to the place I had determined to go
to, and I was obliged to stop on the road, and it was a blessed stop to
me—I found rather an obscure street, and turned down a court, and there
was a little chapel.…I wanted to know how I might be saved.…At last a very
thin-looking man came into the pulpit and opened his Bible and read these
words: "Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth." Just
setting his eyes upon me, as if he knew me all by heart, he said, "Young
man, you are in trouble." Well, I was, sure enough. Says he, "You will
never get out of it unless you look to Christ."
And then, lifting up
his hands, he cried out…, "Look, look, look! It is only look!" I saw at
once the way of salvation. Oh, how I did leap for joy at that moment! I
know not what else he said; I did not take much notice of it—I was so possessed
with that one thought. Like as when the brazen serpent was lifted up, they
only looked and were healed. I had been waiting to do fifty things, but
when I heard this word "Look!" what a charming word it seemed to me! Oh,
I looked until I could almost have looked my eyes away! And in Heaven I
will look on still in my joy unutterable.
That was Spurgeon’s
experience of salvation—the man who became one of the greatest preachers
of all times. In fact, he may have been the greatest preacher since the
Apostle Paul or since New Testament preachers.
He preached when just
a teenager at Park Street Church. A thousand came to hear him, then twelve
hundred. He made a move to Exeter Hall, and ten thousand came. Later when
that place burned, they moved to Surrey Gardens. Thirty thousand came to
hear him there.
The people said, "He’s
a teenager, a novelty. When he gets older, this will wear off, and such
crowds will not come." But they kept coming. Finally the Metropolitan Baptist
Tabernacle was built which seated five thousand. You had to have a ticket
in order to get into the Metropolitan Tabernacle to hear Spurgeon preach,
and these had to be gotten two to three weeks in advance. On many occasions
Spurgeon would ask the church members to stay at home to make space for
all the visitors. And these visitors would pack the five-thousand-seat
building to hear Spurgeon preach.
When I read his salvation
experience, I knew my experience was not too much unlike Charles Spurgeon’s.
I went to church. A preacher said, "Ye must be born again," but I had no
idea what he meant. I even heard him say, "You ought to be saved. If you
are not saved, you are going to Hell." I knew Hell was a lake of fire—an
awful place—but I didn’t know what "saved" meant. And no matter how much
I wanted to be saved, I couldn’t have been because I didn’t know how to
be saved. I prayed, I did everything else I knew to do, but I didn’t know
I had to trust Jesus Christ as my Saviour. Nobody had ever explained it
to me.
Multiplied thousands
of religious people go to church Sunday after Sunday, week after week,
month after month, year after year; many know about Jesus and know something
about the Scriptures, but they don’t know how to obtain forgiveness of
their sins. So they face death still unsaved.
I think many preachers
take for granted that people know how to be saved, and so they never bother
to explain it. They think it sounds too simple.
At the risk of sounding
too simple, I take the text Spurgeon heard and give you a simple salvation
sermon so no one listening to my voice can ever say, "I went to church,
heard what he said, but didn’t know what he meant. I didn’t know how to
be saved, nor did I know how to obtain forgiveness of my sins."
"Look unto me,
and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth: for I am God, and there is
none else."—Isa. 45:22.
Looking at the text, I
call your attention to four things:
I. THE SOURCE OF SALVATION
You have the Source
of salvation in the text: "Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends
of the earth: for I am God, and there is none else." Doesn’t it seem strange
that we have to emphasize "me"? Salvation is not in a church, not in any
denomination, not in sacraments, not in ceremonies, not in rituals, not
in works, not in reformation; salvation is in a Person—the Lord Jesus Christ.
"Look unto me, and be ye saved."
My most difficult job
as an evangelist is getting people to look to Christ alone for salvation.
Some very sincere people look to Jesus and the baptistry. "It is not enough
to look to Jesus," they say; "you must also be baptized."
Now everybody who gets
saved ought to be baptized by immersion in a local church, but no one gets
baptized to be saved. It is not looking to the baptistry; it is looking
to Jesus.
I have been baptized,
and I try to live right. But if I had to die right now and stand at Heaven’s
gate and were asked, "Curtis, why should we let you in?" I would not say,
"Because I lived right." I believe I would stand tall and say:
My hope was built
on nothing less
Than Jesus’ blood
and righteousness;
I dared not trust
the sweetest frame,
But wholly leaned
on Jesus’ name.
And that angel would say,
"Come in, Curtis. You have the magic word that gets one into Heaven!"
Jesus will not share
saving people with any church, with any denomination, with any individual—not
the pope, not the Baptist preacher, no sacrament—nothing else. He only
is the Saviour, not one of the saviours.
In Acts 4:12 Peter
said, "Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other
name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved."
A missionary visiting
on a mission field led a little boy to Christ. He already had religion
and knew about Jesus, but he had added many other things for salvation.
A few days later when
she saw the little fellow, his countenance had changed. She asked, "Son,
something has happened to you. You don’t look the same. What happened?"
He answered, "Miss
Missionary, I always knew Jesus was necessary, but I didn’t know until
the other day that He was enough."
I am here to tell you
and the whole world that Jesus Christ is not only necessary, He is enough.
It is not what a man
does that saves him; it is not what a man promises to do that saves him;
it is not what a man quits doing that saves him; it is what a man has that
makes him a Christian.
If a man must have
a million dollars to be a millionaire, what must a man have to be a Chris-tian?
CHRIST! In I John 5:12 we read, "He that hath the Son hath life; and he
that hath not the Son of God hath not life." That is it!
I’m not going to Heaven
because I’m a Baptist, or because I’ve been baptized, or because I have
tried to live good. I’m going to Heaven because I’m trusting Christ and
Him alone for salvation.
There is no promise
to those who partially believe on Jesus. The promise is to those who wholly
believe on Him, the Source of salvation.
I belong to a church,
I tithe to a local church in Murfreesboro, not in order to be saved, but
because I am saved and want to help propagate the Gospel throughout the
world through my local church program. But I did only one thing for salvation:
I looked to Christ alone.
If there were any other
way to be saved, why would God let His Son die on the cross? Yet this religion
and this religion and this religion are trying to go to Heaven through
baptism, through keeping the Commandments, through sacraments, through
ceremonies, through lighting and burning candles and every other way. But
Jesus said, "I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto
the Father, but by me."
II. THE SCOPE OF SALVATION
We have the Source
of salvation, but we have also the scope of salvation: "Look unto me, and
be ye saved, all the ends of the earth." Who can be saved? Everybody!
I get a little impatient
with those who teach hyper-Calvinism and say that some are elected to be
saved, some are elected to be lost, and some couldn’t get saved no matter
what because they weren’t elected.
I have never met a
non-elected Calvinist. They are all elected. It is the others who are not.
Ask any little first-grader
what "Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth" means,
and he will tell you, "Everybody in the world."
John 3:16 says, "For
God so loved the world…." Ask any third-grader what that means, and he’ll
tell you, "God loves everybody in the world."
Hebrews 2:9 says He
tasted "death for every man." Ask any third-grader what "every man" means,
and he’ll say, "Nobody is excluded: it means everybody."
But once you get to
college and seminary, you learn that "every man" doesn’t really mean every
man; that the whole world doesn’t really mean the whole world, but the
whole elected world. Hogwash! Why don’t you take it for what it says, "Look
unto me, and be ye saved"?
What is the scope?
"All the ends of the earth." Salvation is for everybody.
If I sell automobiles,
I have to find a prospect because everybody is not a prospect. If I am
selling real estate, I have to find a prospect because everybody is not
a prospect. But when I am preaching the Gospel, everybody I meet—rich or
poor, educated, uneducated, dumb, handsome, good-looking or ugly—is a prospect
for salvation. "Jesus died for the whole world" is the scope of salvation.
Nobody in Hell will
ever look up to Heaven and say, "Jesus, I wanted to be saved, but You didn’t
die for me." He will be in Hell because he would not trust Jesus Christ
as his Saviour.
III. THE SIMPLICITY OF SALVATION
We not only have the
Source of salvation and the scope of salvation, but we have the simplicity
of salvation in our text.
Dr. Bob Jones, Sr.,
once said, "Truth’s most becoming garment is simplicity." People are not
confused because preachers have been too simple, but they are confused
because preachers have been too complicated. Good preaching is not complicating
a simple matter, but simplifying a complicated matter. Billy Sunday used
to say, "Put the cookies on the lower shelf so everybody can reach them."
Whether this is true,
I do not know, but I have been told that Charles Finney really didn’t start
out to preach. But he went to hear other preachers preach, and they used
such words that the average man couldn’t understand. Being a lawyer and
an educated man, he could understand them. I am told that Charles Finney
would gather people together and explain what the preacher had said from
the pulpit. And he drew larger crowds explaining what the preacher had
said than the preacher drew when he preached the sermon! Make your message
so simple that anybody can understand it.
Salvation is so simple
that we stumble over it. We can’t believe it is that easy. Does our text
say, "Look unto me, and be baptized and join the church"? No. Does it say,
"Look unto me, and live right"? No. Does it read, "Look unto me, turn over
a new leaf, and promise never to sin again"? Oh no! We do one thing to
get saved: we look to Christ.
When Moses raised that
brazen serpent in the wilderness, he said to those who were bitten and
doomed to die, ‘Look and live.’ He didn’t say, "All you who have 20/20
vision, look and you will live, but you who are blind in one eye don’t
have a chance." He just said, "Look." You could have been blind in one
eye and hardly have had sight in the other, but with what sight you had,
if you looked at that brazen serpent, you lived.
People say to me, "I
don’t think I have enough faith to be saved." It is not the measure of
faith but the object of faith who saves. You can have a little bitty faith
and a great big Saviour. If, with what little, quivering faith you have,
you will look to Jesus, then you will be saved.
Not a man in this room
put his breakfast through a chemical analysis before he ate it. You just
sat down and started eating. You don’t know that your spouse wouldn’t put
rat poison in that food! Blind faith. You trusted her.
When you eat in a restaurant,
you eat by faith. I have sat down in a restaurant and noticed bread left
on plates and nice pieces of meat. I wonder: Do they throw out that good,
uneaten stuff? That seems like such a waste. Everyone has faith.
The simplicity of salvation—"Look
unto me" is all He is saying. With the little faith you have, even if it
be just the least bit, say, "I cannot save myself. I believe Jesus died
for me, and I’m looking to Him, trusting Him to take me to Heaven," and
you will be saved.
The word look means
"to depend on, to rely on." That same expression is found in Hebrews 12:2:
"Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith." Martin Luther
translated that, "Oft looking unto Jesus," which has the idea of looking
away from everything else and looking only to Jesus—looking away from our
baptism, our works, our good life, our promises to do better, our reformation—looking
only to Jesus.
Do I make myself clear?
I’m struggling. I don’t want you to trust anything but Jesus. I want you
to live right, go to church, get baptized, tithe. But when it comes to
salvation, I want you to say, "My hope is built on nothing less, than Jesus’
blood and righteousness. I am trusting Him and Him alone to get me to
Heaven."
The Source of salvation—Jesus.
The scope of salvation—"all
the ends of the earth."
The simplicity of salvation—just
look.
Isn’t that simple?
Jesus made it that easy for us. He did the hard part two thousand years
ago when He suffered Hell at Calvary for the whole world. I won’t get into
trying to explain that, except to say that He was infinite. He could suffer
infinitely. And He did it in those few hours when He was suspended between
Heaven and earth, as if rejected by both.
We have seen the Source
of salvation, the scope of salvation, the simplicity of salvation. One
is saved by simply trusting, simply believing, simply depending on Jesus.
IV. THE SURETY OF SALVATION
Now, the surety of
salvation. "Look unto me, and be ye saved." We use that word all the time.
Sometimes an unsaved world doesn’t understand our terminology, especially
those who don’t go to church. If you say, "So-and-so got saved," they think
he was in a house on fire and was pulled out of the back bedroom window.
Or he was drowning, and somebody threw him a lifeline and dragged him in.
To the world, saved means saved from something. If you save a man from
a burning building, you save him from burning to death. If you save a man
from drowning, you drag him out of the lake before he goes under for the
last time. And when a man is saved in the Bible sense, he is saved from
the penalty of sin, which is Hell.
To be saved means I
am saved from Hell, the lake of fire. And when I get to Heaven, I’ll be
saved from the very practice and presence of sin. But right now, I am saved
from the penalty of sin, for Jesus paid the penalty at Calvary.
"Look unto me, and
be ye saved."
The Bible tells us
that, but most religions teach that you are not saved when you look to
Jesus. They say you are put in a position to be saved, provided you don’t
mess up again, or provided you endure to the end, or provided you keep
the Ten Commandments. You have looked to Jesus and are trusting Him, but
if you mess up, too bad. But all of us know we are going to mess up.
We are not saved by
not messing up; we are saved by looking to Him. "Look unto me, and be ye
saved"—not put into a position to be saved provided you do this and do
that; but look unto Him, and be saved.
Do you know that if
you are in danger of being lost, you are not saved? You were just put into
a position to be saved, provided something doesn’t happen. If I swim out
into the middle of the lake to rescue you, then drag you ninety yards and
leave you ten yards from shore, then brag after I get back to shore that
I have saved you—I didn’t save you. I put you in a position to be saved
provided you could swim ten yards.
And if you look to
Jesus and He says, "You will go to Heaven if you don’t do this, or if you
do that," He doesn’t save you; He puts you in a position to be saved if
you can do this or if you can refrain from doing the other.
No, when you looked
to Jesus, you were saved right then and there. And you couldn’t go to Hell
if you tried. Justification is an act that cannot be reversed nor followed
by condemnation.
The Source of salvation—Jesus.
The scope of salvation—"the
ends of the earth."
The simplicity of salvation—just
looking, just trusting.
The surety—and be saved.
I am saved. I am going
to Heaven. Why? Because I’m looking to Jesus. I’m trusting Jesus. And if
you will look to Him, you too will be saved. Trust Him alone and nothing
else.
EDITOR URGES YOU TO TRUST CHRIST
TODAY
You have read the sermon
by Dr. Curtis Hutson, "Simple Salvation." Salvation, as Dr. Hutson has
explained, is a very simple matter. In order to keep people from being
saved, the Devil has tried to complicate it. In many instances, he has
used religion and religionists to accomplish his purpose.
The clear promise of
Scripture in John 1:12 is: "But as many as received him, to them gave he
power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name."
To believe on Christ simply means to trust, to depend on, to rely on Him.
You must trust Christ as you would trust a surgeon to perform a delicate
operation, or as you would trust a pilot to take you across the nation.
The editor joins with
Dr. Hutson and pleads with you to trust Christ today. Simply tell Him in
your own words, "Dear Lord Jesus, I know that I am a sinner. I do believe
You died for me; so here and now I completely trust You for salvation.
I am totally depending on You to take me to Heaven when I die. Amen."
If you have prayed that
simple prayer and will write to tell me so, we have some free literature to send
to you that will help as you set out to live the Christian life.
Decision Form
Dr.
Shelton Smith
Sword of
the Lord
PO Box
1099
Murfreesboro, TN 37133-1099
Dear Dr.
Smith,
I have
read the sermon entitled “Simple Salvation,” by Dr. Curtis Hutson, and have made
the decision to receive Christ as my Saviour. Please send me the free literature
that you mentioned that will help me to grow in my Christian life and that will
help me to share with others the message of salvation.
Date_____________________________
Name____________________________
Address___________________________
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