One Way
(Part 3)
by Rev. David Blunt
In this concluding article in this series we look at the opinion which
insists that those who are not exposed to God's written revelation are
not saved. Even here we find competing options today: the article
therefore concludes with a statement of the orthodox view and its
implications.
This article was published in the
Presbyterian Standard, Issue No. 9,
January-March 1998.
T
HE third and final view which we consider advocates that:
"THERE IS NO SALVATION FOR THE UNEVANGELISED ."
We have now arrived at those viewpoints which may be termed "orthodox"
in the sense that they deny that the heathen can be saved apart from a
knowledge of Christ. However, we may again distinguish three variations
on this theme.
1. The Sincere Seeker
This stance depends upon a concept of "the honest searcher after
truth." It is held that there are those who respond positively to the
light of natural revelation, and that God in turn responds to such
sincerity by ensuring that the message of Christ reaches them in some
form: they must then accept it in order to be saved. The Ethiopian
eunuch (Acts 8) and Cornelius the centurion (Acts 10) are cited as
examples. Missionary J. Oswald Sanders says:
"...God will always respect sincerity where it exists, and will grant
further light and lead those who respond to the impulses of the Holy
Spirit to a knowledge of Christ."
This view in effect proves too much. The unevangelised pagan eventually
becomes a gospel-hearer, and is saved or lost on an identical basis
with those in evangelised lands. But we must disagree with this notion
of a sincere seeker: the Bible declares emphatically that "There is
none that understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God" (Rom.
3:11), i.e. the mind and will of fallen man are so corrupted that no
sinner naturally desires and searches for the living and true God. When
we encounter a "genuine" seeker, we are not meeting one who has
improved upon general revelation, but one in whom God has already
worked by His Spirit, and will certainly lead to a saving knowledge of
Christ (Psa. 65.4; Hos. 11.3,4; John 6.44,45).
2. Conditional Immortality/Annihilation
Essentially these related teachings maintain that unbelievers (for some
these include the unevangelised, for others not), cannot be saved
— but that they cannot be damned either! Those who have not
believed in Jesus Christ during this life are not admitted to heaven,
but neither do they suffer the everlasting conscious punishment
traditionally held to by orthodoxy: rather they cease to exist
altogether.
Dean Farrar
records Justyn Martyr and Irenaeus among the early Fathers holding to
conditional immortality. Post-Reformation, he cites Anglican divines,
including Archbishop Whately, and Isaac Watts among the
non-conformists. Such views have been revived recently among
evangelicals.
A.
Conditional Immortality.
This theory maintains that immortality is not inherent in man's being
but is a gift that God bestows only upon believers. Unbelievers do not
survive death. The Anglican commentator Philip E. Hughes latterly
propounded this viewpoint. In posing the question, "Is the Soul
Immortal?" he answers in the negative, concluding:
"Too late will they (the unregenerate) then wish they had lived and
believed differently. The destiny they have fashioned for themselves
will cast them without hope into the abyss of obliteration. Their lot,
whose names are not written in the Lamb's book of life, is the
destruction of the second death."
B.
Annihilation.
This idea holds that all men survive death, but that unbelievers will
eventually be annihilated after the general resurrection. Anglican
evangelical John Stott has made public his support for this view.
Before detailing four arguments in favour of annihilation, he says:
"...emotionally, I find the concept (eternal conscious torment)
intolerable and do not understand how people can live with it without
either cauterising their feelings or cracking under the strain.
But...As a committed Evangelical, my question must be...what does God's
word say?...we need to survey the biblical material afresh and to open
our minds (not just our hearts) to the possibility that Scripture
points in the direction of annihilation, and that 'eternal conscious
torment' is a tradition which has to yield to the supreme authority of
Scripture."
These ideas clearly both hinge upon whether the soul of man is
immortal. Stott writes: "...the immortality — and therefore
indestructibility — of the soul is a Greek not a biblical
concept." But the Church historically has affirmed the innate
immortality of man's being:
"After God had made all other creatures, he created man, male and
female, with reasonable and immortal souls..." (Gen. 1:27; Gen. 2:7,
Ecc. 12:7, Luke 23:43, Matt. 10;28). ( West. Conf. of Faith, IV.ii.)
John Murray wrote:
"The Scripture provides us with copious evidence to establish the
thesis that there belongs to man a subsistence or entity distinguished
from the body and characterised by qualities in virtue of which it does
not undergo the dissolution that befalls the body in death. The
Scripture designates this as spirit or soul."
Some passages often appealed to by annihilationists have been well covered by Arthur Pink.
3. Eternal Punishment
That this has been the traditional stand of the Christian Church is
acknowledged even by those who oppose it, and of course it is well
covered in literature. Only those responsible adults who consciously
respond to the Christ proclaimed to them in the gospel can be saved.
The conviction that the unevangelised are eternally lost goes back to
ancient Judaism. Calvin felt that a lack of opportunity to hear the
gospel was one of the marks of reprobation: "That they (the reprobate)
may come to their end, he sometimes deprives them of the capacity to
hear his word."
There is no difference in this respect between those who have rejected
the gospel and those to whom it has never come. The difference lies in
the degree of punishment that the two classes will receive, which is in
accordance with the light or knowledge they have been given (Luke
12:47,48). The destiny of the unevangelised is therefore embraced in
the following sombre creedal statement:
"...but the wicked, who know not God, and obey not the gospel of Jesus
Christ, shall be cast into eternal torments, and be punished with
everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the
glory of his power." ( WCF, XXXIII.ii.)
CONCLUSION
After our survey and critique of the evangelical viewpoints on this
vital subject, we conclude by setting out the following axioms in
defence of the traditional view that the unevangelised are eternally
lost.
1.
The heathen have heard.
While the peoples of evangelised lands have been exposed to the written
Word of God, or special revelation, the heathen partake of the
unwritten word, or natural revelation (Psa. 19:1-4). There is no gospel
preached in this revelation, for the gospel is "the mystery, which was
kept secret since the world began" (Rom. 16:25): but there is
sufficient information to render men responsible before God (Rom.
1:19,20).
2.
The heathen are guilty before God.
The unevangelised are not blameworthy for refusing the Saviour of whom
they have never heard, but for turning aside from the witness of
creation and conscience (Rom. 1:21-23). Natural law, or the light of
nature as reflected in the conscience of man, provides the ground for
the judgment of God upon the unevangelised. This is the standard by
which sin in the pagan is measured (Rom. 2:14,15). No heathen does not
sometimes violate his conscience, or come short of his own creed (Rom.
3:9).
3.
The heathen are perishing.
Because pagans are guilty before a holy God, and because the light of
nature affords them no basis for saving faith in Christ, they are
indeed perishing eternally (Rom. 2:12). Paul's observations on the
Ephesian Christians' former state are applicable to all the heathen
peoples: "...having no hope, and without God in the world" (Eph. 2:12).
The ground-rules of redemption force us to conclude with Hodge that the
unevangelised are entering upon a lost eternity:
"The heathen in mass, with no single definite and unquestionable
exception on record, are evidently strangers to God, and going down to
death in an unsaved condition. The presumed possibility of being saved
without a knowledge of Christ remains, after eighteen hundred years, a
possibility illustrated by no example."
4.
The heathen must be the object of the Church's missionary endeavour.
While God has not categorically stated that He never extends His
salvation to sinners except by Christian evangelistic effort, every
Bible teaching and inference obliges us to assume that this is so. The
commission of the risen Christ to His disciples is the Church's mandate
to labour as though everything depended upon her agency (Mark
16:15,16).
We must never slack in our zeal to reach the unevangelised multitudes,
perhaps secretly influenced by the belief that they are not really
perishing, or that somehow for them to hear and reject the gospel will
render them guilty before God, whereas previously they were innocent.
That will surely make us lukewarm, or even silent, in our presentation
of the only way of man's redemption. Rather we should adopt the clear
logic of Scripture itself:
"For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved. How
then shall they call on him in whom they have not believed? and how
shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard? and how shall
they hear without a preacher? And how shall they preach, except they be
sent? as it is written, How beautiful are the feet of them that preach
the gospel of peace, and bring glad tidings of good things!" (Rom.
10:13-15).
Bibliography
Calvin, J.,
Institutes of the Christian Religion. The Westminster Press, Philadelphia, U.S.A., 1960, III.xxiv.12.
Hodge, A.A.,
The Confession of Faith. Banner of Truth Trust, Edinburgh, 1983, p.176.
Murray, J.,
Collected Writings of John Murray. Banner of Truth Trust, Edinburgh, 1977, vol.2, p.19.
Pink, A.W.,
Eternal Punishment. Evangelical Press,Welwyn, Herts., n.d., pp.8-10.
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Letter to Anworth — by Samuel Rutherford
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