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Bible Questions with Michael Pearl - Episode 005
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Mike Pearl: All right here we are, Jared and Mike Pearl. Jared's working the
equipment, and Mike Pearl is sitting right here in this seat,
behind the fuzzy face. I'm here to answer your Bible questions,
Jared's got some things you've written in and asked, and I've not
seen them yet. So Jared's going to read the question and I'm going
to try and come up with the answer. What have you got, Jared?
Jared: Hebrew 6:4-6 seems to imply that it's impossible for someone to
have a relationship with God, fall away, and then come back to him,
because in doing so they put God to shame. Your take on these
verses would be appreciated.
Mike: If I took the passage, Hebrew 6:4-6, just took it out of its
context, then it would be a scary passage, you'd have to believe in
the losing of your salvation, but if you take it in its context, it
makes a whole lot of sense. The context actually starts in Chapter
5. He says, "But strong meat belongeth unto them that are full age,
who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both
good and evil. Therefore, leaving the principles of the doctrine of
Christ, let us go unto perfection, not laying again the foundation
of repentance from dead works, and of faith toward God, of the
doctrine of resurrection, of baptism, and the laying on of hands,
and eternal judgment." So he said that we need to go on from being
a believer -- we need to go onto perfection, and not lay again, any
-- of that long list there of one, two -- not lay again the
foundations of the Christian faith. That is, not getting saved a second time.
"For it's impossible..." Notice the word "for". "For" relates back
to what he just said one, two, and three. Go on unto perfection, "for
it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have
tasted the heavenly gift, and were partakers of the Holy Ghost..." Look
up the word "tasted", the Greek word there behind that, and you
find that Christ tasted death for every man. You find the word taste
is a full, complete taste. It's not something light and delicate.
So, "tasted the heavenly gift" is to consume it. And we're
made "partakers" - look up the word "partakers", the Greek word behind
it, and you'll find it is a full partaking - "partakers of the
Holy Ghost, and have tasted the good word of God and the powers
of the world to come." Now, that's clearly a description of a saved
man. I say that, because many people try to interpret that
as not being a saved man: someone almost got saved. So clearly he said,
if you're saved, if you've had this experience and you're saved,
don't relay the foundation of salvation. Why? Because "it's
impossible for those who are saved..." - rest of verse four and
five and verse six - "...if they shall fall away to renew them
again unto repentance, seeing as they crucify themselves the Son
of God afresh and put him to an open shame."
So what he said here is I'm writing this to you, who are full age,
who are fully grown up as Christians, not to you baby Christians,
he said, because if you're really saved, don't relay your
foundation, go on and be perfect. Because if, hypothetically, if
you fell away, it would be impossible to renew you again in
repentance.
Basically what he said is, don't get saved again, go on and get
perfect before God, because if you think you've lost it, you can't
get saved again anyway. Salvation is a one-shot deal, you can only
get saved once; you can't get saved twice. If you got saved and
lost it, it couldn't be renewed.
Why? If you did get saved, truly saved, you're on your way to
Heaven, you're forgiven, on what basis would you be saved? You'd be
saved on the basis of the fact that Jesus Christ died for you, bore
your sins, and paid the full price. Now if you were saved, and you
lost it, on what basis would you lose it? You'd lose it on the
basis that you'd out-sinned that gift of atonement that Christ
provided. So, you were saved for two years, in this hypothetical
theoretical, you were saved for a period two years, based on the
blood of Christ, then you lost it because the blood of Christ no
longer covers you anymore.
So you go for one year not being saved, or three months or two days
without being saved, and you say, OK, I'm going to get saved again.
You go back and try to repent again. He said it can't happen,
because you would crucify yourself the Son of God afresh, and put
him in open shame. Christ would have to die a second time, to
provide a second atonement, because you out-sinned the first
atonement. You spent the capital on the first atonement. You used
it up. He paid for all your sins and you out-sinned all your sins.
And so, your first salvation began, and two years later it
terminated and it's no longer any good. So you are now unsaved and
cannot get saved again.
This is a very good passage. I've used this many times. I've been
on the street witnessing to people, and I tell somebody, "Are you
saved?" "Well, I used to be but I lost it." I say, "That's too bad.
I'm sorry I wasted your time." Turn around to walk off. They say,
"Well, wait a minute, why are you walking off?" I say, "Well, it's
too late for you." "What do you mean, it's too late for me? I've
been thinking about getting right and repenting." "Well, it's too
late for you. Says right here, " and I show them, "it's impossible
for those who once were enlightened and tasted the gift and so
forth, if they shall fall away, to renew them to repentance.
So it's impossible for you, you can't get saved again." "Oh, well,
maybe I didn't get saved, or maybe I'm still saved, and I just need
to get right with God." Well, it's one of those two: either you
never got saved or you are saved, and need to repent and go on to
perfection, but in no case, in the world, has anyone ever gotten
saved twice, much less three times, or four times, or five times.
Because Christ would have to die three or four or five times. You
say, then why did he put the passage in here? Going back on the
context, Chapter 5, following through, reading it, getting six,
reading the rest of the context, he's using it the same way I used
it on the street. He's raising the issue, if you think you're
getting saved a second time, let me tell you something, if you lost
it, you couldn't get saved, therefore, quit thinking you lost it,
and go on and be perfect. It's a great passage.
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Jared: If you would like to ask a Bible question, email us at
biblequestions@nogreaterjoy.org, or call at 931-805-4820.
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Transcription by CastingWords