Confess Christ

Romans 10:9 King James Version (KJV) That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved.

Just yesterday I heard a grieving mother say that she hopes her recently deceased daughter is with her grandmother and that she will get to see them someday. It was not the right time to say to her, “I never heard either one confess Christ.”

Why do people want to be comforted in times of grief by thoughts of heaven when they know nothing about what it takes to be saved? Waiting until our loved one are dead is too late for them to find eternal security. Later after a respectful mourning period, I will try and talk to her. Right now is too painful for her. Maybe it is too painful for me.

After my first wife died I divorced myself from her side of the family. Her brother did not attend the funeral. Now his daughter is dead and I feel bad that I did not reach out when it might have done some good. It is too late for the grandmother and daughter that never confessed Christ. What of the living?

Do we have people in our lives that do not understand what it means to confess Christ? Do we have a proper understanding? When I ask people I often get the reply “Yes, I believe in Jesus.” Is that the same thing as believing ON our Lord Jesus Christ?

If that confuses you, it was meant to make you think about what you believe and to be absolutely sure about what it takes to gain eternal salvation in Christ.

A review of the requirements seems appropriate at this time.

I pray you will be here tomorrow. Tomorrow is not promised to us.

Footnotes

2 Timothy 3:16-17 English Standard Version (ESV) 16 All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, 17 that the man of God[a] may be complete, equipped for every good work.

Footnotes:

That is, a messenger of God (the phrase echoes a common Old Testament expression)

Not all footnotes are as instructive as this one but we should read them all anyway. They often clarify the difficulties with translations of ancient writings where meaning are often understood from cultural use and experience. Cultures change and meanings might get muddled without some explanation.

This footnote goes one step further and ties this New Testament epistle to Old Testament culture. At the time of Paul’s letter the Old Testament was all the Jewish converts had in a way of bible writings. Those epistles were copied and circulated among the early Christian churches with the same accuracy as the habits of the Jewish scribes. Decades passed before the gospels were to be circulated in the same fashion.

If people were not able to read Greek or Aramaic they were without writing material. The gospel was during those first days enacted in two forms, verbal and actionable. If actions did not match the words, Christianity would have died in its infancy.

It was important that during those early days that men and women who carried the gospel message forward would be seen as messengers of God. The actions of those witnesses had to be godly or the message would have died.

We don’t often speak to the issues of godly behavior enough. Our messages are centered on the commonality of our sin nature and that none of are free from sin. We are however freed from the power of sin and in that we should remind ourselves that our actions must not belie the message.

We are messengers of God.