IT SOUNDS INCREDIBLE,
yet it’s really true! Back in 1891, James Bertley, a British whale harpooner,
fell overboard near the Falkland Islands and was swallowed by a wounded sperm
whale. Several hours later the whale was captured and Bertley was rescued out
of its stomach—alive, but out of his mind for a few days. Twenty seven hundred
years prior to Bertley’s experience, another man was swallowed by a gigantic
whale in the Mediterranean Sea. Far surpassing Bertley’s ordeal, this man
survived for three days in the fish’s belly! Finally in desperation he cried
out, “Salvation is of the Lord. And the Lord spake unto the fish, and it
vomited out Jonah upon the dry land” (Jonah 2:9,10).
What Jonah uttered on that occasion is good theology indeed, and he learned it
in a strange school—a whale’s belly, with weeds wrapped around his
head. I don’t know if that word “SALVATION” impresses you, but
it cer-tainly conveys a lot to me. The word simply means, “Deliverance,
Safety, Preservation.” It carries the thought of being rescued from a coming
catastrophe and brought into a secure and blessed position—and notice, the
Lord is the only One who can accomplish this.
THE DIVINE APPRAISAL
Man is born of a fallen race, condemned because of his participation in Adam’s
sin, doomed because of the fact that he has only a fallen nature, judged as one
who is under the dominion and power of sin, and guilty before God because of his
personal sins (Rom. 3:9-23; 5:12). Consequently he is “dead in trespasses
and sins,” a child of dis-obedience, by nature a child of wrath, having
no hope, and without God in the world. This is the Almighty’s ap-praisal
of him (Eph. 2:1-3,12).
Unless he obtains God’s salvation during his lifetime, he will experience
everlasting punishment in the lake that burns with fire and brimstone. Cowards
deny and scoffers laugh at this truth, but that doesn’t change the fact,
the reality, one iota. The Holy Bible is mercilessly clear on the subject of eternal
damnation and punishment of the lost. A careful reading of Luke 16:19-31; Revelation
20:11-15 and the Lord’s own words in Matthew 24:41,46 and Mark 9:43-48,
will prove this.
Man’s problem of guilt and sin is so great that he cannot cope with it himself.
In no way can he forgive his own sin, impart eternal life to himself, clothe himself
with the righteousness of God, or write his name in heaven. God says man is hopelessly
“dead” to accomplish anything to better himself spiritually. In view
of such a dark picture, man needs deliverance, safety, and preservation. In other
words—he needs God’s salvation! Since salvation belongs to God alone,
He alone can bestow it. Thank God, it is available to all, for God desires all
men to be saved (I Tim. 2:4).
THE DIVINE PURCHASE
Human efforts can never purchase salvation. However, God offers it freely, for
it has been purchased by the Son of God. This involved leaving the Father’s
house in heaven, coming to earth to be born of a virgin—then in perfect
manhood, offering Himself as a sacrifice for sin at Calvary. “Christ died
for the ungodly” (Rom. 5 :6). “Christ died for our sins” (I
Cor. 15:3). “Christ died for us” (Rom. 5:8). He “put away sin
by the sacrifice of Himself” (Heb. 9:26), thus satisfying all God’s
righteous claims against us! Through His death “He became the Author of
eternal salvation” (Heb. 5:9). The Church does not hold this salvation and
dispense it at its whim. Oh no! God righteously would never stand for that! Only
God can impart salvation to the lost and perishing—and what a great salvation
it is! It provides a dismissal of every charge against the sinner and equips him
with eternal life in place of death—with the perfect merit of Christ in
place of condemnation—and with forgiveness and justification in place of
wrath! Through the death of Christ, all judgment is so perfectly borne that it
can never again be reckoned against the believer. “There is therefore now
no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus” (Rom. 8:1).
HUMAN OBTAINING
The obtaining of salvation is simple! God says to you, “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” (Eph. 2:8,9) “Grace” means,
that in spite of our being so undeserving of salvation, God’s unmerited
favor bestows it upon us. “Through faith” indicates that faith is
the channel, or instrument, through which salvation comes to us. “Not of
yourselves” shows it is not our ac-tion that saves us. “The gift of
God” simply means that God freely offers His salvation as a gift. You cannot
work or pay for a gift, for if you do, it automatically ceases to be a gift. God’s
gift is received free from the Giver. The mo-ment Zacchaeus received Christ the
Lord said to him, “This day is salvation come to this house” (Lk.
19:9). Good living, good deeds, and religious observances are all activities that
many are depending on for salvation. But God exposes and denounces these by saying,
“Not of works, lest any man should boast.”
If you are relying on your own efforts to gain heaven, forsake such thoughts,
and like Zacchaeus, simply receive the Saviour. If you do, this day salvation
will come from God to you! “Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now
is the day of salvation” (2 Cor. 6:2). Do not delay, for “how shall
we escape, if we neglect so great salvation?” (Heb. 2: 3).
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