This question came up this morning and so I thought I'd post my thoughts here.
It seems to me that most of the confusion surrounding such a question comes from looking in the wrong place for the answer.
If someone asked me to prove that I am saved, I would not point to my behavior, my church attendance, my emotions, or any ritual I have participated in. I would point to one thing only, and I would say it plainly:
I believe the gospel.
Paul defines that gospel clearly:
That is the content. That is the object of faith. That is the dividing line.
The issue is not whether a man has been baptized, whether he speaks in tongues, whether he keeps the law, or whether he has cleaned up his life. The issue is whether he is trusting the finished work of Christ alone.
Paul removes all ambiguity on this point:
If I have to point to my works to prove I am saved, then I am no longer standing on grace. I am attempting to validate myself, and that is precisely what Paul excludes.
Now here is where the discussion often gets shallow, because people reduce the gospel to a set of abstract facts, as though merely agreeing that certain events happened in history is sufficient. The gospel is not less than that, but it is certainly more.
The one who died for our sins was not merely a man. God Himself took on flesh. The eternal Son entered into His own creation, lived as a man, and went to the cross. The one we call Jesus is not simply a messenger of salvation, He is the very ground of it. His death is sufficient because of who He is. His resurrection is decisive because death had no rightful claim on Him.
To believe the gospel, then, is to entrust yourself to Him. Not to your performance, not to your reform, not to your religious activity, but to the Person and work of the Lord Jesus Christ.
That is the proof.
Everything else follows from that, but nothing can replace it.
There will, of course, be a change in thinking and in life. Paul speaks often about walking worthy, about putting off the old man, about bearing fruit. Those things are real, and they matter. However, they are the result of salvation, not the evidence by which it is established.
A man can clean up his life and still be lost. A man can be baptized and still be lost. A man can be deeply religious and still be lost.
The question is not, “What have you done?”
The question is, “What are you trusting?”
If the answer is anything other than Christ alone, then no amount of external evidence will prove salvation. If the answer is Christ alone, then that is sufficient, because God Himself has said so:
It seems to me that most of the confusion surrounding such a question comes from looking in the wrong place for the answer.
If someone asked me to prove that I am saved, I would not point to my behavior, my church attendance, my emotions, or any ritual I have participated in. I would point to one thing only, and I would say it plainly:
I believe the gospel.
Paul defines that gospel clearly:
I Corinthians 15:3 For I delivered to you first of all that which I also received: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, 4 and that He was buried, and that He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures,
That is the content. That is the object of faith. That is the dividing line.
The issue is not whether a man has been baptized, whether he speaks in tongues, whether he keeps the law, or whether he has cleaned up his life. The issue is whether he is trusting the finished work of Christ alone.
Paul removes all ambiguity on this point:
Romans 4:5 But to him who does not work but believes on Him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is accounted for righteousness
If I have to point to my works to prove I am saved, then I am no longer standing on grace. I am attempting to validate myself, and that is precisely what Paul excludes.
Now here is where the discussion often gets shallow, because people reduce the gospel to a set of abstract facts, as though merely agreeing that certain events happened in history is sufficient. The gospel is not less than that, but it is certainly more.
The one who died for our sins was not merely a man. God Himself took on flesh. The eternal Son entered into His own creation, lived as a man, and went to the cross. The one we call Jesus is not simply a messenger of salvation, He is the very ground of it. His death is sufficient because of who He is. His resurrection is decisive because death had no rightful claim on Him.
To believe the gospel, then, is to entrust yourself to Him. Not to your performance, not to your reform, not to your religious activity, but to the Person and work of the Lord Jesus Christ.
That is the proof.
Everything else follows from that, but nothing can replace it.
There will, of course, be a change in thinking and in life. Paul speaks often about walking worthy, about putting off the old man, about bearing fruit. Those things are real, and they matter. However, they are the result of salvation, not the evidence by which it is established.
A man can clean up his life and still be lost. A man can be baptized and still be lost. A man can be deeply religious and still be lost.
The question is not, “What have you done?”
The question is, “What are you trusting?”
If the answer is anything other than Christ alone, then no amount of external evidence will prove salvation. If the answer is Christ alone, then that is sufficient, because God Himself has said so:
Romans 5:1 Therefore, having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ
That is where assurance rests. Not in the shifting ground of human performance, but in the finished work of the One who loved us and gave Himself for us.