EXPLORING CHRISTIANITY - ASSURANCE

THE BIBLE
Can we trust a book written 2000 years ago?

EYEWITNESS
Did the writers of the New Testament get their picture of Jesus right?

GOD - MAN
Is Jesus really God?

RESURRECTION
Did Jesus really rise from the dead?

RELIGIONS
With so many religions, why Christianity?

SUFFERING
If there is a God, why is there so much suffering?

TRINITY
Understanding the Trinity.

SCIENCE
The complementary nature of Science & Christianity.

FORGIVENESS
What it is and why it matters?

GUIDANCE
How does God guide?

REPENTANCE
What it is and why you can't get to heaven without it.

BORN AGAIN
What does it mean to be converted and born again?

SAVING FAITH
The kind of faith that will get you to heaven

ASSURANCE
Can I know for sure that I am going to heaven?

TRUTH
What is truth and does it matter?

MORALITY
Does it matter how we live? A Christian view of morality.

THE CHURCH
God's vision for his family, the Church. A call to the churches of the new millennium.

PURPOSE
How can I find a great purpose for living?

IDENTITY
Who am I; Finding my true identity as a human being and as a child of God.

SELF-ESTEEM
How can I feel good about my self? The Christian basis for proper sel-esteem.

LIFE AFTER DEATHChristianity's Hope & Challenge.

THE CROSS
Why did Jesus Die? What the Bible says about the Cross.

Grace
The importance of grace in the New Testament.

 

Christian certainty in the New Testament

"This certainty they were to discover is found everywhere in the book of Acts and the letters of the New Testament"

From the moment of Jesus' resurrection from the dead, and the giving of the Holy Spirit on the Jewish day of Pentecost seven weeks later, there is a note of certainty that runs through the New Testament. When speaking to his disciples at his last meal with them before he was crucified, Jesus talked about the coming of the Holy Spirit. He said, "Then you will know that I am one with the Father. You will know that you are one with me, and I am one with you" (John 14:20). This certainty they were to discover is found everywhere in the book of Acts and the letters of the New Testament. John gives us the reason for writing his first letter near the end of the New Testament: "I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God so that you may know that you have eternal life" (1 John 5:13).

The Bible talks about the "full assurance of understanding" (Colossians 2:2), "the full assurance of hope" (Hebrews 6:11) and "the full assurance of faith" (Hebrews 10:22).

Paul, facing possible death in a Roman prison, wrote, "I want to die and be with Christ, because that would be much better" (Philippians 1:23). He says, "We should be cheerful, because we would rather leave these bodies and be at home with the Lord" (2 Corinthians 5:8). The author of Hebrews, in commending those he writes to, says, "You gladly let your possessions be taken away, because you knew you had something better, something that would last forever" (Hebrews 10:34).

If you wish to explore further this certainty of heaven and of the defeat of death in the New Testament, I would suggest you begin with the following passages:

Romans 8:28-39
1 Corinthians 15
2 Corinthians 5:1-9
Philippians 1:20-24
Hebrews 2:14,15
1 Peter 1:3-9
2 Timothy 4:6-8

There have been a great many examples throughout history of individuals facing death with this same certainty found in the New Testament. One of my favourite stories is about C. T. Studd, who captained the English cricket team in the 1880s. He left a promising career at home to go as a missionary to China. Later, when most men would think of retiring, he pioneered missionary work in the heart of Africa. When dying in central Africa, the last word he wrote, in a letter to missionaries, was "Alleluia!" The last word he spoke was "Alleluia!" After his death, the mission sent a telegram back to England, "Bwana glorified July 16th, Alleluia!"

Another is the story of Henry Venn, Anglican clergyman and one of the founders of the Church Missionary Society. During his final illness his doctor told him he only had a week to live. He actually lived for three weeks. His doctor later declared that it was the prospect of dying and going to heaven that made him so jubilant and high-spirited, and it was this that had kept him alive for the extra fortnight!

 

 

Foreward

Can I know for sure that I am going to Heaven?

The nature of our relationship with God

Christian certainty in the New Testament

Truths on which we base our certainty of heaven

Does it matter?

 



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