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Being one who knows and preaches that Jesus Christ will reconcile, and in effect has reconciled, all men to Himself, and witnessing others who believe in the reconciliation of all things, I have often heard this question asked:
“If all sinners are going to be saved, what was the point of Jesus Christ dying on the cross for us?”
That, I have to say, is one of the stupidest questions one could ever ask, and here’s the simple answer:
“So that all sinners might be saved!”
Let’s say I go to the store and buy twelve chairs that are selling for $50 each. I pay the price in full ($600), receive a receipt for the purchase, and the salesclerk gives me one chair. I say, “Where are the other eleven chairs?” The salesclerk looks at me like I am an idiot and says, “What was the point of paying for twelve chairs if you are going to get them all?”
Excuse me?! If I pay for twelve chairs, am I not entitled to them? If I wanted one or two chairs, I would have paid for only one or two, and I would only receive what I paid for.
Jesus Christ paid for the sins of all people, so all people redeemed is what He will have. “For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but so that the world might be saved through Him” (John 3:17 MKJV).
Somehow religious people who think they are among those chosen to be saved have the impression that if only a small percentage will be saved, then it was worth Christ dying for sinners, but if all are saved by His precious blood, then it wasn’t worth it! Just how precious is His blood anyway?
The problem most often leading to this silly notion is that these people think they somehow earned their way in, believing on the Lord Jesus Christ, confessing Him with their lips as their Savior, and perhaps even repenting of their sins. The thought of everybody getting in is anathema to them because they made sacrifices to believe and get in, while the vast majority will get in for nothing! They assume others won’t need repentance and faith.
They assume wrongly, and that is part of their problem. All those who are reconciled to God go through the same process of faith and turning away from themselves, their sin, and their world, whether in this age or in the one(s) to come.
Who is going to cheat me out of the chairs for which I paid the full price? Some thief might try. The retailer might try, and if it tried, it would also be a thief. Now the thief who deals in the salvation of mankind is Satan. If he succeeds in stealing fully-paid-for goods from Jesus Christ and gets away with it, of what value was the precious currency of shed blood for those perished? How great is our Savior if He simply could not secure His purchased possessions? Can God be permanently robbed of anything that is rightfully His and which He took measures to redeem? Is He a loser or a winner?
So then we have the problem of the silly doctrine that man, having free will, must choose to be saved, coupled with the notion that God will not go against man’s will if it chooses to go against His. Yet Jesus said to His own apostles:
“You have not chosen Me, but I have chosen you and ordained you that you should go and bring forth fruit, and that your fruit should remain; that whatever you shall ask of the Father in My name, He may give it to you” (John 15:16 MKJV).
“For by grace you are saved through faith, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast. For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to good works, which God has before ordained that we should walk in them” (Ephesians 2:8-10 MKJV).
Perhaps there is another explanation as to why some religious people think not everyone deserves to be saved. By the human, fallen, selfish sin nature, we like to think of ourselves as privileged. “I’m better than you; look at me; see how holy I am; I go to church, I read the Bible, I don’t smoke or get drunk; I don’t cuss – I preach and witness instead – I stick up for God! But look at you – you don’t deserve to go to Heaven. ‘Without holiness, no man shall see God,’ the Bible says. No, because you won’t believe me, you’ll go to hell. Too bad, but I will be in ecstatic glory without you. By the way, I love you.”
There is one more possibility for the misunderstanding many have. Because they see people dying before experiencing repentance and faith toward God, they assume their death to be the end of opportunity to be saved for all time. This is not so. There are other worlds or ages to come.
All people serve their purpose in this world and the next as the Lord sees fit. When it is their time to come to Him, He will summon them. Nowhere in Scripture, but nowhere, does it say one can only be saved in this life.
Putting away these false, ungodly, unScriptural notions will clear the way for the peace and freedom of the soul.
So, to those who ask this most foolish of questions, allow me to ask a question in return:
“If all sinners are not going to be saved, what was the point of Jesus Christ dying on the cross and paying the full price for all of us?”
Victor Hafichuk