Yet some Christians would have
us believe that God, our heavenly Father, who is not weak and imperfect,
punishes forever and ever people who have never even heard the gospel. And
fascinatingly, these same people call God the God of grace and mercy.
Let’s think about it for a
moment. Jesus tells us to love our enemies, and yet some Christians think
God not only hates his enemies, but burns them mercilessly and relentlessly
for eternity.
Jesus prayed for his killers,
saying, "Father, forgive them, because they don’t know what they’re doing."
But some Christians teach that God only forgives certain people, the ones he
predestined to forgive before he even created the Earth. Which, if true,
means that Jesus’ prayer didn’t make a whole lot of difference.
On our heads?
How often have you heard someone
giving their "witness" speak about how miserable and guilty they felt over
failing to present the gospel to someone who died? One Christian youth
leader recently told a group of college kids a morbid story about how he met
a person and talked to him, and felt an urge to present the gospel, but then
didn’t actually do it during their conversation. Then he learned that the
man died, hit by a car, later that same day.
"That man is in hell right now,"
he told the young, wide-eyed, Christian students, "suffering indescribable
agony." Then with a dramatic pause, he added, "and all that’s on my head."
He told them how he suffers nightmares about what he has done, and how he
lies in bed sobbing over the horrible truth that because of him, this poor
wretch will suffer the torments of fiery hell forever.
I marvel at the way some people
can so expertly juggle their faith on the one hand that God so loved the
world that he sent Jesus, with their faith (yes, it takes faith) on the
other hand that God is so shockingly inept at actually saving people that he
sends them to hell based on our incompetence. Standing steadfastly in
faith in God’s power and love with one part of their minds, they actually
believe at the same time that God’s hands are tied to save people if we
fail to get to them in time.
"You are saved by grace and not
by works," they say (rightly so), and yet they somehow have taken a most
baffling detour to come up with the patently anti-gospel idea that people’s
eternal destiny is determined by our success or failure in the work
of evangelizing.
Nobody slips
through Jesus’ fingers
As much as we humans love our
kids, how much more does God love them? It’s a rhetorical question— God
loves them infinitely more than we are even able to love them.
Jesus said, "Which of you
fathers, if your son asks for a fish, will give him a snake instead?... If
you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children,
how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who
ask him!" (Luke 11:11-12).
God really does love the world.
And the salvation of what God loves depends on God, not how good we are at
telling the gospel story. And God is really good at what he does.
So if you’re carrying a burden
of guilt about someone you didn’t get the gospel to before he or she died,
why not hand that burden over to Jesus? Nobody slips through his fingers,
and nobody goes to hell because of you. (Who do you think you are, anyway?)
Our God is good and merciful and
strong. And you can trust him to be that way for everybody, not just for
you.