How can we have a secure "assurance of salvation"? The apostle John likes to 
nail things down, to "know" this or that for sure. Some two dozen times in his 
First Letter he says we can "know" that we "know" the truth. Half of those 
times he uses the word ginosko, which means to be informed, to gain the 
knowledge of. The other half he uses the word eido which means to know by 
perception of truth, or shall we say, by common sense. He has "written unto you 
... that ye may know (eido) that ye have eternal life" (5:13).
How can spiritual common sense give us this "assurance"? The answer is in verse 
11: "God hath given to us eternal life, and this life is in His Son." "God so 
loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son" (John 3:16), not merely 
offered to give Him. Some five or six times in Romans 5 Paul emphasizes that 
God has given us the "free gift" that has reversed the "condemnation" that came 
upon the human race "in Adam," and as John says, that gift is "in Christ." The 
Father gave Christ to the world, that He might already be "the Saviour of the 
world," "the Saviour of all men, specially of those that believe" (John 4:42; 1 
Tim. 4:10).

What it boils down to is this: salvation is due to God's initiative; damnation 
can be due only to our own initiative in choosing not to "believe" the truth. 
As surely as Esau had the birthright, so surely you have eternal life in 
Christ. He gave Himself for you and to you. He not only offered to give you the 
gift of eternal life so that your salvation would depend on your own 
initiative; He actually gave you the gift so that in eternity you would never 
have any reason to "boast" that you took the initiative. It's 100% "by grace 
are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God 
[there's that word again!]: not of works, lest any man should boast" (Eph. 2:8, 
9).

Although Esau had the birthright, he chose to "despise" it and "sold" it for a 
trifle of worldly pleasure (Gen. 25:34: Heb. 12:16). "He that believeth not" 
takes the initiative in his being lost at last (John 3:18, 19), "despises" what 
God has given him "in Christ." Cherish your assurance in Christ, but don't be 
cocksure in yourself. You can trust Him but you can't trust yourself. You can 
very easily do something stupid. Look both ways before you cross the street.

--Robert J. Wieland

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