Freedom's Ring: Issue 35
Table of Contents
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Ananias and Paul on CONVERSION
Cecil Hook
During my formative years and earlier years of preaching, my people in
the churches of Christ were much more aggressive in evangelism. This zeal
was fired more fervently by our conviction that we had restored the true
route to salvation which others had abandoned.
Many of our lessons were based on the accounts of conversion recorded in
the Acts of the Apostles which we sometimes described as the book of
conversions. In strength-ening our case, we analyzed each account,
pointed to their parallel messages, and charted them all for comparison to
show that the same thing was required of each convert.
While it is very questionable that Luke’s record in Acts was purposely to
show the route to God’s forgiveness for us to use in evangelistic sermons,
it remains that what he recorded was true. Though he was not teaching us
lessons on how to find salvation, he told Theophilus in his historical
narratives how different persons obtained that forgiveness. His details
are in harmony with the Great Commission in which Jesus offered the
benefit of his atonement to every creature (Matt. 28:19-20; Mark
16:15-16; compare Luke 24:44-49).
Many times I used the exciting story of the conversion of Saul of
Tarsus as illustrative of how a sinner receives salvation. The points gained from such a study are still valid. What
greater authenticity could we look for? Here is a direct intervention by
Jesus, the giving of the Holy Spirit, the divine direction of Ananias, and
the witness of the inspired apostle himself narrated toward the close of
his ministry about a quarter of a century later. So please look again
with me at this part of God’s revelation. There are unsettling points for
our confused religious community along with confirming assurances to be
gained.
Some of this treatise will be negative in an effort to clear away much
rank growth of theological interpretations which tend to hide the
colorful, fragrant flower of truth.
Various details of the conversion of Saul of Tarsus related in Acts
9:1-19; 22:1-21; 26:1-23 are reviewed briefly here. Saul, like a
mythical, fire-breathing monster, was "still breathing threats and
murder against the disciples of the Lord." He was on his way to
Damascus to arrest disciples and to bring them back to Jerusalem bound. As
he approached Damascus, there came a blinding light exceeding the
brightness of the noonday sun. He fell to the ground and heard an
arresting call, "Saul! Saul! Why do you persecute me. You are like
kicking against an ox goad hurting yourself." "Who are you, Lord? What
will you have me do?" The answer must have been an emotional thunderbolt!
"I am Jesus! Go into the city and it will be told you what to do," the
Voice replied.
This blinded, devastated conqueror was led by hand into Damascus where he
prayed in deep contrition for three days without eating or drinking. The
Lord then sent Ananias, a disciple living in Damascus, to Saul. Fearful of
this notorious persecutor, Ananias was reluctant, but the Lord assured him
that Saul had been chosen to carry his name before the Gentiles and kings
and Israel. Then going to Saul and laying his hands on him, Ananias
explained, "Brother Saul, the Lord Jesus, who appeared to you on the road
by which you came, has sent me that you may regain your sight and be
filled with the Holy Spirit." After regaining his sight, Saul was urged,
"And now why do you wait? Rise and be baptized, and wash away your sins,
calling on his name." "Then he rose and was baptized, and took food and
was strengthened."
Your full reading of these references is encouraged as
we now make some observations about them and relate them to present-day
teachings about receiving the grace of God through Christ.
Ineffective Formulas
Paul, addressing the Jewish council many years later, declared,
"Brethren, I have lived before God in all good conscience up to this day"
(23:1). No person should allow himself or herself to be condemned by
violation of conscience, yet living with a clear conscience as Paul had
done cannot save, for it would be a merited salvation. A person can be
conscientious, God-fearing, and zealous while alienated from God. Looking
back later, he would see himself as the chief of sinners at that time.
Those who rely upon a "saving experience" have been known to declare that
Saul was saved "before he hit the ground." We have to look outside the
Scriptures, however, to find mention of the popular concept of a saving
experience. Emotional reactions are not evidences of forgiveness.
Forgiveness is in the mind of God and is not felt in the mind of one
forgiven. For example, while you read this you might forgive me of some
offense but I would not feel it.
When Ananias, who received his
instructions directly, came to Saul, he did not say, "Good brother, Jesus
has appeared to you, so we can be sure you are saved!" If the appearance
of Jesus did not save that sinner, what trust can we have in any sort of
mystical experience or feeling today?
Neither did Ananias, after laying
hands on him, declare, "Saul, you have received the Holy Spirit. You, the
former enemy of Jesus and his disciples, no longer are burdened by those
sins. You are forgiven!" This point is just as true as if the whole world
believed it: There is no record of the Spirit saving anyone by a direct
operation on the person; there is no record of the Spirit ever even
telling anyone directly what to do to be saved. Jesus announced in the
Great Commission and confirmed on Pentecost how a sinner might receive
salvation, and there is no indication that he varied from that in specific
cases. The Holy Spirit guided us into all truth, but the Holy Spirit is
not our savior. More about his work later.
Ananias did not assure Saul
that Jesus had already saved him because "if you confess with your lips
that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the
dead, your will be saved" (Rom. 10:9). Certainly, Saul had become a
believer when Jesus appeared to him on the road, and he had expressed his
submissive faith in contrition by asking Jesus what he wanted him to do.
But he was not yet free from the guilt of his sins!
When the stricken,
undone Saul, called out from the ground, "Lord, what shall I do," Jesus
did not soothe him with, "Saul, there is nothing for you to do. I have
already done it all for you. You have nothing to answer for." Jesus gave
him instructions to follow and said that in the city more instructions
would be given.
Ananias told Saul, "Just believe in Jesus and pray the
sinner’s prayer," didn’t he? Those who give that advice today know that
Ananias did not give it to Saul. If he had, Saul might have rightly
responded, "What do you think I have been doing the last three days and
nights?" But it says, right there in Romans 10:13, "For every one who
calls on the name of the Lord will be saved." So what else could be asked
of Saul? His sins were already remitted. Really? Who says so, modern
pulpiteers or the inspired writers?
With these various experiences in
Saul’s favor in which seekers tend to trust for salvation or as evidence
of having been forgiven, he still had not received that assurance. If he
was saved instantaneously, he did not realize it for he inquired as to
what to do and then followed the instructions given. If he was saved
then, Jesus did not know it for he sent Ananias to him to tell him how to
be rid of his sins. If he was saved before he hit the ground, the Spirit
was not aware of it for he directed Ananias to inform him. Likewise,
Ananias was not informed of it because, after those happenings and his
explanation of why they happened, he urged Saul, "And now why do you wait?
Rise and be baptized, and wash away your sins, calling on his name." His
sins still had not been remitted!
Sins Washed Away
There is no indication
that Saul hesitated, questioning whether sin is something that can be
washed from the body in water. He was familiar with the rituals of
cleansing required by the Law of Moses in which he was schooled. He could
understand the washing of baptism to be a ceremony of purification and
that God accepted such an approved expression of faith inasmuch as it was
impossible for a person to remit his own transgressions. The trust was in
the grace of God rather than an efficacious or sacramental ritual. In
later times Paul never explained that Ananias was too simplistic and
misled in directing him to wash away his sins in baptism. Paul’s epistles
to the Romans and Galatians, written about twenty-five years after his
conversion, in which he commented on baptism, justification by faith,
confession, and calling on the name of the Lord were in complete harmony
with the narrative of his conversion.
Saul’s obedience was under the
direct guidance and supervision of Jesus, the Holy Spirit, and a
Spirited-directed disciple. It was in harmony with Jesus’ Great
Commission to every creature and what Jesus had told Nicodemus in veiled
language about a birth of water and the Spirit. It was in harmony with
the other narratives of conversions in Acts. It is questioned only by
modern theologians!
Saul of Tarsus, thereafter known as Paul, the apostle,
became the evangelist to the Gentiles who wrote various epistles. In
looking back in later years, did Paul ever denounce the place of baptism
in the receiving of the grace of God in Christ? He did not. Instead he
emphasized it as the time of finalizing our relationship with Christ.
In
discussing the covenant of Law and the covenant of grace through faith, he
taught that they were no longer children under a custodian of Law "for in
Christ Jesus you are all sons of God, through faith." The next sentence
explains how: "For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on
Christ" (Gal. 3:26f). Paul included himself as one being "baptized into
Christ" (Rom. 6:3). That change of relationship is not accomplished
through faith without baptism.
When we are baptized into Christ, we are
baptized into the one body, which is the church / ekklesia / the saved (1
Cor. 12:13; Eph. 4:4; Col. 1:18). One cannot have fellowship with Christ,
the source of all spiritual blessing (Eph. 1:3), without being in his
spiritual body which is the church (universal congregation, assembly of
the forgiven).
Since baptism is a ritualistic acceptance of the remission
of sins provided in Christ’s atonement (Acts 2:38; 22:16), we are forgiven
/ saved by the same process that creates our relationship in Christ in his
saved group.
We were separated from God by our sins (Isa. 59:2). Paul
says we are reconciled to God in our relationship in Christ (2 Cor.
5:18f). That reconciliation is in one body (Eph. 2:6) which is the
church; hence, the reconciled are his church. The church does not save,
but it is the saved, for the same procedure that saves us makes us his
saved group. All these considerations identify baptism, not simply
believing, as the point of change of relationship. Being thus reconciled
to God, we are in fellowship with God and all others whom he has forgiven.
Paul further informs us that "if any one is in Christ, he is a new
creation" (2 Cor. 5:17). This newness of life (new birth; John 3:3-5) is
given when one symbolically dies with Christ, is buried with him, and is
raised from the dead with him in baptism (Rom. 6:3-4). In this rebirth of
water and the Spirit one becomes a child of God entering and submitting to
the Kingdom of God (See Gal. 3:26f again).
These references from Paul
which should be studied in context, of course, were written long after his
conversion experience which he himself related in Acts 22 and 26. In them
he explains some deeper meanings without altering his story. Do we have
reason to change it? For two decades converts had obeyed the gospel
sufficiently without his epistles.
Grace Through Faith
About twenty-five
years after his conversion he explained: "For by grace you have been saved
through faith; and this is not your own doing, it is the gift of God – not
because of works, lest any man should boast" (Eph. 2:8f). By that
statement was he saying that Ananias really goofed and misled him into
thinking that he could gain salvation by works when he told him to be
baptized to wash away his sins? Certainly not. Paul could know that he
was formally accepting Christ’s forgiveness which changed his relationship
rather than contributing anything to it. His obedience was no more
merit-orious than his faith. Neither faith nor baptism contributed
anything to the atoning of sins but both are essential to the accepting of
the atonement.
Justification is not delivered to us C.O.D.! We pay
nothing for it, nor do we have anything of merit to offer. That does not
mean, however, that we do not have to answer the postman’s ring or walk to
the mailbox. We must accept the gift or it is "returned to the sender."
We may sign a receipt and use a pocket knife to open the gift. All these
actions are necessary to receiving the benefit of the gift but offer
nothing whatever toward payment for it. Paul did not class his accepting
actions as works adding anything to the completed work of Christ.
All of
Paul’s explanations about salvation by faith must be interpreted in
harmony with his own conversion. Paul taught salvation by faith – a
system of faith – rather than by law with its system of works. When he
wrote of saving faith, he was referring to faith in its full essence which
includes response. "For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor
uncircumcision is of any avail, but faith working through love" (Gal. 5:6)
is a succinct statement of that. Not through rituals of the Law (code) of
Moses, but through Christ’s law (principle of action -- love), saving
faith includes response. Without the essential element of action, faith
is dead, hence, ineffective. The active response of faith is not a work
in the sense that Paul says we could have reason to boast.
Single Factors
We can find prooftexts that attribute salvation to various single
factors such as faith, repentance, calling on the Lord, confession,
baptism, works, and doing the will of the Father. Are we left to choose
the factor which appeals to us, fortifying it with prooftexts, while
disregarding theothers? No, for they are all involved in the system of
faith. When a writer emphasizes a single factor, he is using a common
linguistic device called a metonymy. In the metonymy one part may be used
for the whole. For illustration, if you say your life was saved by the
quick response of the paramedics, you are including all their remedial
activities. Jesus explained that his Golden Rule "is the law and the
prophets" in letting a part represent the whole. Also, in the beloved
Golden Text of the Bible, John 3:16, when Jesus specified "whoever
believes." He was including all the responsive action that is involved in
living faith. Surely, he was not referring o dead faith – faith without
works (James 2:18-26). Even so, inspired writers may attribute our
righteousness to the single or few factors being discussed as in Romans
10. Paul uses this device in answering the jailer’s cry, "Men, what must
I do to be saved?" with "Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved,
you and your household," yet Paul then taught them the more inclusive
word of the Lord and baptized them the same hour of the night. (Acts
16:30f).
It is a marvel to me that students of the Word will quote Paul in
declaring, "Everyone who calls upon the name of the Lord will be saved"
(Rom. 10:13) without relating it to Acts 22:16 where Saul was told, "Rise
and be baptized, and wash away your sins, calling on his name." In his
epistle in later years Paul is not indicating that he was freed from his
guilt on the Damascus road when he called out to the Lord nor at any other
time simply by calling out in something akin to "the sinner’s prayer."
The "calling on his name" is inclusive of his whole conversion process.
"Why do you call me ‘Lord, Lord,’ and do not what I tell you?" Jesus
chided (Lk. 6:46). Again, "Not every one who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’
shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of my Father
who is in heaven" (Matt. 7:21). To call upon the name of the Lord
involves more that crying out to him in prayer.
What, then, does it mean
to call on his name? The name denotes, not some proper name like Jesus,
but the person or authority of that person. To do something in the name
of a person means to do it by the authority of or in behalf of. When Saul
was baptized to wash away his sins, he was doing that by the authority of
the Lord as he was directed to do through Ananias. In this procedure he
was not only invoking the authority of Jesus but also the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Spirit. Just before his ascension, "Jesus came and said to
them, ‘All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go
therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing then in the name of
the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe
all that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, to the close
of the age’" (Matt. 28:18-20).
These considerations interpret Paul’s
"every one who calls" in relation to his own account of his conversion
directed by Ananias. They are in harmony with Jesus’ Great Commission.
There is harmony with the conversion of the first converts on Pentecost
when Peter told that great gathering, "Whoever calls on the name of the
Lord shall be saved," and then instructed convicted men, "Repent, and be
baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness
of your sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit" (Acts
2:21, 38).
Do we not compromise our integrity as interpreters when we
dissociate Paul’s teaching from his own related conversion experience, the
very words of Jesus, and the words of Peter on Pentecost to whom Jesus had
given the authoritative keys of the kingdom? So, in view of these
considerations, what does it mean to call upon the name of the Lord? You
are accountable to God for the answer you give sinners.
Holy Spirit
The
visible manifestations of the baptism of the Holy Spirit as depicted in
Acts were not for the purpose of saving individuals or showing how or when
salvation is given. Let it be stated again: There is no record of the
Holy Spirit filling the saving role or even telling an individual what to
do to be saved. Luke was not explaining the full work of the Spirit that
Jesus had promised. What, then, was Luke explaining?
Please consider
this. The Roman Empire frowned upon new religions among its subjugated
provinces while allowing free practice of their traditional national
religions. Thus, Judaism was permitted. But here were the Christianos
spreading from the Jews but with the disfavor of the Jews. They were
becoming the target of persecution. Luke was writing Theophilus,
evidently a Roman official, not so much to convert him to Christ, but to
assure him that Christianity was the true Judaism which was no longer just
nationalistic but worldwide in its thrust. This was attested by the Holy
Spirit being given to Jewish apostles. Then others, like the Samaritans
who were sort of Jewish cousins, Cornelius who was a Roman, Saul who was
to be an apostle to the Gentiles, and converts to the teachings of John
the Baptist were attested as being in harmony with the Jewish apostles.
Thus the Holy Spirit was demonstrating God’s acceptance of individuals of
different races and cultures in one body of disciples of Jesus. This
would indicate that Christians were the true Israel and that Christianity
was the national religion of God’s approval through the Spirit. Such
status should relieve them of persecution in their spread into the Roman
Empire.
All converts since Pentecost had received the forgiveness of sins
and the gift of the Holy Spirit at the time of their baptism, but only a
few received visible manifestations as proof to onlookers. The visible
manifestation was given in those five instances mentioned above – to some
before baptism in water and to some afterward – to indicate God’s
inclusion of them in the "all nations" scope of his kingdom. Those
visible manifestations were neither the cause or result of their having
received the benefit of Christ’s atonement.
Purpose of Baptism
What we are
setting forth is not baptismal regeneration, the receiving of life through
a sacramental ritual whose powers cleanse the soul. Such a sacramental
concept was invented to be performed upon the infant supposedly born in
sin. Baptism is a responsive part of faith by which grace is accessed
(Rom. 5:1f).
In baptism we symbolically die with Jesus, are buried with
him in his tomb, and are raised to new life in him. Paul, included his
own conversion experience in expressing this: "Do you not know that all of
us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death?
We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, so that as Christ
was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in
newness of life" (Rom. 6:3f).
Paul again includes himself in the
consideration that "…he saved us, not because of deeds done by us in
righteousness, but in virtue of his own mercy, by the washing of
regeneration and renewal in the Holy Spirit, which he poured out upon us
richly through Jesus Christ our Savior, so that we might be justified by
his grace and become heirs in hope of eternal life" (Titus 3:5f: compare
Heb. 10:22; 1 Cor. 6:11). He speaks of symbolic cleansing by washing
again, "Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the church and gave
himself up for her, that he might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the
washing of water with the word, etc." (Eph. 5:25f).
Paul’s statements
above relate well with the words of Jesus to Nicodemus, "Truly, truly, I
say to you, unless one is born anew, he cannot see the kingdom of God."
"Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit,
he cannot enter the kingdom of God." (John 3:3, 5).
From these passages we
see that the word, water, and Spirit are involved in the new birth. Jesus
told the disciples, "It is the spirit that gives life, the flesh is of no
avail; the words that I have spoken to you are spirit and life" (John
6:63). Peter adds illumination with, "You have been born anew, not of
perishable seed but of imperishable, through the living and abiding word
of God"…"That word is the good news which was preached to you." (1 Peter
1:23, 25).
Since inspired writers use natural birth as a type of the
spiritual birth, let us look at the analogy. Life does not begin in the
delivery room though it is ineffective without it. Our physical life
comes from God through Adam and Eve and succeeding generations. Each
individual new life begins with conception, an insemination (seeding). A
developing period must be followed by a delivery, without which previous
developments are in vain. The birth did not give the life but finalized
it in a different relationship.
In similar manner the Spirit gives life
through the word believed (seeding, insemination) which develops into
active faith. Thus faith leads one to be baptized in finalizing the birth
process. It is then that sins are remitted and the gift of the Holy
Spirit is received. A new life is recognized and a new relationship is
established.
Preach Jesus’ Words
It is with more dismay than joy that I
compose this essay. After sixty years as a teacher of the word, I almost
feel apologetic for still writing on such an elementary subject as
baptism. Am I just singing the "Elijah blues"? Is everyone in the
platoon out of step but me? It is my deep conviction that a truly fresh
restudy should be made of this vital subject free from defenses of
traditional, sectarian, or popular concepts. Perhaps the greatest good
the Stone-Campbell Movement contributed to the American religious scene
was its revaluation of the conversion process, yet some of its fresh
concepts became distorted and sectarian within the movement.
I find it
inconceivable that present-day evangelists, in advising sinners as to how
to accept the pardon Jesus has to offer to every creature, actually refuse
to use the words of Jesus or Peter who proclaimed, "He who believes and is
baptized will be saved," and "Repent, and be baptized every one of you in
the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of your sins; and you shall
receive the gift of the Holy Spirit." The fact that evangelists prefer to
substitute "just believe, accept Jesus in your heart, just pray the
sinner’s prayer," and other such terms for the very words of Jesus’ Great
Commission should be shocking to every believer.
My conscience would never
allow me to give assurance to a sinner that his freedom from sin is to be
enjoyed without baptism. Baptism still remains as a commanded
prerequisite to the remission of sins. There was always an urgency about
it in the narratives in Acts. After the finalizing of the new
relationship in Christ by baptism, Saul took food and was refreshed, the
Philippian jailer and his family rejoiced, and the Ethiopian treasurer
went on his way rejoicing.
Are there exceptions? Does God save any unbaptized persons today?
God’s prerogatives are his own. If he chooses to save a non-believer or
an unbaptized person, that is his prerogative. However, I am not
authorized to encourage anyone to depend upon his possible exceptions
instead of his instructions. Yes, Jesus forgave the thief on the cross,
but he died before Jesus commanded baptism. His case was not an exception
to the terms of the Great Commission for it had not been announced.
Having
written all the above, now let me state that I am not trying to bind my
conscience on you. I claim no infallibility. I am not your judge. I
respect you according to the depth of your convictions. If you declare
that you are a child of God, my only alternative or desire is to regard
you as a brother or sister in Christ. I am saying, however, that a
critical examination of our birth certificates is in order. []
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