If there were a Guinness Book of World Records record for “amount of times having asked Jesus into your heart,” J.D.
Greear is pretty sure he would hold it. Like so many church kids he
asked Jesus into his heart when he was very young, and then again when
he was slightly older, and then again every time he wondered if he
really loved Jesus, and then again whenever he felt the guilt of sin.
For years he wrestled with assurance and fought for an answer to this
question: How can anyone know, beyond all doubt, that they are saved?
It
is a question most Christians ask at one time or another; it is a
question every pastor faces on a regular basis. Greear’s new book Stop Asking Jesus Into Your Heart
tackles this question head-on and does so very effectively. Greear sets
out to accomplish two things: to help the Christian find assurance that
he has been saved, and to help the unbeliever resting on a false
assurance see his danger and to turn to Christ. “My prayer is that by
the time we’re done, you’ll know exactly where you stand with God. I
hope to show you how to base your assurance on a promise God gave once
for all in Christ and not on the fleeting memory of a prayer you once
prayed.” What Greear teaches is consistent with what the best
theologians have been drawing from Scripture for so long, that “what
saves the sinner is a posture of repentance and faith toward Christ,
that and that alone. Any ‘sinner’s prayer’ is only good insofar as it
expresses that posture.” Continue at Tim Challies
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