I keep getting calls from resorts letting me know that I
have been “specially chosen” to receive free tickets to some exotic location
where I will be pampered and treated like royalty. All I need to do is talk to
a representative and make arrangements and I will be off to a vacation
paradise. Of course, it is never quite that easy. There is always some fine
print to deal with, a high-pressure sales presentation, follow up phone
calls, and limited availability on dates, locations, airlines, airports, etc.
By the time you jump through all the hoops, it ends up being more trouble than
it is worth and “free” never really means free.
For the past couple of weeks, I have been driving past a
church reader board, on my way to work, that says, “Free tickets to heaven,
inquire inside.” If you have had experiences like mine, such a line may raise
your suspicions. Like the calls from the resort, it sounds too good to be true.
Who gives away a trip to paradise for nothing?
We have created a problem for ourselves in the church. We
have started to sound like slick timeshare salesmen willing to peddle a twisted
version of the truth for the sake of getting people to sign on the dotted line.
Once we get them inside, we can turn up the heat and put the pressure on for a commitment.
But, ironically, in our evangelical zeal to have people grab their tickets to
heaven, we have actually asked for no commitment at all. We are selling a version of Christianity that requires
nothing other than a prayer, and maybe getting wet with some water. We make
people believe that getting a ticket to heaven is as easy as getting candy on
Halloween. It’s just a matter of showing up and saying the right words.
But the version of Christianity that we so often pitch,
ignores the not-so-fine print of scripture. Salvation and a trip to heaven is
not a “freebie” that gets tossed to us when we say a prayer. The church does
not get to distribute the tickets simply because we were able to manipulate the
emotions of a person so that they would succumb to raising their hand in an
auditorium. A ticket to heaven isn’t granted as the result of a momentary
spiritual high.
The missing element in all this is that becoming a Christian
means becoming a disciple of Jesus. Salvation is about surrender and submission
to the Lordship of Jesus Christ. Surrender is not the result of a momentary
expression of belief. Submitting to the Lordship of Christ is not just a matter
of getting wet in a church. Being a disciple of Jesus means giving up your life.
The house that stands on the rock, doesn’t stand because of
belief, it stands because we surrender our will to the commands and teachings of
Jesus as an expression of our faith.
Here is an important truth: That prayer you said will not
solve all your problems. In fact, that prayer might make things worse, before
they get better, but the reality is that it might not ever get better at all. The
magic ticket to heaven doesn’t exist and neither does the magic cure to fix
your life. That doesn’t mean that it can’t happen, it just means you shouldn’t
count on it. If you are saying the prayer to get your ticket to heaven punched
and to fix your life that you have made a mess (and, in one way or another, we
have all made our lives a mess), you are saying the prayer for the wrong
reasons and you shouldn’t count on either one happening. A prayer of submission
and repentance, as well as baptism, are not tickets to a blissful life. They
are a statement that we will give up our lives for Christ. They are the first
steps in becoming disciples of Jesus.
Unfortunately, those of us in the church, have often led
others to believe what the church reader board says. In subtle and not so
subtle ways we have communicated to those who are willing to listen, that
getting into heaven is easy and fixing your life is as simple as saying a
prayer. And people have bought it. They have believed it. They have said the
prayer and waited for the magic to happen. For awhile the “high” carries them
along, but before long they realize that they are still a mess, people are
still disappointing, and the church is far from being perfect. As reality sets
in they care less and less about the free tickets because the magic they
expected didn’t happen. And soon we are left wondering why they don’t show up
on Sundays anymore.
Here is another important truth: a ticket to heaven will
cost you your life.
We do not communicate this second truth very well in the
church. It may not be an appealing message, but it is a more honest one. You
are not a “follower” of Jesus Christ simply because you said a prayer or got
dunked in a tank of water. I know this is crazy, but what makes you a follower
of Jesus is that you, well, follow Jesus. If you read the words of Jesus in the
gospels, he never talks about “freebies.” In fact, it is just the opposite. He
talks constantly about the cost of following him and warns us to count the cost
before we commit. He doesn’t talk about your life being great because you
follow him, he says that if you follow him you will have trouble. Even more
frightening he talks about separating sheep and goats, the pretenders from the
real deal, those who live out the teachings of Christ and those who do not. He
ends by saying what will happen to each. It’s not a pretty picture for those
who thought they had a free ticket to heaven.
We continue to cling to Ephesians 2:8-9 and misunderstand
its place in the full context of the gospel. We like seeing the “free” and “not
by works” part of that passage and so we tend to read it (and memorize it) to
the exclusion of the rest of the New Testament. The point of Ephesians 2:8-9,
though, is not to emphasize the ease with which we can get to heaven, but the
incredible graciousness and mercy of God. Although salvation will cost us our
lives, it is not our lives that pay for our salvation. Our lives can’t pay for
our salvation, because as important as we think our lives are, they are worthless
in comparison to what God has to offer.
Yes, grace is free. Mercy is free. Even faith is, in a
sense, a free gift from God. And yes, salvation is free, but not in the way we
so often sell it. It is free because we don’t have enough to pay for it. There
is nothing that we could ever do to earn our way. The ultimate price is beyond
our reach, but Jesus has paid it for us. When we surrender our lives to Christ,
we are not paying the cost of admission, we are succumbing to the reality of
our position. The only thing we have to offer, inadequate as they are, is our
lives.
There is another aspect of all this. Salvation is not just
the promise of heaven, it is the promise of a transformed life, our life. It is
the promise of a new creation, now. It is not a promise that everything will be
blissful or even that everything will be “fixed”; it is the promise that we will
become a new person. But you can’t have your cake and eat it too. You can’t be
a new creation if you are not willing to give up the old one. You can’t hang on
to the old person and become a new person at the same time. We must understand,
however, that the process of transformation might take time, but the commitment
is “all or nothing.” That is where we must count the cost. Are you willing to
give up everything so that the Holy Spirit can begin a new work in you? That is
not a purely figurative, spiritual question.
If you are looking for free tickets to heaven, you can go to
that church, but you won’t find what you are looking for. You won’t find free
tickets to heaven in any church. There is no such thing. As the church, we need
to stop leading people to believe there is.
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