The Saving of a Soul

Salvation of a soul is a topic of great spiritual meaning for all people. Yet it is little understood. To understand the gospel it takes a measure of belief, and it takes an even greater understanding of God Himself. Our soul is where the action takes place. One must acknowledge there is a soul in the human being. The soul is the part of us that understands concepts of right and wrong, love and hope, goodness and faith, spiritual and transcendent, of deeper meaning or devoid of meaning. For those who have journeyed into the spiritual realm and have an understanding of God, the soul and its condition is a critical consideration that means everything as we come to the end of life’s journey. It also has great meaning in our earthly days as to how we will live and whether we will follow the Savior.

As a people we are confronted with the cross upon which Jesus died.  Even though it sounds counter intuitive, the cross exemplifies life, not death. Without the cross there would be no soul-life and no Christ following, no faith-living and no anything in our spiritual journey. We are a needy people. Christ came to satisfy that need. The need was for cleansing of our sins, healing of our souls, redeeming of our soul-life, and the restoring of our lost and disconnected relationship with Father God. Parents often want good gifts for their children but that good gift may be something to be enjoyed in their future, something they cannot access now because of their immaturity. God, as well, through the death, burial, and resurrection of His Son, Jesus Christ, gave us the best gift possible to receive, by preparing a way for us to God through accessing His healing grace for our wounded and lost souls. The truth is, we didn’t know we were lost until the light of Jesus revealed the truth to us.

We learned that Christ is real, and He is the way to life and peace.

In a motel room in West Berlin, Germany after my senior year in high school, one of my friends made a spiritual transition from death to life. Let me explain. She did not have a relationship with God and her spirit side was not alive. One of my other friends shared her faith in Christ and what Christians believe. It was a little awkward and I did not expect her to understand. I was mistaken. Her soul was awakened. She opened her heart to the gift of God and placed her faith in Jesus Christ. She believed in His offer of salvation through believing and receiving God’s perfect plan of redemption. “Ye must be born again.” My friend was born again right then and there. Then she embraced newness of life.

It was a spiritual conversion.

Today she continues to glow and grow in God’s presence. Christ is alive in her soul. She and I keep connected through social media. It is sweet. I’ll never forget that night. There were three of us in my circle of Christian friends and her, tucked in a many-storied with pink exterior, circular motel with dark rooms. There was much rejoicing that night by all of us. I’m sure the angels sang. We went to Germany to compete in a music venue, but when we returned home we were sisters in Christ.

It begins with God.

God calls to us. He impresses our minds, hearts, and souls with thoughts of Him. Some resist these thoughts as intrusions messing with their plans and the way they want to live. More layers come in as God reveals Himself to the one with whom He desires close fellowship. God is persistent. He is intent on drawing the unbelieving person towards His being and His truth. The following story will serve to illustrate this process.

Last fall I had the privilege of listening to a man in his late thirties who my church was considering as a potential pastor. Before interviewing him on Skype, the Pastor Search Team viewed a video where this man talked about a former church ministry he co-led, which offered opportunities for the arts community to put on first class drama presentations. Their run lasted nine years. People of alternative lifestyles participated in these plays, and they often came to the prayer time before each practice, Although hesitant at first, they soon were offering their personal prayer concerns. Eventually some came to the church services. Their souls were being drawn by God to truth. But some in the church weren’t ready for this and resistance mounted. There was conflict because of this ministry. This pastor called himself a “big tent” Christian. He cared for and was comfortable with sharing his faith with all types of people, including other faith traditions. What made him that way, unafraid and passionate about his faith?

It was interesting.

When we interviewed him, he told us that he was adopted from Mexico into a family with no faith or religious leanings. Both parents were atheists. Religion was not discussed in their home. As an atheist, one of his delights was to trip up Christians because they could not defend their beliefs. He had no interest in Christianity or personal faith in Christ. One day he met a pretty highschooler who was a Christian. He could not dismantle nor weaken her arguments. She could defend and debate with the best of them. She could deflect his arguments with solid answers. This was different. He was curious. She asked if he would like to study the book of Matthew. That led to a couple of months of delving into the scriptures. For every answer there was another question. Then she told him he needed a bible of his own if they were to continue. So he purchased one. He began to read it. The gospels were fascinating. Soon after, it dawned on him that the person of Jesus Christ was exactly who the biblical narrative said He was. He knew it was true. Salvation came to him that day. He believed in the promise of salvation–accepted the grace of God into his life–and became a new creature in Christ. The next day he debated his atheist friends. They were stunned, shocked that he, an atheist, had become a Christian, a believer in Christ.

That is how God works.

God is in the soul-changing business. He is in the life-changing business. He is in the spiritual transforming business. God loves us so very much, more than we will ever comprehend. There are days when I sing they hymns and choruses and I’m aware of the tender blessings of God. Tears surface because of the great love that fills my heart for God. He is precious to me. Once we taste of Christ’s sweet offer of salvation, we realize part of being saved is an ongoing appreciation of God for what He has done by transforming our souls from death unto life. We are part of the resurrection story. We used to live without hope, now we live with hope. Our lives become a witness of Spirit-Life to people we meet as we speak life to them. Scripture says to work out your own salvation. Salvation is a starting point. We begin to grasp, believe, and accept as we embrace the truth of the greatest gift we will ever receive this side of heaven (glory). Salvation is when our soul transitions through belief in a holy God, when we sorrow for our sinful rebellious ways, and we embrace the mercy and grace of God as He forgives them of us. Our souls, through a divine transaction, become forgiven, clean, whole, and made righteous. We become one of God’s children as sheep who are loved by the Shepherd and redeemed by the blood of the Lamb.

Some see salvation as happening at one point in time and some see salvation as a process over the course of time. I believe it is both. Salvation of a soul begins with belief. We confess our unworthiness and gratefulness as we accept and believe in God’s saving grace. At that point we are spiritually transformed. From then on we are continually living within this salvation in an on-going way. We either believe in Christ and partake of the grace He offers or we disbelieve and choose not to believe. Some harden their hearts against belief in Him. They don’t want to believe and because they don’t want to, they won’t. Salvation takes belief and faith. Faith is necessary.

God is not willing that any should perish. He speaks in the silence, in the quiet times. Have you heard His quiet voice? Does it annoy you? Take stock. God is offering you a new start, with Him as your helper, to guide and grow you. You have nothing to fear. First, there must be belief in Christ as the way, the truth, and the life. “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved.” It is a personal faith. Your choice. Choose wisely. God has provided a way.

There are many precious acts of faith the Christian will participate in i.e. baptism, holy communion of bread and the cup, and fellowship with a body of Christian believers. Daily prayer and bible study will open the door to knowing God. Christ purchased our salvation on the tree where He bled out on our behalf and said, “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.” Then He said, “It is finished.” The Light of the world went out for three days. Next He resurrected into living life. Christ had completed the task for which He had come. Some day we will meet Him. What a glorious day that will be. Until then, we continue our faith journey as we draw from the living water Christ has given us. We become living water to other thirsty souls in need of “so great a salvation.”

“For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.” John 3:16, 17. NIV

Christian Organizations that Target the Elderly

Dear Christian Organization,

Re: Aggressive Solicitations

THIS IS A LETTER FROM AN UNHAPPY DAUGHTER

PLEASE STOP!

I do not appreciate it that you take advantage of the elderly by sending them more books than they can possibly read, calling them persistently and more frequently than is warranted and by constantly playing on their sympathies when you highlight how desperately you are in need of their money gift. Every communication is the same as you graphically show how great the suffering is and how their money is needed and will help through support of your charity.

ENOUGH IS ENOUGH

It is unconscionable. Is it elder abuse? In the last couple of years I have become more involved regarding my parents’ welfare.  During my visits, I first noticed your frequent calls for support in the form of a solicitation. My folks received your call as well as calls from several groups in a day, like a constant barrage. My parents are not young and this was over-done. They are an easy target because they care about suffering, human need, and the spiritually lost. They especially care about Christian faith and its activities in the global realm. Courtesy is part of their way so they are polite and always listen to the spiel. Maybe so or maybe not, they would agree or not agree to whatever your caller was promoting. Next, I noticed the books. More and more books. Always the Christian books from all sorts of groups, and health books of all shapes and sizes, and the frequent mailings from multiple Christian agencies.

Your list must have been shared with other agencies. Related themes are noticed and the donation “well” was primed. It has become a river of donation solicitations. Not fair. Not right. Not, … Christian. How can it be right to take advantage of our elderly?

The intent is wrong.

Due to circumstances, my sisters and I became more actively involved in our parents’ care. We also became aware of the ongoing barrage of calls, mailings, and other forms of solicitations by your organization and a myriad of other Christian groups. A few were education related, others, pastor-author related, service groups, overseas medical groups and all sorts. Someone from your agency called, not once, but twice in one day! and called the next day.  How can that be right? Frankly, my parents have had enough and are tired of the constant calls. It is an invasion of their privacy and seems like a constant manipulative ploy.

I am disheartened and disappointed. I used to hold your organization in high esteem. No longer.

What could we do? We began intercepting your calls and other agencies’ calls. With our parents’ support, we would state to the caller that our folks’ business would no longer be conducted by phone. Soon it was realized the calls were automated, so we would tell the recording to remove them from the list. “Remove” was the operative world. But your agency persisted. We have tried letters that state to remove my folks from your list. We’ve returned books and asked that they not be sent anymore, but this has not been fully successful either.

We carry on. We love our folks and don’t want them to be preyed upon. Mother and Dad should only support the charities that are dear to them. In addition to this, they should not receive books they never asked for, or receive because of placement on a never ending mailing list. They should not support agencies that hound them, including yours.

Sure, I know you could say that it started with my folks, that they were the ones who agreed to that first gift. That is probably true. But the sad thing is, the constant calls and mailings and so forth are beyond what is acceptable and warranted. The other terrible fact is that many other seniors are being treated in this same way. I happen to know this because I know of several who are, or used to be. One gentleman, a friend of my family, spent nearly six thousand one year in response to phone and mail solicitations. They live modestly. His wife was appalled when it came to tax time and the evidence piled up.

You know, it bothers me when someone is taken advantage of by anyone. It particularly bothers me when a Christian institution crosses a line into a predatory mindset. They might not see themselves as such because it’s been a slow progression. Probably it started when they saw the way money flows and knew people would help them meet the bottom line and keep the organization afloat. Maybe it was innocent at first. I’m willing to give them the benefit of the doubt. But now it’s not okay. What is disconcerting to me is that the givers are seen as an endless well, which is assumed will supply the necessary funds.

I ask you to take a look at your motivation and your integrity. A reasonable approach should be applied and without a play on seniors’ sympathies. As a matter of fact, I gave up my landline phone, in part, because I was tired of phone solicitations and their intrusion into my private dwelling and my time. (I think there should be a law against telemarketing and phone solicitations of any kind.)

This is not a rant. It is the facts from what I have observed, and it is a call to doing what is right, moral, and of good conscious. Honor the Lord in all you do. Do not be unreasonable in your requests and do not call more than once or twice a year, if at all. More than that is taking advantage of the elderly who may not understand or realize they are being played.

Sincerely,

Norma L. Brumbaugh


Have you observed or experienced this problem?

If you are able, take a look at your own folks’ charities, magazines and books. See what looks reasonable or not. You wouldn’t want them to be taken advantage of by those kinds of organizations.

Of note. Many organizations are respectful. I am not saying what organizations I am talking about in this post. You will know who they are if you have received frequent phone calls, mailings and books. However, I would like you to know that it is not in reference to any of Billy Graham or Franklin Graham ministries.