THE REASON WHY
written by Robert Laidlaw
A
About the Author:
The late Robert O. Laidlaw from
known as one of his country's most successful and respected businessmen.
At the age of 23, he opened a mail order business that grew
spectacularly into a retail organization employing a staff of more than
2,700 men and women.
The founder of the Farmers' Trading Company, Ltd., Mr. Laidlaw
wrote, "The Reason Why" originally for his staff members, giving his
explanation and the "reasons" for the Christian faith. A more
definitive title could well have been, "The Reason Why Jesus Christ has
the Only Answer to Life." Since that original writing, this booklet has been
translated into more than thirty languages, with an estimated 25 million
copies in print. This edition has been published by the Christian Business
Men's Committee, an international non-profit organization of Christian
business and professional men, of which Robert Laidlaw was a member.
Is Christianity credible? Is there a God?
Does man need Him? Is the Bible true?
Is Man responsible to God? Can man find Divine forgiveness?
When honest with himself, man questions his existence, he wonders
at his world--its beginning and end he searches for personal meaning
this man has explored life and found its fulfillment here he explains
the intellectual evidence he weighed the questions he had answered the
resulting belief he experienced.
Robert Laidlaw is convinced of God's reality he believes in the
Bible in Christ, in Divine salvation, in purposeful living, in credible
Christianity.
Written by a Christian businessman to the members of his staff...
Suppose that a young man sent his fiancee a diamond ring costing
him $1000, placing it in a little case which the jeweller threw in for
nothing. How disappointed he would be, if upon meeting her a few days
later, she would say, "Sweetheart, that was a lovely little box you sent
me. To take special care of it, I promise to keep it wrapped up in a
safe place so that no harm shall come by it."
Rather ridiculous, isn't it? Yet it is just as foolish for men and
women to be spending all their time and thought of bodies, which are
only cases containing the real self, the soul, which, the Bible tells
us, will persist long after our bodies have crumbled to dust. The soul
is of infinite value. Longfellow expressed it this
way:
Tell me not in mournful numbers,
Life is but an empty dream,
For the soul is dead that slumbers,
And things are not what they seem.
Life is real, life is earnest,
And the grave is not its goal.
Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
Was not spoken of the soul.
Indeed this statement was not made of the soul, for in Mark 8:36
our Lord Himself asks, "What shall it profit a man if he gain the
whole world and lose his own soul?" So, in Christ's estimate, man's
soul is something incomparably more valuable than the whole world.
I would like to discuss with you some of the basic things that
relate to your most valuable possession, your soul. For instance---
Is there a God?
Is the Bible true?
It man accountable?
Is there divine forgiveness?
These are some of the problems which most perplex those who think
seriously about the future.
How may I know there is a God?
I have an innate conviction that God exists. No matter how my
intellect has tried in the past to produce reasons proving He was not,
or how much I have wanted to believe that there was no God, that
"still, small voice" came to me again and again, just as it has come to
you, in the quiet of life's more sober moments. Yes, I knew that at
least for me there was a God. And as I looked at others I realized
how many were looking for God, seeking in "religion" to silence
that same voice that spoke within me.
True, there are some men who don't believe in God. But to me the
problems of unbelief in God are greater than the problems of belief.
To believe that unaided dead matter produced life, that living matter
produced mind, that mind produced conscience, and that the chaos of
chance produced the cosmos of order as we see it in nature, seems to
call not for faith but for credulity.
The president of the New York Scientific Society once gave eight
reasons why be believed there was a God. The first was this: Take ten
identical coins and mark them one to ten. Place them in your pocket.
Now take one out. There is once chance in ten that you will get number
one. Now replace it, and the chances that number two will follow number
one are not one in ten, but one in one hundred. With each new coin
taken out, the risk will be multiplied by ten, so that the chance of ten
following nine is one in 10,000,000,000 (ten billion). It seemed so
unbelievable to me that I immediately took pencil and paper and very
quickly discovered he was right. Try it yourself.
That is why George Gallup, the American statistician said: "I could prove
God statistically. Take the human body alone-the chance that all its
functions would just happen is a statistical monstrosity."
Surely no thoughtful persons would wish to base their eternal
future on a "statistical monstrosity." Perhaps that is why the Bible
says in Psalm 14:1 "The fool says in his heart, "There is no God.'" But
let us consider the problem from another viewpoint.
Suppose we are standing at an airport watching a big jet come in
for a landing. I say to you "A lot of people think that plane is a
result of someone's carefully designed plans, but I know better. There
was really no intelligence at work on it at all. In some strange way
the metal just came out of ground, and fashioned itself into flat
sheets. And then these metal sheets slowly began to grow together and
formed the body and wings and tail. Then after a long while the engines
slowly grew in place, and one day some people came along and
discovered the plane, all finished and ready to fly."
You would probably consider me a lunatic and move further into the
crowd to escape my senseless chatter. Why? You know that there is a
design there must be a designed, and having seen other productions of
the human mind just like the plane in question, you are positive that it was
planned by human intelligence and built by human skill.
Yet there are highly educated, professional men who tell us that
the entire universe came into being by chance, that there was really no
higher intelligence at work on it. They claim to know no God but
nature.
On the other hand there are many thoughtful men who believe that
God is transcendent; that is, while He reveals Himself in nature (in
that its laws and principles are expressions of His power and wisdom),
He Himself is greater than the universe. But all that atheists can
offer us in the riddle of design without a designer, of creation without a
Creator, of effect without cause.
Every thoughtful person believes in a series of causes and effects
in nature, each effect becoming the cause of some other effect. The
acceptance of this as fact logically compels one to admit that there
must be a beginning to any series. There could never have been a first
effect if there had not been a First Cause. This First Cause, to me, is Deity.
Although man has discovered many of the laws that govern
electricity, the greatest scientists cannot really define it. Then why
do we believe it exists? Because we see the manifestation of its
existence in our homes and industries and streets. Though I do not know
where God came from, I must believe He exists, because I see the
manifestations of Him everywhere around me.
Dr. Wernher von Braun, director of NASA research, and developer of
the rocket which put American's first space satellite into orbit said:
"In our modern world, many people seem to feel that our rapid
advances in the field of science render such things as religious belief
untimely or old-fashioned. They wonder why we should be satisfied in
'believing' something when science tells us that we 'know' so many
things. The simple answer to this contention is that we are confronted
with many more mysteries of nature today than when the age of scientific
enlightenment began. With every new answer unfolded, science has
consistently discovered at least three new questions.
"The answers indicate that anything as well ordered and perfectly
created as is our earth and universe must have a Maker, a Master
Designer. Anything so orderly, so perfect, so precisely balanced, so
majestic as this creation can only be the product of a Divine idea."
The last professor Edwin Conklin, a noted biologist, very aptly
said: "The probability of life originating from accident is comparable
to the probability of an Unabridged Dictionary resulting from an
explosion in a printing shop."
God exist whether or not men may choose to believe in Him. The
reason why many people do not believe in God is not so much that it is
intellectually impossible to believe in God, but because belief in God
forces that thoughtful person to face the fact that he is accountable to
such a God. Many people are unwilling to do this. Most of those who
take refuge in atheism or agnosticism do so because it is a convenient
"escape" from the stern reality that man is accountable to his Creator.
It is usually not so much a case of "I cannot believe" as it is a case
of "I do not want to believe."
I know only two ways by which God's purpose and God's person may
be known. First there is the process of reason. As a good detective
can, for example, tell you many things about my skills, habits and
character just my examining something I may have made or handled,
so much can be learned about God by a careful examination of the
universe, the work of His hands.
But the detective who examines only what I make can never say that
he knows me. He may know some things about me, but before he can
say that he knows me, there must be a process of revelation: I must
communicate with him. I must tell him what I think, how I feel and what
I want to do. This self-revelation may be in conversation, in writing, or
in some other way. Only then does it become possible for him to know
me. Just so, if God is ever to be known and His thoughts, desire and
purposes perceived, He must take the initiative and make at least a
partial revelation of Himself to men.
Of all the many books this world contains there is one only that
claims to be a direct revelation from God, telling us of Himself and His
purposes for us. That book is the Bible. The Bible is a book of such
importance that it is surely worthy of thoughtful investigation. So, with
that advice of Francis Bacon neither to accept nor reject, but to weigh
and consider, let us approach this book with its unusual claims.
To be fair to ourselves and to the Bible, we should read it
through. As a judge must not make his decision when the case is half
heard, neither must we. Rather, like the judge, we should compare the
evidence of the witnesses, and weigh and consider every word, seeking
for its deepest significance rather than accepting its surface meaning.
Surely the importance of its claims justifies spending the necessary
time on the study of its sixty-six books, written by at least forty
different writer (some well educated, some barely educated, some kings,
some peasants) over a period of 1600 years in places as far apart as
expect to find a miscellaneous collection contradictory statements. Its
unity is therefore especially striking, for each contribution is the
complement of the others.
In my considerations of this whole matter, slowly the truth of
2 Peter
"Holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy Spirit." This
belief was confirmed as I read prophecy in the Old Testament which found
its fulfillment, even to the letter, hundreds of years later. For instance, Isaiah
52 foretold the death of Christ with minute accuracy more than 700 years
before His crucifixion. Yes, the difficulties in the way of doubting the Book
seemed to me greater than those in the way of believing it. I had to be
honest with myself and admit that the problems were all on the side of
unbelief. I even went further and said:
"I believe the Bible to be the word of the living God. I can account
for it in no other way."
Such an admission brought me face to face with a serious
difficulty, however, for the Bible set a standard of righteousness that
I had not attained. It pronounced that anything short of its standard
was sin. Remembering that God knows you every secret thought, just
measure yourself alongside the standard: "Thou shalt love the Lord thy
God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind.
This is the first and great commandment" (Matthew
Confronted with such a standard, can you claim to have lived up to
it throughout you life? Have you put God first in everything? No man
can honestly claim such perfection. Every honest heart echoes Romans
and fall short of the glory of God." All have failed to reach God's
standard.
A young man once asked me, "Do you think it fair of God to set the
standard of holiness so high that we cannot reach it, and then judge us
for falling short?"
I replied, "God has not set an arbitrary standard of holiness as an
official sets an arbitrary standard of height for his bodyguards. In such
a case, a man may have all the other qualifications, but it he is an inch
too short he is disqualified.
"God has not really set a standard at all; His is the standard. He is
absolute holiness, and to preserve His own character He must
remain absolutely holy in all of His dealing with man, maintaining that
standard irrespective of the tremendous implications which it may hold
for both Him and us."
My conscience and my common sense compelled me to admit I had
fallen short of God's standard of absolute holiness and, therefore, I
was a sinner in His sight.
On my admission of having sinned came God's condemnation is
Ezekiel 18:4: "The soul that sins, it shall die."
It appealed to me like this: The law in
all drivers must keep to the left side of the
street, while in
that rule of the road demands that a driver keep to the right side.
Now suppose I go driving in
On being brought before the judge, I say, "This is ridiculous.
In the
"You are not being judged by the laws of
"It does not matter what the laws of other lands may be, you
should have concerned yourself only with the laws which judge
you here, where you are."
In the same way as far as god's standard was concerned, I was
lost, because God's standard was the only one by which I was
judged in eternity. I was hopelessly lost. I began to see that it didn't
matter at all what I thought, or what my friends told me. The judgment would
be on what god has said, not what my friends say. Moreover, because in
God's judgment we had all sinned, there was no use in looking to other
men for help, for they were under the same
condemnation as I.
But this same Bible, which told me of my sin, told me also of Jesus Christ,
who claimed to be the Son of God.
It is the clear teaching of the Bible that this person, Jesus
Christ, is God the Son. He saw that men were lost and that they had
forfeited their lives to sin. His life was not forfeited. It was
sinless and spotless. This pure life of His He was willing to give in
place of man's sinful life, that we might go free.
He Himself tells us in John
only begotten Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish, but have
everlasting life."
If Jesus Christ is the Son of God, then we may indeed be sure of
salvation; but the difficulty faces us: Is Jesus Christ really the Son
of God? He could only be one of three--the Son of God, or a deceiver, or
an honest man Himself under a hallucination. But we find Him meeting some
of the cleverest men of His day, who were purposely sent to catch Him in
His words, and He so silenced them that they did not dare ask Him any more
questions (Matthew
of His statements from an intellectual standpoint, we see plainly that He was
under no hallucination as to Himself.
Then was His wisdom so great that He was using it to deceive the
people? Have you ever heard of a young man associating with swindlers
and rogues and because of that association becoming ennobled, pure and
honest? No! You admit you have not heard of such a case; but I know a
young man who by the reception of Christ into his life has been lifted
from the basest desires to the noblest manhood, I simply cannot believe
that the reception of a deceiver into one's life could transform it for good.
The other day I heard a man say, "I owe it to Jesus Christ that I
can walk down the street with my head erect and my shoulders squared to
the world. I owe it to Him that I can look a pure woman in the face and grip
an honest man by the hand."
I call to witness the opinion of the whole civilized world that
Jesus Christ was at least a good man. If so, then an honest man, and if honest,
He must have been what He claimed to be, the Son of God, sent to lay down
His sinless life in place of your sinful life and mine.
Leaders from several professions have this to say about Jesus Christ:
United States Senator Mark O. Hatfield, testifies: "I saw that for 31 years I had
lived for self and decided I wanted to live the rest of my life only for Jesus Christ.
I asked God to forgive my self-centered life and to make my life His own.
Following Jesus Christ has been an experience of increasing challenge,
adventure and happiness. Living a committed Christian life is truly satisfying
because it has give me true purpose and direction by serving not myself, but Jesus Christ."
Robert E. (Bob) Richards, former Olympic track star, said: "My only reason for being in
sports is to give my testimony to youth of all the world that Jesus Christ can save from sin,
and that one can be a Christian and still excel in good, creative things. Young people need
to realize that God unleashed a tremendous spiritual power when Jesus
Christ died on
Lt. Gen. William K. Harrison (Ret.), former Senior Delegate of the
United Nations Command Truce Team in
of the Caribbean Command, wrote: "It is wonderful to believe in the Lord Jesus
Christ and I am exceedingly thankful that God has graciously led me to saving
faith in Christ. God gives us who believe in Christ a daily, personal experience
which is convincing evidence of the reality of the
new life in Christ."
Convinced that the Scripture is true, that Jesus Christ is the Son of
God, believing that He willingly came, that God so lived me that He has
willingly sent Him to suffer the full penalty of my sins that I might go
free, if I would retain my self-respect as an intelligent being, I must
accept the Lord Jesus Christ as my Savior.
But I do not ask you to accept Him as yours, for you may have an
objection: although it is plausible that the Bible is true, are not
alternate views also plausible? Who not be reasonable and submit them
to a fair test as well?
On telling my conviction to a friend, he replied, "You are all
right, but so am I, although I don't see things as you do. It seems to
me that it doesn't matter so much what a man believes, so long as he is
sincere in this belief."
Let us test that statement. One fine Sunday morning a neighbor of
mine said to his wife and family, "Let us take the car and go for a
picnic." Traveling north, he came to a railway crossing and , sincerely
believing there would be not trains on a Sunday morning, attempted to
drive across. He as killed on the spot, one son had an arm broken and
his little daughter was in a cast for months. Did his sincere belief that all
was clear save him? No, it did not.
I know a nurse who, on night duty, sincerely believed she held the
right medicine in her hand, but she was wrong, and in twenty minutes
her patient was dead in spite of frantic efforts to save him.
Of course we need sincerity, but we must sincerely believe truth,
not error. If fact, having sincere belief in error can be the very
means of deceiving and finally destroying us.
The Bible leaves no room for doubt. In John 14:6 Christ says: "I
am the way, the truth and the life; no man come to the Father but by
me." Acts
among men whereby we must be saved." If you can get to heaven any
other way you will be a witness throughout eternity to the fact that Jesus
Christ spoke falsely when He said there was no other way. But, since He
gives full evidence of being the Son of God, is it not folly to attempt
coming to God by any other way than through Christ Himself, who
claims to be God's appointed way?
The real reason we want some other way is because the way of the
cross is a humbling way, and we are proud at heart. But let us remember
the way of the cross was a humbling way for Christ also, as we read
in Philippians 2:5-8:
5 Have this attitude in yourselves which was
also in Christ Jesus
6 Who, although He existed in the form of God,
did not regard equality with God a thing to
be grasped,
7 But emptied Himself, taking the form of a
bondservant and being made in the likeness
of men
8 And being found in appearance as a man, He
humbled Himself by becoming obedient to
the point of death, even death on a cross.
(The New American Standard Bible)
Some people have suggested that all a person needs to do is sincerely
reform, do better in the future, and thus live down past short-comings.
This is supposed to make one fit for heaven. Will this work?
Let us assume that the manager of a business goes to his accountant
and finds that his company owes $50,000 to manufactures and other
merchants. He says, "Write letters to all those people and tell them
that we are not going to trouble about the past, that we have turned
over new pages in our ledger, but we promise to pay 100 cents on
the dollar in all future business, and from now on live up the highest
standard of business integrity." The accountant would think his
employer had gone mad, and would refuse to put such a proposition
to the creditors. Yet thousands of otherwise sensible people are trying
to get to heaven by just such a proposal, offerings to meet their
obligations toward God for the future, but refusing to worry about the
past at all. Yet in Ecclesiastes
account." Even if we assume that we can somehow begin to live an
absolutely perfect life--which is no better than we ought to do, but
which is certainly impossible for us--we are still sinners.
God's righteousness demands that no past account shall be
considered settled until it has been paid to the last penny and every
claim of justice met. The murderer may cover his sin and live the life
of a model citizen for ten years after his crime, but when he is
discovered, man's law condemns him to death. Though he has murdered no
one for ten long years--it judges him still a murderer.
To hide past sin, either thought, words or deeds, by what seems to
be an absolutely perfect life, still leaves us sinners in the sight of
Him to whom the past and future are as open as the present. According
to God's standards of holiness, we all have sinned and we must bring
that sin out into the open and have it dealt with righteously.
We each need someone who can clear the books. The bible declares
that Jesus Christ is the only One who could pay this penalty. "We are
reconciled to God by the death of his Son"
(Romans
Lord Jesus Christ gave up His life in place of ours that we might go free.
Our past sin is paid for, and God, against whom we had sinned, has
given us His receipt showing His satisfaction with the completed work
of Christ on the cross in that He raised Him from the dead. Christ, once
crucified, is now our living Savior. He died to save us from the penalty
of sin and now He lives to deliver us from the power of sin.
But why did Christ need to die? Could He not have saved us without that?
Man had broken God's law and the penalty was death. How could
Christ righteously deliver us without meeting our full penalty? Do you
not see that if He paid anything less than the full price there would still
be judgment for us to meet? But it is evident that because He died, the
law we had broken can judge us no more.
The Bible says in Romans 8:1: "There is therefore now no
condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus."
On one occasion an unfinished court case extended to a second day
and as is the usual practice, so that no outside influence could be
brought to bear on the jurymen, they were kept in custody overnight.
On entering the court the next morning, the Judge, addressing the jury,
said: "Gentlemen, the case is dismissed; the prisoner has been called
to a higher court." The accused had died in his cell during the night,
and there was no use going on with the case, since the law cannot judge
a dead man.
Again, if a man should murder one person he is put to death, but if he
should murder six people he is still just put to death, because this is the
utmost penalty of the law. No matter what a man's sins may be, the
law knows no greater penalty than to take his life.
Therefore it matters not that there are sins in my life I have long since
forgotten. I fear none of them, for I have this confidence that the Lord
Jesus Christ, my Substitute, suffered the utmost penalty of the law on
my account, freeing me absolutely from all its claims against me, both
great and small.
On the basis of the greatness of Jesus Christ's sacrifice, some
have suggested that if Christ died for all, we must all be saved. But
God does not say so. He says there is salvation for all, not that all
are saved.
Here is an illustration. It is a bitterly cold winter, and
unemployment is rife in one of our great cities with man in dire need.
The municipal authorities provide free meals. You meet a poor fellow
on the street who say he is starving. Naturally you ask if he does not
believe the notices that are up all over the city, and there is enough
food for all provided free.
"Yes," he replies, "I believe that is true in a general sort of
way, but I am still hungry."
You tell him that he is likely to remain hungry in spite of the
provisions unless he eats and drinks personally of what is proved for
all.
Just so, although the death of Christ provides salvation for
whosoever will, only those are saved who personally accept Christ and
believe that He died in their place. I must take Christ as my savior,
or His death will avail me nothing--just as a man could die of thirst
beside a spring of water if he refused to make its life-giving stream
his own by drinking of it for himself.
There are some people who still pose the question: How could the
Lord Jesus Christ's one life be considered the substitute for the lives
of so many, so that God offers salvation to whoever places their faith
in Christ?
That seems a fair question--a problem in arithmetic that can be
demonstrated on paper. Christ was God manifest in the flesh--Divinity
in humanity--so that the life He gave was an infinite life, which can
meet the needs of any number of finite lives. Get a sheet of paper and
write down all the big figures you can think of--millions or more--add
them up. Now you have a big number, then multiply it by 10-100-by a
million if you like--cover sheets of paper and after all you still have
a finite number--a number that has bounds set about it--a beginning and
an end, however far it may extend. No, by adding finite things together
no man has ever been able to make that which is infinite. The infinite life
of Christ given for sinners is more than sufficient to save all who accept
Him as the One who died for them.
But how could Christ suffer for my sins when they were not
committed till more than 1900 years after He died?
At first this seems a problem to a thoughtful person, but the more
thoughtful you are, the more readily you will see the solution. God is
omniscient (that is, He knows all things), and God is eternal. In
Exodus
in John 8:58 "Before Abraham was, I AM" (present tense). In other
words, to one who know all things and is eternal, there is, as it were,
neither past nor future, but one eternal present. Events yet to take place
2000 years ahead must be as clear to Him as events which happened
2000 years ago, and both must of necessity be just as clear to God as
event happening now.
But why did not God make man incapable of disobeying His will and
therefore incapable of sinning?
Such a question is like asking why does not God draw a crooked
straight line or a round square, or make an object black all over and
white all over at one and the same time. Man is a creature with the
power of intelligent choice, so that the question really is: Why didn't
God make a creature with the power of intelligent choice and yet
without the power of intelligent choice at one and the same time?
If I had the power of hypnotism, I would be able to put my two sons
into an hypnotic state, thus robbing them of the power of intelligent
choice, and the say, "Sit on those chairs till I return"--"Get up and eat"
--"Stop eating"--"Kiss me goodnight", and unfeeling arms would go
around my neck, and unresponsive lips would be pressed to mine.
I would have prompt and perfect obedience to my every command,
but would I find satisfaction in it? No!
I want boys with free wills who are capable of disobeying me, but
who willingly choose to carry out my instructions, which are the outcome
of my love for them and are given for their own good. I cannot conceive
of God, who put these desires in my heart and yours, being satisfied with
anything less Himself.
God does not want puppets who jump in a given direction according
to the wire that is pulled, not does He want robots in the form of "men"
who mechanically and absolutely obey His will as do the planets that
whirl through space. God can find satisfaction in nothing less than the
spontaneous love of our hearts and our free-will decisions to walk in
paths that please and honor Him. But it is obvious that this same power
of free action enables us to defy and dishonor Him if we so choose.
Man is truly a magnificent creature, far above the animal creation
around him. This is no "missing link." But a great gulf is fixed
between the highest beast and man, for God has given man the awesome
power of being able to say no to God as well as an effective yes. In
your own interests, may I ask which you are saying to God now as you
read this booklet?
What does God care about this little world of ours compared with
the vastness of the mighty universe?
Think of our own solar system, with the planet
far away from the sun as our earth, so that it takes 164 of our years to
make one of
around the sun! Of what importance can our earth be to God, and of
how much less importance can man be?
So said the astronomer as the faith of his youth fled--this is what the
telescope had done for him. The vastness of the heavens had robbed
him of faith in his mother's God, for how could God trouble Himself
about man, who is less than a grain of sand in comparison?
But his thirst for knowledge would not let him rest. The heavens
were available for study only at night; how should the free hours of the
day be spent? Why not a microscope? And lo! worlds were opened
at his feet--worlds as wonderful as those above, and slowly his faith came
back. Yes, the God who could attend to such minute details as to make
a drop of ditch water throb with miniature life was sure to be interested
in man, the highest form of His creation. The man found balance instead
of bias, and balance brought him back to God. John
But is faith logical?
Yes, it is logical. It is a mistake to think that faith is opposed to reason.
Faith and reason go hand in hand, but faith goes on when reason can
go no farther. Reason, to a great extent, is dependent on faith, for
without knowledge it is impossible to reason, and knowledge is very
largely a matter of faith in human testimony. For instance, I believe
strychnine administered in a large enough dose will poison a human being,
but I have never seen the experiment performed. Yet I have such faith
in the written testimony of men that I would not take a large dose of
strychnine for anything.
If you check up carefully, you will find that nine-tenths of the
things you know (?) are a matter of faith in human testimony, written or
spoken, for you have not verified them for yourself. Then, having
accepted the testimony of men on other matters, will you not accept the
testimony of thousands of Christians when they affirm that they have
verified the things written God's Word and have proved them to be true?
But why should God judge my sins as worthy of death?
I cannot answer that, but I would suggest that because of His
infinite holiness no sin could exist in His presence. In some primitive
cultures, a native chief may club his wife to death on slight
provocation without falling in the slightest degree in the estimation of his
people. The same act is our land would have to be paid for by the life
of the murderer. The act is the same in both lands, but in one instance
no judgment; in the other, quick retribution. The difference is simply the
result of our enlightenment. If a sin, which in a primitive culture is
considered as nothing, would cause a man to lose his life in our land,
think, if you can, what some other sin, which appears to us as nothing,
must look like to an infinitely Holy God--"For God is light, and in him
is no darkness at all" (1 John 1:5).
It may be just, but is it merciful of God to refuse to take us all
to heaven even if we reject Christ as our sin-bearer?
Yes, both just and merciful. Would it be kindness to transfer a
poor ragged beggar into the glare of a beautiful ballroom? Would be
not be more conscious of his rags and dirt? Would he not do his best to
escape again to the darkness of the street? He would be infinitely
happier there. Would it be kindness and mercy on God's part to bring
a man in his sins into the holy light of Heaven if that man had rejected
God's offer of the only cleansing power there is? If you and I would
not wish our friends' to see inside our minds now and read all the
thoughts that have ever been there (and our friends' standards are
perhaps not any higher than our own) what would it be like to stand
before God, whose absolute holiness would reveal our sin in all its
awfulness?
Revelation
accept Jesus Christ as their Savior and persist in going to eternity in
their sins. They call on the mountains and the rocks to fall on them
and hide them from the face of the One who sits on the throne. Yet it
is the pr esence of this same Christ that will make Heaven for those
who have accepted Him as Savior and Lord.
You see the absurdity of talking about God taking us all to heaven-
heaven is a condition as well as a place. The presence of the Lord
Jesus Christ will constitute heaven to those who are cleansed from their
sins, while that some presence would make a hell of remorse in the hearts
of any who, still in their sins, should stand in the infinite light of His holiness.
Let us be quite reasonable--could you really be happy in the presence
of One whose love you had rejected, and whose great sacrifice you had
not counted worthy of your acceptance?
Salvation by Substitution--
The Innocent Bearing the
Penalty for the Guilty
We have considered reasonable evidence that God does exist and that
He has revealed in the Bible His holy claims on men and women. We
have been shown that "all have sinned, and fall short of the glory of
God" (Romans
Son, who came to this earth to die for the sin of man. We have also
considered numerous objections, raised by people who have other
ideas about God's plan of salvation. Now we are going to think through
the wisdom and the wonder of God's plan of salvation for sinful people.
In a word, it is salvation by substitution.
God's love would have forgiven the sinner, but God's righteousness
prevented the forgiveness. God's righteousness would have judged the
sinner, but God's love restrained the judgement. How to reconcile His
inherent righteousness with His character of essential love was a
problem that no human philosopher could have solved, but divine wisdom
and mercy find their highest expression in the solution--the vicarious
suffering and death of God the Son.
"But," one may object, "does not Christianity fail at its very
foundation by basing everything on substitution? Substitution will not
stand thoughtful investigation. It makes Christ, the Innocent, bear the
penalty for the guilty and thus lets the guilty go free. It is
diametrically opposed to our every idea of justice, for we believe that
justice should protect the innocent and bring the full penalty upon the
guilty."
But see God's perfect justice and perfect mercy revealed at the
cross. He does not there take the innocent and compel him to bear the
penalty of the guilty. God acts like the judge in this story:--It is on record
that of two young men who studied law together one rose to a seat on
the bench, while the other took to drink and wasted his life. On one
occasion this poor fellow was brought before his old companion, charged
with crime, and the lawyers present wondered what kind of justice would
be administered by the judge under such trying circumstances. To their
surprise, he sentenced his one-time companion to the heaviest penalty
the law allowed, and then paid the fine himself and set his old friend free.
God, against whom we had sinned, in justice sat upon His judgment
throne and passed the heaviest penalty He could--the sentence of death
upon the sinner. Then, in mercy, He stepped down form His throne and,
in the person of His Son, took the sinner's place, bearing the full
penalty Himself. 2 Corinthians
not through Christ, but in Christ, "reconciling the world to himself."
God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit are one God.
The same God against whom we had sinned passed the judgment, paid the
penalty, and now offers us full and free pardon, based upon absolute
righteousness. That is why the Apostle Paul writes in Romans 1:16,17:
"I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God
for the Salvation of everyone who believer...for therein is the
righteousness of God revealed..." I, too, can say that I am not ashamed
of the Gospel of Christ, for no man can honestly find a flaw in the
righteous forgiveness offered by God to man. That is the righteousness
you may possess now, at this very moment, if you will accept. it.
But is the acceptance of Christ as my Savior all that is necessary
to save me for all eternity? Yes, I admit the very simplicity of it
seems to make it hard to grasp. But if I owe $500 and have nothing
with which to pay, and a friend pays the debt for me and gives me the
receipt, I don't worry about it any more. I can look my creditor
straight in the face, for I hold his signed receipt. As Jesus Christ
gave His life in place of mine, He said: "it is finished," meaning that the
work of atonement was completed, and God gave me His receipt.
The assurance that He was satisfied with Christ's finished work is that
He (God) raised Christ from the dead on the third day.
"But I can't see it," said a certain cabinetmaker, as a friend
tried to explain this to him. At last an idea came to his friend, who,
lifting a plane, made as though he would plane the top of a beautifully
polished table that stood near.
"Stop!" cried the cabinetmaker. "Don't you see that's finished?
You'll simply ruin it if you use that plane on it."
"Why," replied his friend, "that's just what I have been trying to
show you about Christ's work of redemption. It was finished when He
gave His life for you, and if you try to add to that finished work you
can only spoil it. Just accept it as it stands--His life for yours, and you
go free." Life a flash, the cabinetmaker saw it and received Jesus Christ
into his life as his Savior.
"But," says someone, "there is one more problem that puzzles me. I
know a polished cultured gentleman who is not a Christian and states so
quite definitely, and I know a rather crude uncultured man who is a
Christian and who shows his genuine belief in many ways. Do you mean
to tell me God prefers the uncultured man simply because he has accepted
and acknowledged Christ as his Savior?" This question arises from a
confusion of ideas. A Christian is not different in degree from a non-Christian,
he is different in kind, just as the difference between a diamond and a
cabbage is not one of degree, but of kind. The one is polished, and the
other is crude, but the one is dead while the other is alive, therefore the
one has what the other has not in any degree whatever, life--and such
is the difference God see between a Christian and a non-Christian.
Here is one of many such statement He makes in His Word. 1 John
life, and this life is in his Son. He who has the Son has life; and he
who does not have the Son of God does not have life." So that the vital
and all-important question for everyone of us becomes not am I cultured
or uncouth, but am I alive or dead toward God? Have I received God's
risen Son who brings me life from above, the life of God, called in the
Bible eternal life? Or have I not received Him and am I therefore classed
by God as among those who "have not life"?
But how may I receive the Lord Jesus Christ as my Savior?
If I know that, according to Ephesians 2:1, I am "dead in
trespasses and sins," as regards my relationship with God; if I believe
Jesus Christ gave His life in place of mine, and that now by the
receiving of Him as my Savior I may have eternal salvation, will
perceiving these facts in a cold mechanical way give me everlasting
life? Most certainly not!
A wealthy man loses all his money, and rather that sacrifice his
social position, he agrees to give the hand of his daughter to a rich
man whom she despises. At first she refused point-blank, but when her
father shows her the expediency of the marriage, that it is his only
hope of being saved from utter want, she consents and goes through the
marriage ceremony and becomes, according to the law of the land, the
rich man's wife. But is her heart really his? Surely not!
You see it now, don't you? When a man and a woman would be truly
one, they must love with such a love as to receive each other into those
innermost recesses of their hearts in such a deep, true way that they
cannot fully express in words all that they feel.
We all have the innermost recess of our beings, which is sacred to
us, where emotions stir that no one else could possible understand.
Jesus Christ, God's Son, because of His love for us, claims the right to
enter there. He will take no other place in our lives. The love He has
shown for us entitles Him to that place. Will I withhold it?
When I think that Christ's love for me was so great that He left
His Father's glory and came to earth, becoming truly human that He
might suffer and die in my place to give me eternal life, my heart soften
toward Him.
If, when I lay sick and helpless in a burning building, a friend
had rushed in to save me, and wrapping the blankets about me that I
might receive no harm, had himself been critically scarred and burned
about the face and arms, would not my heart go out to him? God know
it would.
And now I am face to face with my Savior. I see Him suffering in
the
me. I see Him in Pilate's Judgment Hall; the soldiers have been
striking Him in the face, saying, "Prophesy, who smote thee?" I see
them crowding Him with a crown of thorns. They have taken Him
bleeding and bruised from judgment to
spikes through His hands and feet. As He is then lifted up to die
between two thieves, the people gather around to mock and revile Him,
though He is pouring out His life to redeem them. Then I began to
understand what self-sacrificing love really means as I hear Him cry:
"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."
But even if we could enter sympathetically into the physical
suffering of Christ until tears streamed down our cheeks, and that was
all, we should have failed miserably to comprehend the true
significance of the cross.
We read in 2 Corinthians 5:21 that "he (God) made him (Christ) to
be sin for us, who knew no sin." Come with me, I plead with you, with
bowed head and humble heart, and let us, it we may, enter into the soul-
sufferings of Christ the Son, and of God the Father, as that Holy One,
who loathed sin as we would loathe leprosy in "made sin for us."
If the higher the development of the physical organism the greater
the capacity for pain, then the higher the development of the moral
character, the greater the capacity for soul-suffering.
Have you ever heard of a venerable old gentleman, justly proud of
his honored name--a man who would sooner lose his right hand than
use it to do a dishonorable deed? His son and heir goes astray from the
paths of virtue and in a drunken brawl murders someone. And the old
man walks no more erect, his head is bowed in shame, and soon his
soul-suffering brings his gray hairs in sorrow to the grave.
If that be possible (and it is possible even for us to feel the
disgrace of a greater sin than we are used to), think what sin must be
like in all its awfulness to an absolutely holy God! Now we understand
why, in the
cries in agony of soul: "my Father, if it be possible, let this cup
pass from me; nevertheless not as I will, but as you will" (Matthew
26:39). Yet in spite of that agonized cry from
loved the world that he have his only begotten Son" to be "made sin"
for us, "that whoever believes in him should not perish, but have
everlasting life" (John
Now do you understand why I said that if I would retain any ideal
of manhood, or any nobleness of character, I dare not reject One who
has endured so much for me? My intellect has reasoned it all out; my
emotions have been deeply stirred; and now they both appeal to my will
for a decision. To be true to my God and myself and my eternal future
I have only one course open, and I must take it. Today Jesus Christ is
my personal Savior and my Lord.
Because of His love to me, because of the way He has blessed me
here, and because of my assurance of a glorious hereafter, my heart's
desire is that you might share in the blessings I enjoy. Christ had
done all. I say it reverently. He can do no more. He has borne the
penalty of your sin; He has been raised by the power of God; now He
presents Himself to you. Will you accept Him as Savior and Lord?
You are saying; "It seems so mysterious; the mystery of it all
baffles me." I do not ask you to understand the mystery of it. I
cannot understand its mystery myself, nor can any Christian in this
life. I am asking you to rejoice in its fact.
Electricity remains a mystery. We have discovered many of the laws
which govern it, but we cannot tell what it really is. You and I do not
worry about the mystery of electricity as we make use of its benefits.
You must have known men who accepted Jesus Christ as their Savior
and were so changed as to be actually new men in Christ. Will you not
let these facts that you have seen for yourself influence you? Yes, it is
just as simple as switching on an electric light.
Come saying: "Oh God, I cannot understand the mystery of it all.
I cannot understand why You cared enough for me to send Jesus Christ
To bear the penalty of my sins. But with all my lack of understanding, I
am willing and I do yield to You; absolutely. I trust in the fact of
His death for me and the promise that You have made
in John
whoever believes in him shall not perish, but have everlasting life."
Just as you leave the mystery of the electric current with the
engineer and take the benefits of the light for yourself, so leave the
mystery of salvation with God and take the infinite benefits of a
personal savior to yourself. Yield to Him now--He wants to come into
your life. Say and mean it: "I am Yours, Lord Jesus; yielded to You,
body, soul and spirit, and You are mine." Then clinch it by signing the
declaration form on the next page.
MY DECISION
Before God, who knows the innermost secrets
of my soul, I accept Jesus Christ into my life as
my Savior and Lord. I yield absolutely to Him. I
know, on the authority of His own written Word
in John 5:24, that I have everlasting life, for
there He says, "I tell you the truth, whoever hears
my word and believes Him who sent me has eternal
life and will not be condemned; he has crossed over
from death to life."
Signed______________________________________________
Address_____________________________________________
____________________________________________________
Date________________________________________Age_____
A Further Word:
Perhaps you have not yet made a decision to place your faith in
Jesus Christ. The consider the following:
Someone says, "I am one of those individuals who most emphatically
resents being brought to a definite decision on any important subject.
It is not that I have no willpower. If fact, I am so strong-willed that I
am determined neither to pull up against the current nor pull down
with it. I am determined to do nothing but just drift, slowly drift, down
the stream of time to----.
"But I hate to think about it! True believers in Jesus Christ look forward
to eternity with joy. But I--why am I not honest enough to admit to
myself that my resentment at the question is only because I do not
want to decide in the way I know I ought to? Yet I must fact it
some day. Then why not now?"
Now that you have done so, read this little book again. It will
seem so much clearer. Then read the entire gospel of John in the New
Testament.
Now for the last point, a most important one. If you open your
Bible at Romans 10:9 to 11 you will read: "That if you confess with
your mouth the Lord Jesus, and believe in your heart that God raised
him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you
believe and are justified; and it is with your mouth that you confess and
are saved. As the Scripture says, "Everyone who trusts in him will never
be put to shame."
You say you have accepted Christ--go and tell someone--do not be
ashamed to confess Him. Why should you be? Suppose I had fallen off
the wharf, injuring myself so that I could not swim, and a laborer
working on a coal barge had plunged in and saved me. If a month later
you saw me walking down
with coal dust, coming up from the opposite direction, and you see that
I noticed him first and deliberately turned to look into a store window
so that I would not have to stop and greet him because I was ashamed
to be seen talking to him, what would you think of me?
You have declared that you believe the Lord Jesus Christ has given
His life to save you. Occasions will arise when you will meet Him face
to face in the presence of those who despise Him. Will you be ashamed
and look the other way, or will you honor Him in both word and deed as
your Lord and Savior? Having really accepted Him, you must and you
will acknowledge Him.
I make on apology for the truth which underlies these pages. I
have sought to write what I believe God would have me write in the
discharge of my duty to Him and to you. I follow this booklet with the
earnest prayer that God will bless it to your
eternal welfare.
Yours Sincerely,
Robert A. Laidlaw
This booklet was made available on this bulletin board by the
Christian Business Men's Committee (CBMC). The Christian Business
Men's Committee is an international evangelical organization of Christian
business and professional men whose primary purpose is to present Jesus
Christ as Savior and Lord to other business and professional men and to
train these men to carry out the Great Commission. (Matthew 28:18-20,
Colossians 1:28-29).
CBMC of USA is a nondenominational, non-profit Christian ministry
supported by gifts from people committed to reaching and discipling
business and professional men for Jesus Christ.
More information may be obtained by writing: Christian Business
Men's Committee of
Park,
Christian Business Men's Committee of
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