03.12. REPLY BY DR. C.D. COLE
REPLY BY DR. C.D. COLE
746 West Noel
Madisonville, Kentucky
December 17th, 1959 My Dear Marjorie:
Greetings and best wishes for a happy holiday season! When I mailed you the books, I intended to follow at once with a letter explaining that you would be under no obligation to pay for them, since you had not ordered them. But other things took precedence, and I was still planning to write when your letter arrived with enclosure. Perhaps I should return part of the money as it was more than enough to pay for what I sent. The supply of books and tracts I have written is almost exhausted, and this is one reason why I sent you what I did. The series of SIN and SALVATION have not been put in book form. I have two or three large scrap books containing articles published in various magazines. At my age (now in my 75th year), I do not expect to publish any more books. However, I have many dear friends among young ministers and some of them may want to publish some of my writings after I am gone. With this brief introduction, I will now attend to your questions in the hope I may be of some help.
1. Peter’s exhortation to "make your calling and election sure", is a warning against presumption. One must not take his salvation for granted without proper evidence of it. Of course he means to make it sure to ourselves, for we can make nothing sure to God. His words have to do with assurance and not to the fact of salvation. He starts with the grace of faith as God’s gift, and urges us to build upon that faith so that our lives may not be barren and unfruitful. No unfruitful believer can have assurance of salvation as a subjective experience. Apropos of your own experience while a backslider.
2. I believe "all" in Romans 11:32 is used only in a relative and not absolute sense, else we have universal salvation. Moreover, Romans 9:18 teaches that God is sovereign in bestowal of mercy. This does not mean that He refuses mercy to any who trust Christ for it, but that He does not cause all to look to Him for mercy– some are left to their own carnal will.
3. The Christian will be judged for his works and not for his sins. His sins have been judged in Christ and will not appear against him in the day of Judgment. Salvation is of grace; reward is for work. There will be degrees both in heaven and in hell, for both the saved and lost will be judged for their deeds–the lost will receive the degree of punishment commensurated with their evil deeds, and the saved will receive glory according to their works. I do not expect the reward of Paul, for my works have not equalled his. Romans 2:1-29 is dealing with principles of judgment under law:
3a. It is to be according to truth (Romans 2:2), that is according to facts;
3b. It is to be according to deeds (Romans 2:6);
3c. It is to be without respect of persons (Romans 2:11-12). The chapter is not showing how to be saved, but what one may expect from the law, whether he be Jew or Gentile.
Romans 14:1-23 warns believers against judging one another for various scruples in regard to eating and observing days on the ground that we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ (Romans 14:10). We shall give account of ourselves to God and not to one another.
1 Corinthians 4:1-21 deals with the judgment of the Christian as a steward of God. We cannot judge or appraise the works of one another here and now, for there is much we cannot know, such as motives and hidden things, but when Christ comes He will know everything about us, and "then shall every man have praise of God" (1 Corinthians 4:5). We are not qualified to judge so as to determine the place one shall have in glory–God will look after that.
4. We are to address the lost as sinners, and not as elect sinners. We do not know who the elect are until they manifest it in faith and good works. And we are to address them as in need of salvation, and urge them to trust the one and only Saviour-and to trust Him now. Shall we tell them to trust Him at once or wait until some other time?
It is true that "no one who is elected for salvation can possibly die without being saved". But this does not mean that they will be saved apart from faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. And the means of salvation are as truly elected as are the persons. 2 Thessalonians 2:13-14 Paul knew more about the doctrine of election than any other man, and yet he persuaded people concerning Jesus (Acts 28:23). He knew the elect would be saved, and yet he prayed and worked for the salvation of Israel. (Romans 9:1-3; Romans 10:1-4; Romans 11:14; 1 Corinthians 9:19-22)
We must not allow the doctrine of election to rob us of compassion for the lost, nor close our eyes to the urgency of salvation. (Hebrews 2:3; 2 Corinthians 6:2)
There will be things we cannot understand and doctrines we shall not be able to harmonize, but it is plainly His commanding will for us to witness to all people concerning Christ Jesus. Secret things belong to God, but the revealed things fix our duty Deuteronomy 29:29 With Christian love,
C.D. Cole
