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Climbing to Heaven on a Rope of Sand
E.A. Johnston
0:00
0:00 6:31
E.A. Johnston

Climbing to Heaven on a Rope of Sand

E.A. Johnston · 6:31

E.A. Johnston warns that relying on good works or mere religious affiliation is like climbing to heaven on a rope of sand, emphasizing that only genuine repentance and faith in Christ’s atoning blood secure salvation.
In this powerful evangelistic sermon, E.A. Johnston challenges common misconceptions about salvation, emphasizing that good works and religious rituals cannot secure entrance to heaven. Drawing from Scripture and historical preaching, Johnston calls listeners to genuine repentance and faith in Christ’s atoning blood. He warns against the false hope many cling to and urges a heartfelt response to the gospel before it is too late.

Full Transcript

I believe just about everybody thinks everyone is going to heaven today. When someone dies, their friends and family will say, Well, old Joe is up in heaven now, smiling down on us. They base their reasoning on an ignorance of the Bible and the fact that old Joe was an overall good guy.

So he must be in heaven because good people go to heaven, right? Wrong, friends. Good people don't go to heaven. Only forgiven people get to go there.

Most folks are religious to some degree or another and enjoy the camaraderie of being in some kind of religious institution on an occasional Sunday. Going to mass makes them feel less guilty and safeguards them, so they think, from going to hell. Some folks believe that God keeps a scale up in heaven and when you die, he weighs your good works against your bad works.

And if the good outweighs the bad, then heaven is gained. You can stop anyone on the street today and ask them if they think they will go to heaven when they die. And 90% of them will tell you yes.

After all, God is a God of love, right? He wouldn't send anybody to hell. The only persons that go to hell are really evil people like mass murderers or serial killers or sociopaths. But all these people who have hopes of heaven are climbing to heaven on a rope of sand.

Jesus declared the difficulty of getting into God's holy heaven. In Luke 13, 24, he declared, For many, I say unto you, will seek to enter in and shall not be able. Jesus also said that there are few who are saved and the way to salvation is a straight gate along a narrow road and you have to strive to enter in.

You have to take heaven by violence. For when Jesus says, Many will seek to enter in and shall not be able, he's referring to the multitudes we have already mentioned who carry a false hope of heaven. It was the great British evangelist, George Whitefield, while preaching his last sermon beneath the sky in the fields of Exeter, New Hampshire, where he preached in an excited tone, which carried over the immense crowd of 4,000 who were assembled to hear him that day in late September, 1770.

Whitefield cried, Oh, works, works, a man get to heaven by works? I would as soon think of climbing to the moon on a rope of sand. But what Whitefield said is true, friends. There are multitudes today climbing their way to heaven on a rope of sand.

They will soon dissolve and down they will fall until they bust hell wide open. But it is not just world religions that hold on to a unfounded hope of heaven. But there are a multitude of Baptists today and Methodists today and Presbyterians today and Lutherans today that know about Jesus, but who don't know Jesus savingly.

They rest their hope of heaven on church membership or a physical act they did in response to an emotional appeal like walking an aisle or repeating a prayer or believing a verse of scripture, but all of these are mere ropes of sand that one day will dissolve in the wind. I believe there are many in our churches today who believe that Jesus died for sin, but without believing on the Christ who died. Like I said, friends, knowing about Jesus and knowing Jesus is the great divide between heaven and hell.

Many have fallen victim to modern evangelism with its man-centered methodologies and a only-believe gospel. And consequently, they sit on a rotten foundation of an empty religious profession. They made some kind of decision and were baptized and were added to the church roll, and there they serve in some capacity Sunday after Sunday.

But they've never been awakened to their lost condition, never come under Holy Spirit conviction, and have missed repentance and have never ever been subjects of regeneration. They maintain a good opinion of themselves as they cling to their rope of sand, as they climb up and up and up on the way to heaven. But they've never gotten their sins washed in the blood of Christ Jesus, and they mirror the people mentioned in Proverbs 30.12. There is a generation that is pure in its own eyes, and yet is not washed from their filthiness.

Listen, friend, modern evangelism has damned its millions. You must be washed in the blood and born from above, or the rope you climb up on will dissolve in your hands, because your hope of heaven is like a rope of sand. Repent before it's too late.

Sermon Outline

  1. I
    • Common misconceptions about who goes to heaven
    • The false hope of good people automatically entering heaven
    • The error of weighing good works against bad works
  2. II
    • Jesus’ teaching on the difficulty of entering heaven
    • The narrow gate and the need to strive to enter
    • The warning about many seeking but few being saved
  3. III
    • The futility of relying on works or religious rituals
    • The danger of modern evangelism’s man-centered gospel
    • The necessity of true repentance and regeneration
  4. IV
    • The call to be washed in the blood of Christ
    • The urgency of repentance before it’s too late
    • The final warning against climbing heaven on a rope of sand

Key Quotes

“Good people don't go to heaven. Only forgiven people get to go there.” — E.A. Johnston
“There are multitudes today climbing their way to heaven on a rope of sand.” — E.A. Johnston
“You must be washed in the blood and born from above, or the rope you climb up on will dissolve in your hands.” — E.A. Johnston

Application Points

  • Examine your foundation for hope in heaven to ensure it is based on genuine faith in Christ.
  • Repent sincerely and seek the cleansing power of Jesus’ blood for true forgiveness.
  • Do not rely on church membership or good works as a guarantee of salvation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does being a good person guarantee entrance to heaven?
No, E.A. Johnston explains that only forgiven people, not merely good people, enter heaven.
What does Jesus say about entering heaven?
Jesus teaches that entering heaven is difficult, requiring striving through the narrow gate, and many who seek will not enter.
Why is relying on church membership or rituals insufficient for salvation?
Because these can be empty professions without true repentance, regeneration, or faith in Christ’s atoning work.
What is meant by 'climbing to heaven on a rope of sand'?
It symbolizes trusting in unstable, unreliable foundations like works or emotional decisions rather than genuine salvation.
What must one do to truly secure salvation?
One must be washed in the blood of Christ, repent sincerely, and be born again through the Holy Spirit.

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