E.A. Johnston emphasizes that genuine salvation requires a heart transformed by the new birth, not mere intellectual assent or good works.
In this powerful evangelistic sermon, E.A. Johnston challenges believers to examine the reality of their salvation. Drawing on the example of George Whitefield and the words of Jesus to Nicodemus, Johnston stresses that intellectual assent and good works are insufficient for entrance into heaven. He calls listeners to experience the new birth—a supernatural transformation of the heart by the Holy Spirit. This message is a passionate plea for genuine faith and regeneration.
Full Transcript
I believe, friends, that there are, in some churches, some really good people, that are hard-working, honest folk, that stand for God and country, and who oppose evil in society. And every time the church doors are open, they are there faithfully serving and giving of their money and their time. Some were back yonder, they made a decision for Jesus, by responding to a gospel invitation, and they joined the church and were baptized, and they've been serving faithfully for years.
But the sad fact remains, they are strangers to a work of grace upon the heart, because they've never been awakened to their lost condition, never been brought under Holy Spirit conviction, and have never been wrought upon by a work of grace upon the heart, whereby the heart of stone is made a heart of flesh, through the supernatural act of regeneration in the new birth. George Whitefield, the great British evangelist, wore himself out at the age of fifty-five, but traveling up and down two continents for God, proclaiming one singular message, ye must be born again. Whitefield knew firsthand what it was like to be an unconverted church member.
He lived that way for several years. He fasted, he prayed, he gave alms to the poor, he visited widows and prisoners for the sake of the gospel. But Whitefield was yet a stranger to a work of grace that God performs upon the heart through regeneration.
It wasn't until his good friend Charles Wesley gave him a book written by the Scotsman Henry Schugle entitled The Life of God in the Soul of Man. Whitefield read it and realized all his good works for God were nothing more than a hole in the wall, and he realized he'd been trying to climb up to heaven on a rope of sand. The very last sermon the old boy preached was in Exeter, New Hampshire.
As he stood in a field, in the open air, with an audience of four thousand before him, he shouted out with his very last breaths, for he died the next morning. He cried to them, works, works, I'd no sooner trust in works than I think of climbing to heaven on a rope of sand. I've stood on that exact spot, friends, where Whitefield preached that day.
There's a commemorative stone there which marks that special occasion. I've got a photo of it in my biography of Whitefield if you want to see it. But you can't get to heaven on good works and a long track record of service, friend.
And you can't get to heaven on a good opinion of yourself. And you can't get to heaven resting on your church membership for salvation. And you can't get to heaven by being just a deacon, elder, or pastor.
Titles won't get you in there. And you can't even get to heaven, friend, by being a good person, because good people don't go to heaven. Only forgiven people get to go there.
Only those whom God has wrought a work of grace upon the heart, because you have to be washed in the blood and born from above, you must be born again. Do you know, friend, if you've ever been truly born again, you'd know it for sure if something so remarkable like that happened to you, like the life of God and the soul of man took place in your heart. A man let out of prison knows full well of his release.
A dying patient spared death very much understands the reality of what just happened to them. Even when you come inside from being in a violent thunderstorm, you know your safety in that refuge from the storm. You can't be a halfway Christian, friend, where half of you has done your level best to serve God and be faithful to your church, and that half of you is your head, because when you walked that aisle or repeated that sinner's prayer or just said yes to Jesus, you did it with your head, and your heart was never in the deal, because you were yet a stranger to a work of grace upon the heart through the new birth.
That's why you can't stand long nights of prayer. That's why you don't live in your Bible. That's why you can't talk deeply about spiritual things, why you can't have any victory over sin and why you feel God is a block of wood or a mountain of stone and he's hundreds and hundreds of millions of miles away.
You have no living reality of God in your life, because you do not possess the life of God in the soul of man. You're just a good boy, or you're just a good girl, but an unregenerate good boy and an unregenerate good girl can't go to heaven. No, sir, you can't get to heaven as a halfway Christian, because your head can't go to heaven while the rest of you rots in hell.
You must be born again. In John's Gospel, Jesus speaks to Nicodemus the following words, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God. Then Jesus further explains, That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the spirit is spirit.
Marvel not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born again. Listen to me, dear friend, I don't preach these messages to make you feel bad or make you doubt your salvation. I know what it's like to be a halfway Christian, only having a head knowledge of Jesus, but not possessing him in the heart, for I was an unconverted church member for many years, believing church membership was salvation.
I preach these messages to you, because I care about your soul, and the reason I try so hard to get under your skin and gnaw at you is to awaken you to your danger of relying upon a false profession of faith and dying in your sins to be cast into a burning hell for all eternity. You must be born again. Salvation is Christ.
You must get an interest in Christ, be washed in his blood for forgiveness of sin, and be born from above in a supernatural experience through the new birth, if you want to get to heaven when you die. Because why your head can't go to heaven? Let us pray.
Sermon Outline
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I
- Good works and church membership do not guarantee salvation
- Many faithful churchgoers lack true regeneration
- George Whitefield's testimony illustrates the need for new birth
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II
- Salvation is not based on titles or good opinions of oneself
- Only those born again through a work of grace can enter heaven
- The new birth transforms the heart, not just the mind
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III
- Halfway Christianity is insufficient for salvation
- True conversion results in a living reality of God in the soul
- Jesus’ teaching to Nicodemus highlights the necessity of being born again
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IV
- The speaker’s personal experience with false assurance
- The urgency of awakening to the danger of false profession
- Call to receive Christ and be born from above
Key Quotes
“You can't get to heaven on good works and a long track record of service.” — E.A. Johnston
“Only forgiven people get to go there.” — E.A. Johnston
“You can't be a halfway Christian, friend, where half of you has done your level best to serve God and be faithful to your church, and that half of you is your head.” — E.A. Johnston
Application Points
- Examine your heart to ensure your faith is genuine and not merely intellectual.
- Do not rely on church attendance or good deeds for salvation but seek a true relationship with Christ.
- Respond to the call to be born again and experience the transforming power of God’s grace.
