Monday, January 1, 2018

"....IF THE RIGHTEOUS IS SCARCELY SAVED..."



Hilary Johnson Chukwuma Chukwurah
“…For it is time for judgment to begin with the family of God; and if it begins with us, what will the outcome be for those who disobey the Gospel of God? And, “If it is hard for the righteous to be saved, what will become of the ungodly and the sinner?” – I Peter 4:17-18 (Berean Study Bible)
CONTEXTUALIZING I PETER 4:17-18
Two schools of thought differ on the historical background of the Book of I Peter: one says that I Peter was written during the reign of Emperor Nero whose obsession to rebuild the City of Rome led him to burn the City. When the city of Rome was burnt, Roman citizens believed that it was Nero who masterminded the conflagration. Citizens were totally devastated and angry because every relic of their culture had been destroyed: - great temples, shrines, and even their household idols were burnt up. There was mass resentment and a possible outbreak of mass protests. In his quest to redirect hostilities against him, Emperor Nero accused Christians of culpability.
The emperor’s decision to scapegoat Christians was a perfect plot. Hitherto, Christians were associated with Jews who were hated by Romans because of their aversion to the Roman culture. In view of this, Emperor Nero quickly spread the word that Christians had set the city on fire. As a result, a vicious persecution against Christians began, and soon spread throughout the Roman Empire, touching places North of the Taurus mountains such as Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia (I Peter 1:1). Christians were scattered across and persecuted by the people. It became a taboo to become a Christian. Times were tough for these believers and many were at the verge of losing their faith and salvation. These believers needed spiritual strengthening because of their sufferings. Thus, Apostle Peter, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit wrote the Epistles of First and Second Peter to strengthen them. He told them that it was better to suffer as a Christian than to suffer as “…a murderer, or as a thief, or as an evildoer, or as a busybody in other men's matters. Yet if any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed; but let him glorify God on this behalf” (I Peter 4:15-16).
 Another school of thought believes that the Book of I Peter was written between 64 and 68 AD to a group of Christians who were facing intense persecutions under Emperor Domitian, a diabolical political leader. Domitian had laid claim to divinity. In his days, when a person was confronted by State officials, he/she would be commandeered to make an expression to determine allegiance. Each person was required to recite, “Dominus et Deus,” meaning, “Domitian is lord.” Christians whose allegiance were to our Lord Jesus Christ would refuse to recite “Dominus et Deus,” but would say, “Christus et Deus,” meaning “Jesus Christ is Lord.” This pitched Christians against the State, translating to mass persecution of Christians. Again, in those days, it was literally an abomination to become a Christian because to become a Christian was to place a death warrant on oneself.
            Rather than urge Christians to take up arms in resistance to government, he urged them to accept these persecutions as part of the refining process that would prepare them for eternal life in God’s Eternal Kingdom. Apostle Peter encouraged Christians that it would have been a minus if anyone would,
“...suffer as a murderer, or as a thief, or as an evildoer, or as a busybody in other men's matters. Yet if any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed; but let him glorify God on this behalf.  For the time is come that judgment must begin at the house of God: and if it first begin at us, what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God? And if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear? Wherefore let them that suffer according to the will of God commit the keeping of their souls to him in well doing, as unto a faithful Creator.
Peter encouraged Christians to consider what they were passing through as a form of “judgment” and argued that if “judgment” would begin with the church, what then would be the fate of those who do not obey the Gospel? The phrase, “And if the righteous scarcely be saved,…” (I Peter 4:18) bespeaks of the intense pressures these persecutions were bearing on the faith of Christians. James Burton Coffman explains:  
The righteous (the Christians) were indeed "scarcely saved"; if Satan had had a better administrator than Nero, if circumstances had been only slightly different from what they were, Christianity might indeed have been exterminated from the earth; but, of course, the providence of God did not allow that to occur. But, if only the most signal providence of God could have spared the Christians from annihilation, what could be expected where, in the case of the disobedient, that providence would not be exercised? The fate of Jerusalem exhibited the tragic answer.

APPLICATIONS
There is nothing as scary as Judgment. More scary is God’s Judgment upon mankind and on the Last Day. Whenever the issue of Judgment is broached, people become frightened. This was the experience of Governor Felix. Acts 24:25 tells us:
 
“And as he reasoned of righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come, Felix trembled, and answered, Go thy way for this time; when I have a convenient season, I will call for thee.”  
The reason this is so is because of the presence of guilt. There are two persons one cannot lie to – oneself and God. Our consciences either bear witness against us when we do not do well or justify us when we do well (Romans 2:15). Because our consciences constantly remind us of our guiltiness each time we blow the fuse, we dread God’s Verdict because God is greater than our consciences (I John 3:20).
            In his epistle, Apostle Peter reminds us that God’s Judgment will begin in His Church and that it is going to be a sweeping event in which many people will be lost. He alludes that “Righteous people will scarcely be saved.” Question therefore, is: “If it is difficult for the righteous to be saved, what will be the fate of the unrighteous?” If it is difficult for a live tree to stand, what will be the fate of the dried one?  
            Why would God’s Judgment commence with the Church? Simply – because charity or cleansing begins at home! God has no moral authority to judge outsiders if He has not first subjected those of His Household to judgment. Law of Supernatural Justice is predicated on the fact that cleansing should begin with those who are inside before it is extended to those who are outside.
Why then should God judge the Church?
1.      Because the Church that will be finally saved is the Church devoid of any wrinkle or spot (Ephesians 5:27).
2.      Because a fisherman after he had done fishing would set aside time to select fishes for his keeps while “rubbish” will be thrown away (Matthew 13:47-48).
3.      Because His people have been infiltrated by a Mixed Multitude (Exodus 12: 38).
4.      The Cleansing of the Temple by Jesus Christ in John Chapter 2 is a sure sign that God will judge His people.
Men and Brethren, God is going to judge His Church because the Church as we see her today is stinking. Abominations that cause desolation have taken center-stages of the doctrinal, moral, spiritual and relational fibres of the Church. The Church is no longer what God designed her to be. There are high profile immoralities going on between ministers and members and between members and members. There is intense politicking amongst brethren in various congregations across the land. Doctrinal integrity has been sacrificed on the altar of convenience and desire to be like the Jones and the Joneses. Greed and social vices have defined the character of today’s Church. What unbelievers consider immoral are now practiced as new morality by the Church (cf. I Corinthians 5:1f).
Going by conventional mass and social media reports, the “wider church” has become a by-word. Men and women are living as if there is no God. Liars and charlatans have infiltrated the rank and file of the Church. Magicians are now parading themselves as “Miracle workers.” Comedians and entertainers are now preachers and ministers. Focus has moved away from Heaven and Salvation to earth and earthly matters. Material prosperity, instead of faithfulness to the Lord and to His Word has become the new yardstick for measuring God’s blessings and approval. Orators and oratory, instead of “faithful preaching” of the Word – “Thus Said the Lord” have become the yardstick for determining who a “powerful minister of God” is.
Men and Brethren, the Church of Jesus Christ has been hijacked and turned on her head! I am sure that as our Lord looks down from Heaven to see what goes on in His Church, He is utterly disappointed. Places of holiness and righteousness have been turned to arenas of unrighteousness and sins of all sorts. In fact all the vices that God says should never characterize His people found in Galatians 5:19-21 and Revelation 21:8 are grand redefinitions of most people in our congregations.
Granted: there remnants of Righteous and Godly servants and maidservants of God - of Christians in every congregation of the Lord’s Church, however, God who sees and knows everyone knows that many are not what they should be. For these few, their salvation is eternally guaranteed if they continue in their steadfastness.                    
Whatever happens, it should be said and stressed to its very limit that - if God does not judge and punish the sins of His Church, He would need to apologise to Sodom and Gomorrah.
  
WHAT IS GOD SAYING TO US?
       At I Peter 4:17-18, God is calling our attention to the fact that even though salvation is free, it is costly to maintain; that to attain eternal salvation a lot of work is required on the part of believers. It is easier to say, “I am” than to prove that I am. If I say I believe like I should, do I live like I shouldn’t?  
            In Kingdom dynamics and economics, profession does not translate to possession and activity does not translate to productivity. Either you have it or you do not have it. Either you keep it or you lose it.
            Salvation is not a child’s play. That which cost God His Only Begotten Son is not a matter to be trifled with. Salvation is a do or die matter. Throughout Scripture, the picture we have of salvation is that it is not an-all-comers’ affair - that even though salvation is free at entrance, it is not altogether an easy exercise. It requires that sacrifices should be made. The door to Heaven is open, but the path to it is tough and rough (Acts 14:22). It takes those with brave hearts and determined determination to make it. 
            If in the days of Noah, only eight souls were saved (I Peter 3:20); if in the days of Lot, only three souls were saved (Genesis 19), then in the days of Christ, only few will be saved. Salvation is for everybody, but Heaven is for the few who walk on the straight and narrow gate (Matthew 7:14).     

WHO ARE THE RIGHTEOUS?
To get an idea of the righteous who will be scarcely saved, we only need to look at Ezekiel 14:14: “’Even if these three men, Noah, Daniel, and Job, were in it, they would deliver only themselves by their righteousness,’ says the Lord God.”
Noah demonstrated extreme righteousness in his days so much so that he found favour of salvation before God (Genesis 6). In an era of commercialized lawlessness, Noah was one man who stood by God and lived by His principles. He was not carried away by the lives of others. He refused to follow the crowd. He and his family were one-man squad of righteous people. To live the way they did showed courage to stand for what is right and to live in consonance with God’s Will oblivious of what others think or do.
Daniel became a giant of righteousness when he stood for God in a foreign land and made a decision that turned the idolatrous world of Babylon on her head. While others followed the bandwagon, he and his friends refused to be cowed by popular demand and chose not to defile themselves by the “…kings wine and meat” (Daniel 1:8f). They passed through series of tests in which they emerged as champions of their faith. Daniel, particularly, went through the mill to prove that he was a candidate for salvation and eternal life when he was severally subjected to severe trials.   
Job was one man whom God testified of as one who lived above the levels of spiritual and moral mediocrity. At Job 1, God proudly announced, “Have you considered my servant Job? There is no one on earth like him; he is blameless and upright, a man who fears God and shuns evil(Job 1:8). 
Issues of righteousness have never been a tea-party affair. Righteousness is what differentiates between Heavenly and Hellish candidates. It is one issue that God places high premium on. This is the character of God’s Kingdom citizens (Romans 14:17-19).

WHAT IS RIGHTEOUSNESS?
            Simply stated, Righteousness is right standing (I John 3:7). Righteousness is cultivating Divine cultures. Righteous is living like God: love what God loves and hate what God hates (Psalm 97:10; Hebrews 1:9).
            Righteousness describes the nature and attributes of God. It is the sum totality of who God is and what makes Him Who He is. In Him there is no sin of any sort. Sin is opposite His nature and being. Moral and spiritual perfections are what define God’s nature. Therefore, to be pleasing to Him, one must be perfect as He is perfect (Matthew 5:48) and holy and He is Holy (I Peter 1:15-16).     

WHY WILL THE RIGHTEOUS BE SCARCELY SAVED?
Because God expects absolute and water-tight obedience from His servants. In God’s dealings with man, there is no provision for half-measures (James 2:10). You are either for God or you are not for God.  
            Moses was one righteous man who was scarcely saved. One act of disobedience was what nearly cost Moses his portion in God’s eternal home. If Moses was nearly lost, why would think that God would be more lenient with the people of today? Hebrews 10:26-29 assures that God requires more obedience and conformity now than He had ever done.  
            Does Scripture say that the righteous will not be saved? No, it says that the righteous will be scarcely saved. The word translated, “Scarcely” is the Greek word, Motis, which can be translated, “with difficulty.” In other words, it will be intense difficulty that the righteous will be saved. Making it to Heaven is not going to be a walk-over. It requires discipline or what Apostle Paul would describe as, “…cleansing ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God” (II Corinthians 7:1). If the righteous will have a hard time getting to Heaven, then the unrighteous will have an easy time going to Hell. A more modern translation of I Peter 4:18 would read:

“If the righteous are saved with difficulty, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear? If the righteous, the house of God, must experience the disciplining hand of God, what shall be the end of them who obey not the Gospel?”     
     
HAD GOD EVER JUDGED HIS PEOPLE IN THE PAST?

1.      Ezekiel 9:6 – Slaughter the old men, the young men and women, the mothers and children, but do not touch anyone who has the mark. Begin at my sanctuary." So they began with the old men who were in front of the temple.”

2.      Jeremiah 25:29 – I have begun to punish Jerusalem, the city that bears my name. Now should I let you go unpunished? No, you will not escape disaster….”

Revelation chapters two and three show that God had judged His people in the past and will do it again. In Revelation chapters 2 and 3, God had dissected every congregation, revealing their strengths and weaknesses. To the Church in Ephesus, He threatened that if she did not repent, He would remove His Candlestick from her (Revelation 2:5).  The candlestick of a church is the evidence of her being a true New Testament church. If it was removed, the administrative work of the Holy Spirit would be gone, and though they still look like a church and be very active in doing what seemed to be the Lord’s work, they were not his any longer.
When the Lord looked into the Church at Corinth, He found that many were sick and that some had already died spiritually (1 Corinthians 11:28-30).
If the Lord should look into your personal life and the congregation where you worship, what is He likely to see – will He see a congregation alive or a congregation that is sick or a congregation that is dead?

In his article,Judgment Will Start in the House of God Shane Idleman (2015) quotes Steve Sutherland as saying:

I'm convinced that the majority of the churches … are seeking to please the masses rather than convict. Repentance is rarely sought and sin is often excused. We want to build a church rather than break a heart. This leaves people confused and deceived because we teach and live a form of Christianity void of repentance ... void of truth.
"If the church today had as many agonizers as she has advisers, we would have a revival within a year. We need to cease listening to men so we can hear the groan of the Spirit which we in our lush pews have forgotten.
Today’s Church has the religion of Jesus Christ, but not a relationship with Jesus Christ. "There is a form of godliness without its power." Truth has been raped and taken advantage of, and God continues to be blasphemed. We should never confuse God’s patience with His approval.”
WHEN GOD JUDGES THE CHURCH, WHO THEN WILL BE SAVED? (MATTHEW 19:25).
1.      Few – very few (Matthew 22:14; I Peter3:20; Revelation 3:4; Luke 13:24).
2.      Those who walked through the narrow way (Matthew 7:13-14; cf. Exodus 23:2).
3.      Those who walked humbly with God (Micah 6:8; Amos 3:3; Genesis 5:24; cf. Hebrews11:5; Genesis 17:1; cf. Ephesians 5:27).
4.      Those who disciplined themselves (I Corinthians 9:25-27; I Timothy 4:8).
5.      Those who strive to enter (Hebrews 4:11; Luke 13:24).
6.      Those who kept the word of God’s perseverance and their crowns from being taken from them (Revelation 3:10-12).
7.      Those who lived with eternity in view (Hebrews11:23-27; Hebrews 11:13-16).


CONCLUSION
I want to conclude by quoting Ed Lewis:

"I believe God is withdrawing His hand of protection from the church in judgment, but the church hasn't realized it yet. The pleasures and values of most people in the church are not much different from other people's, either.  The line that once distinguished Christians from non Christians has become severely blurred.  Why has God not judged . . . ?  The main problem is not so much secularism as it is the secularization of the church.  ‘The salt is losing its savor.’ The purity of the church has been compromised, and we've lost sight of the value of a pure church. Persecution always cleanses and purifies the church wherever it occurs, but we don't have to wait for persecution.  We can repent now for violating God's Word, bringing the world's values into the church, and failing to obey God's voice."\-

Writing to the Corinthian Congregation, Apostle Paul urged them to individually judge themselves so that they would not be condemned with the world. This same appeal goes to all of us. If we do not judge ourselves, God will judge us, but if we judge ourselves we will not be condemned with the world (I Corinthians 11:31-32).
Come to think of it – why are we Christians – is it to do as we please and go to Hell or do as God pleases and make Heaven? If Heaven is our goal, then let us live like Heavenly candidates. The worst form of deception is self-deception. If we say we believe like we should, we should stop behaving like we shouldn’t!    

_______________
Hilary Johnson Chukwuma Chukwurah (Evangelist) is an itinerant minister of God’s Word whose membership is with Church of Christ, 14, Agbugwu Lane, off, University Market Road, Nsukka, Enugu State, Nigeria. A private businessman, Hilary Johnson is the MD/CEO, Grand-Heritage Global Communications, a professional editing, content development and publishing firm. He can be contacted via: Phone – 0803 959 6919 or E-mailhilaryjohnsonc@gmail.com.     


References

Coffman, James Burton. (1983). James Burton Coffman’s Commentary on James, 1 & 2 Peter; 1, 2 & 3 John, Jude, Vol. 11. Texas: Abilene Christian University Press.    

Ed Lewis, “The State of the Church.” Pulpit Helps. (Vol. 20, No 3), March, 1995. 




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