Modern
evangelical churches today boast higher memberships then ever
before in the history of the church. Local congregations with
numbers exceeding a thousand are not uncommon. New publishing
companies, record labels, conventions and endless businesses
sporting a little fish on their logo have become so familiar
that even the world has begun to mimic it. If numbers alone
were the determining factor, it would seem definite that revival
has characterized the twentieth century.
However, as the numbers have increased,
morality and modesty have steadily decreased. Crime, lawsuits
and divorce have now become as commonplace in the church as
in the world. I guess it should be no surprise that the twentieth
century has also seen exponential rises in church splits, factions,
heresies, cults, and even warfare among professing Christians.
If the evangelical message is intended to be one of salvation,
we must be left to wonder exactly what it is they are being
saved from.
Paris Reidhead, in his book, “Evidences
of Eternal Life”, insists that salvation should be noticeable.
The back cover of the book expressed his sentiment in this statement:
“A hallmark is that mark of genuineness that cannot be imitated.
True Christianity, says the Apostle John, has certain hallmarks—certain
evidences of eternal life. He lists them throughout his first
epistle as follows: walk in the light, keep His commandments,
love your brother, love not the world, abide in Him, do not
commit sin, love one another, receive the witness of the Spirit,
overcome the world, dwell in the life that is in the Son. If
these ten evidences of eternal life are not current in the Christian’s
life, there is reason to question the believer’s position in
Christ Jesus.”
Paris Reidhead was born on a Minnesota
farm in 1919. Some of the highlights of his lifetime of ministry
might include his pastorate in rural Minnesota, his duties as
linguist and missionary along the Sudan-Ethiopia border, inner-city
pastor in New York City, consultant for the United Nation’s
Industrial Development Organization to villages in South America
and Africa, and his participation in many Christian conferences
across the country. It was during one of these conferences,
at Bethany Fellowship in Minnesota, that he preached his sermon,
“Ten Shekels and a Shirt”, for which he is best known. In all
of his messages Reidhead cries out for a Christian life that
is real, effectual, and life changing.
In this book, “Evidences of
Eternal Life”, Reidhead speaks with a burden on the subjects
of salvation, assurance, and fellowship with Christ. Speaking
about salvation he said, “The Lord Jesus, speaking of Himself,
said, ‘I am the way, the truth and the life; no man cometh unto
the Father, but by me’ (John 14:6). He said that He was salvation.
Salvation is neither something He did for us, nor a scheme He
provided. Salvation is what He is. David knew that. In Psalm
27:1 he said, ‘The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall
I fear? The LORD is the strength of my life; of whom shall I
be afraid?’ Salvation is a person.”
Reidhead goes on to say that in
order to receive the person of Jesus Christ, we must put to
death our “self”. Further, putting to death the self is not
some kind of theological semantic. It is a real and complete
turning away from sin and the world. He writes, “This I
affirm: Whosoever is born of God has been awakened and convicted
by the Holy Spirit and has been brought to repentance. That
person has savingly received Christ and has the witness of the
Holy Spirit of that event. That person has become a new creation.
The time involved is not the issue. The issue is reality! We
are begotten by the agency of His Spirit, confirming the change
of our purpose from pleasing self to pleasing God.”
This reality he speaks of demonstrates
itself in a Christian’s desire to be holy and set apart. It
is mournful today that the message of Christ is often presented
like a high-pressure insurance package. A changed life is considered
a mere option for the more committed. About this Reidhead says,
“How tragic when Christ has been presented as a ‘hell insurance
scheme’ without the prerequisites of awakening, conviction,
repentance, and faith. How can a person who has had so much
requirement be expected to overcome the world? By the same token,
the person who has not experienced awakening, conviction, and
repentance, does not meet the definition of having been born
of God. You cannot be an overcomer until you have come over
from the kingdom of darkness into the kingdom of light.”
These are strong words, but again,
Reidhead stresses reality, not hermeneutical imaginations. Simply
put, his idea is that if God saved you, then you should know
it and you should have fruit to prove it. One of the particular
things I am challenged by is Reidhead’s teaching on the witness
of the Spirit. As I have listened to his recorded messages and
read his books, I have seen this as a recurring theme. His burden
is that no one can tell another person that they are born again
except the Holy Spirit. He proclaims that this witness of the
Spirit is very real and does not need us to “get in the way.”
He stresses that the sad reality
in both the liberal and the conservative camps is that they
are full of professing Christians who have merely gone through
the motions, said a prayer, walked an isle, followed the crowd,
obeyed their parents or tradition, and nothing has happened.
They have no assurance of salvation, no adoption, no victory,
and therefore, no reality. He writes: (the bold print is his
emphasis) “Those of you who are acquainted with me recognize
one of the capstones of my preaching: We should never
tell people that they are saved! We must tell them
how holy God is. We can show them from the Word how sinful sin
is. We can tell them what God did to achieve their salvation.
We can tell them what they must do to be saved. But we
must never tell them that they are saved. Only God
knows the hearts of people.”
Further he says, “It is splendid
to have been born in a Christian home. It is of great value
to have been baptized. It is good to have your name inscribed
on the church records. But no one has the right to think he
is a child of God until, after having reached the age of responsibility,
that individual personally receives the Lord Jesus Christ in
repentance and faith. Call it ‘being born again’, ‘the new creation’.
These are words used in Scripture to describe the act of God
communicating life to the sinner. He brings us into His family.
Therefore, it is the Spirit of Adoption.”
I wonder how many “would-be” Christians
have died in miscarriages at the very moment of their conversions
by the maladies of false assurance, empty commitment and a crossless
Christ. Reidhead’s teachings have encouraged me to settle for
nothing less than the real, life-changing message and work of
the person of Jesus Christ.
This book and one other book entitled,
“Finding the Reality of God”, which was previously
titled, “Getting Evangelicals Saved”, can be obtained
on a donation basis from his family’s ministry.
The tape “Ten
Shekels and a Shirt” is #1827 in the Charity Gospel
Tape Ministry catalog. If you have not heard it, order
it today!
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