Romans 10:9-10 (NIV)
That
if you confess with your mouth, "Jesus is Lord," and believe in your
heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you
believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you confess and are
saved.
Your
salvation comes from both believing and speaking. Your believing is an internal matter, between
you and God. Your speaking is an
external matter, between you and other people.
Your heart (‘kardia’ in the Greek) is the center of your physical and spiritual
life. It is your soul and your mind as
well as it is the fountain and seat of the your thoughts, passions, desires,
appetites, affections, purposes, and endeavors.
Your mouth (‘stoma’ in the Greek) is the verbal utterance of what is in
your heart (Matthew 15:18).
Salvation
means that you are set free from the eternal judgment of God. It means that you are no longer a slave to
sin. Sin still exists in life, but a
person who is saved keeps trying to run away from sin while the person who is
unsaved keep running toward it. It’s the
attitude and resultant actions that change once a person is saved. Salvation, according to this passage, means
that you believe in Jesus Christ as Lord because you readily confess this truth
with your mouth. Salvation also means
that you believe within your heart that Jesus died for your sins and was raised
from the dead by God.
In
I John 4:2, there is a very important test that the Bible gives you to
determine the true belief of someone, including yourself, about Jesus Christ
and the proof that His Spirit lives within the person. The proof is this---the confession that Jesus
Christ is God Incarnate. That is, you
believe that Jesus is God and that God became flesh in Christ to save mankind
from their sin nature. If you do not
believe that Jesus is God Incarnate (God in the flesh) and is one with God, you
are not saved because you do not have the Holy Spirit within you to glorify
God.
Note
that this passage affirms that you must believe in Jesus as the Lord of
your life. People might believe that
Jesus is their Savior, but don’t live their lives with Him as their Lord. Salvation is based both on believing in Jesus
as your Lord and as the Savior of your life. I know that I used to testify that I invited
Jesus in my life to be my Savior but I didn’t follow Him as Lord for several
years. I really believed that I was
saved, yet I didn’t go to church, didn’t read the Bible, didn’t do anything for
the Lord. I’ll always wonder if I was
truly saved in those earlier years before I finally rededicated my life to
Christ that involved getting active as a Christian and serving God through
serving others. Make sure that if you
believe that you are saved that you are showing the works that back up your
faith (read James 2:14-26); that Jesus is indeed Lord as well as Savior of your
life.
Why does confession come first,
then belief in verse 9 while verse 10 has belief coming first, then
confession? William MacDonald in Believer’s
Bible Commentary (p. 1722) wrote that verse 9 emphasizes Jesus coming to
earth (Incarnation, Jesus is Lord) and His resurrection (God raised Him from
the dead) that occurred in chronological order.
In verse 10 the emphasis is on the order of events in the salvation of a
sinner. First, belief, then the public
confession of his/her salvation.
Can
you claim these verses as your own? If
not, is it not time to take action on what the Bible says and believe with all
your heart that Jesus came to save you and become the Lord of your life and then
confess Him as your Savior and Lord both privately and then publicly. Your eternal destiny depends on this
decision.
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