Ten reasons NOT to ask Jesus into your heart.
By Todd Friel
The music weeps, the
preacher pleads, “Give your heart to Jesus. You have a God shaped hole
in your heart and only
Jesus can fill it.” Dozens,
hundreds or thousands of people who want to get their spiritual life on
track make their
way to the altar. They ask
Jesus into their heart.
Cut to three months later. Nobody has seen
our new convert in church.
The follow up committee
calls him and encourages him to attend a Bible study, but to no avail.
We label him a backslider and
get ready for the next
outreach event.
Our beloved child lies in her snuggly
warm bed and says, “Yes, Daddy. I want to ask Jesus into my heart.”
You lead her in “the
prayer” and hope that it sticks. You spend the next ten years
questioning if she really,
really meant it. Puberty
hits and the answer reveals itself. She backslides. We spend the next
ten years praying that she
will come to her senses.
Telling someone to ask
Jesus into their hearts has a very typical result, backsliding. the
Bible says that a person who
is soundly saved puts his
hand to the plow and does not look back because he is fit for service.
In other words, a true convert
cannot backslide. If a
person backslides, he never slid forward in the first place. “If any man
is in Christ, he is
a new creation.” (II Cor.5)
No backsliding there.
Brace yourself for this
one: with very few if any exceptions, anyone who asked Jesus into their
hearts to be saved…is
not. If you asked Jesus
into your heart because you were told that is what you have to do to
become a Christian, you were
mis-informed.
If you have ever told someone to ask Jesus into their heart (like I have), you produced a false convert. Here is why.
1. It
is not in the Bible.
There is not a single verse that even hints we should say a prayer inviting Jesus into our hearts. Some use Rev. 3:20. To tell us that Jesus is standing at the door of our hearts begging to come in.
“Behold, I stand at the door and knock.” There are two reasons that interpretation is wrong.
The context tells us that the door Jesus is knocking on is the door of the church, not the human heart. Jesus is not knocking
to enter someone’s heart but to have fellowship with His church.
Even if the context didn’t tell
us this, we would be forcing a meaning into the text (eisegesis). How do we know it is our heart he is knocking
at? Why not our car door? How do we know he isn’t
knocking on our foot? To suggest that he is knocking
on the door of our heart is
superimposing a meaning on the text that simply does not exist.
The Bible does not instruct us to ask Jesus into our heart. This alone should resolve the issue, nevertheless, here are
nine more reasons.
2. Asking
Jesus into your heart is a saying that makes no sense.
What does it mean to ask
Jesus into your heart? If I say the right incantation will He somehow
enter my heart? Is it literal?
Does He reside in the upper
or lower ventricle? Is this a metaphysical experience? Is it
figurative? If it is, what exactly
does it mean? While I am
certain that most adults cannot articulate its meaning, I am certain
that no child can explain it.
Pastor Dennis Rokser reminds us that little children think literally and can easily be confused (or frightened)
at the prospect of asking Jesus into their heart.
3. In
order to be saved, a man must repent (Acts 2:38).Asking Jesus into your heart leaves out the requirement of repentance.
4. In
order to be saved, a man must trust in Jesus Christ (Acts 16:31).
Asking Jesus into your heart leaves out the requirement of faith.
5. The
person who wrongly believes they are saved will have a false sense of security.
Millions of people
who sincerely, but wrongly,
asked Jesus into their hearts think they are saved but struggle to feel
secure. They live in doubt
and fear because they do
not have the Holy Spirit giving them assurance of salvation.
6. The
person who asks Jesus into
his heart will likely end up inoculated, bitter and backslidden.
Because
he did not get saved by
reciting a formulaic prayer, he will grow disillusioned with Jesus, the
Bible, church and fellow believers.
His latter end will be
worse than the first.
7. It
presents God as a beggar just hoping you will let Him into your busy life. This
presentation of God robs Him of His sovereignty.
8. The
cause of Christ is ridiculed.
Visit an atheist web-site and read the pagans who scoff, “How dare
those Christians tell us
how to live when they get divorced more than we do? Who are they to say
homosexuals shouldn’t
adopt kids when tens of
thousands of orphans don’t get adopted by Christians?” Born again
believers adopt kids
and don’t get divorced.
People who ask Jesus into their hearts do. Jesus gets mocked when false converts give Him a bad name.
9. The
cause of evangelism is hindered.
While it is certainly easier to get church members by telling them
to ask Jesus into their
hearts, try pleading with someone to make today the day of their
salvation. Get ready for a painful
response. “Why should I
become a Christian when I have seen so called Christians act worse than a
pagan?” People
who ask Jesus into their
hearts give pagans an excuse for not repenting.
10. Here
is the scary one. People
who ask Jesus into their hearts are not saved and they will perish on
the Day of Judgment.
How tragic that millions of
people think they are right with God when they are not. How many people
who will cry out, “Lord,
Lord” on judgment day will
be “Christians” who asked Jesus into their hearts?
So, what must one do to be saved? Repent and trust. (Heb.6:1)
The Bible makes it clear that all men must repent and place their trust
in Jesus Christ. Every man does have a “God
shaped hole in their
hearts,” but that hole is not contentment, fulfillment and peace. Every
man’s heart problem
is righteousness. Instead
of preaching that Jesus fulfills, we must preach that God judges and
Jesus satisfies God’s
judgment…if a man will
repent and place his trust in Him.
If you are reading this
and you asked Jesus into your heart, chances are good you had a
spiritual buzz for a while, but
now you struggle to read
your Bible, tithe, attend church and pray. Perhaps you were told you
would have contentment, purpose
and a better life if you
just ask Jesus into your heart. I am sorry, that was a lie.