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Is Salvation Possible For Those Who Do Not Believe In Jesus? by Daniel Mann

As a resource center, occasionally we re-share good material available online. We give full credit to the author as well as the website that originally publish such material. The following is taken from Daniel Mann’s blog, Mann’s Word. You can read the original article here.


Scripture gives us no such hope. Jesus did not extend this hope to the Jewish leadership of His day:

Without Jesus, the Mosaic Covenant would do them absolutely no good. To His own disciples, He warned that if they wanted the biblically promised salvation, it would have to come through Him:

According to Jesus, salvation isn’t possible through other religions or teachers:

However, some believe that there is another way. While they might acknowledge that the only way to salvation is through Jesus and what He accomplished on the Cross, they claim that it is possible to receive the benefits of the Cross without faith in Jesus. Consequently, Peter Kreeft and Ronald Tacelli have written:

According to Kreeft and Tacelli, our lack of certain beliefs (faith) cannot damn us. Therefore, faith in Jesus might be unnecessary. If Abraham was saved apart from a faith in Jesus, there must be many others who were also saved without the right beliefs in Jesus.

However, this argument is not Biblically sound. Abraham had believed what God had told Him. However, today, God has been revealing more, and this too must be believed if we truly have faith in Him. Paul had explained to the Athenians that, after the Cross, God expects more from humankind:

Consequently, the content of Abraham’s faith is no longer normative for us. While God still requires faith, He now requires faith in Jesus. However, Kreeft raises a deeper issue – Does God really care about theology exams and the correctness of our faith?

Well, what would be better than the requirement of faith? Perhaps nothing! If God used any other criterion for salvation, none of us would qualify:

Consequently, salvation and everything else we mercifully receive from God can only be received as a gift (Eph. 2:8-9; Rom. 3:26-28; Gal. 3:1-5; 5:2-4), by grace. Therefore, it is ultimately God’s grace that saves us, but He saves through our beliefs and attitudes.

Kreeft demeans this means of salvation as a mere “theology exam,” something that sounds superficial to a loving relationship. However, our beliefs and thoughts are critical to God’s plan to reconcile us to Himself, especially in regards to our sin and guilt:

It is important that we recognize and confess our sins. This is necessary for any kind of reconciliation. Ordinarily, we live lives of denial and rationalizations, even hating the things of God, as Jesus taught:

We must also believe that God blesses us if we seek Him:

We have to believe that it is all about God’s mercy to us and not about our moral merit. This belief produces gratitude and guards against self-exalting pride and its flipside – depression. In summary, how we think (our beliefs) is not only how we are but also how we relate to others. If I think that I’m entitled to God’s forgiveness and salvation because of my moral rectitude, it will undermine any possible relationship I might try to develop with God.

However, it is not our thoughts alone that save us. The Devil had the right thoughts in this regard (James 2:19), but to no avail. Instead, the gift of faith is inseparable from a greater gift – the gift of a new heart (and the Spirit), which opens our eyes to the truths/doctrines of the Gospel and inclines us to be drawn to them.

In light of this, faith is far more than a “theology exam,” in which, if you produce the right answers, God will grant us entrance into heaven. This is a gross misrepresentation of both faith and God’s salvation.

Can we receive the grace of Christ without faith? The Bible gives us no explicit evidence of this. Instead, it seems that faith is absolutely necessary:

But how about those who simply never heard about this “great salvation?” Will they be eternally condemned? It seems so:

It seems that, without faith, all know about God will fall under the “wrath of God,” instead of the salvation of God. And what of those who could not possess such knowledge? What about the salvation of babies and the aborted? We do not have any explicit Scriptural teaching on this subject. Instead, Scripture seems to leave this door slightly ajar:

What then is the Good News that we must preach? Where Scripture remain uncertain, we too must remain uncertain. Where its teachings are clear, we too must be clear.

Is there any hope for those who could have known better? Not according to Scripture! If there is a secret hope for them, we must remain as silent as Scripture on the subject. The secret things of God must remain with God (Deuteronomy 29:29).

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