Why Is Jesus Knocking at the Door?

I have been seeing this meme around Facebook:

Christians have three false ideas that cause unbelievers to slander Jesus like this:

  1. Works have nothing to do with salvation.
  2. It is not about good and evil, but accepting Jesus.
  3. It is not about dos and don’ts, but accepting Jesus.

In the Bible context, Jesus is knocking on the door of the Laodicean church, which foolishly thinks they are doing just fine without him. What he promises if they let him in is a chance to sit on his throne with him in his everlasting kingdom (Rev 3:14-22).

The meme, though, is not completely wrong. The wrath of God is going to come on the sons of disobedience not because they won’t let Jesus in, but because they are sexually immoral, impure, and greedy (Eph. 5:5-7). So the correct answer to “Save me from what?” is “Save you from what God is going to do to you because you are evil. You don’t seem to have the power to free yourself from these things you’re doing that are harmful to society in general, to the people you know, and to yourself. I am offering to provide you the power, but if you want to just press on without me, you may find God is also mad at you for ignoring the Savior he sent to rescue from your slavery to doing what is evil.”

Salvation is all about works, brothers and sisters. Jesus wants to make us new creatures, created in himself to do good works (Eph. 2:10). He died so we could be redeemed from all unrighteousness and become zealous for good works (Tit. 2:14). It is true that in God’s great mercy, no works are required to become part of this amazing cleansing and transforming machine that is the grace of God, powered by the Spirit of God living in us, but once we are inside, the whole purpose is to transform us into doers of good works that will glorify our Father in heaven (Matt. 5:16).

This is why the New Testament is full of dos and don’ts. “Turn from evil, and do good,” Peter writes in his first epistle (3:11). If you’re not keeping commandments, John writes, you don’t know God (1 Jn. 2:3-4). Sinner, Jesus is knocking on your door because you are a goat, turning people away that he wants you to help. He is knocking on your door to make you a sheep, empowered by his Spirit to help those in need and to escape the corruption that is in the world through lust (2 Pet. 1:3-4). He is knocking at your door because he doesn’t want you to find out on the last day, at the final judgment, that you are about to be destroyed because you chose evil over good.

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About Paul Pavao

I am married, the father of six, and currently the grandfather of five. I teach, and I am always trying to learn to disciple others better than I have before. I believe God has gifted me to restore proper theological foundations to the Christian faith. In order to ensure that I do not become a heretic, I read the early church fathers from the second and third centuries. They were around when all the churches founded by the apostles were in unity. My philosophy for Bible reading is to understand each verse for exactly what it says in its local context. Only after accepting the verse for what it says do I compare it with other verses to develop my theology. If other verses seem to contradict a verse I just read, I will wait to say anything about those verses until I have an explanation that allows me to accept all the verses for what they say. This takes time, sometimes years, but eventually I have always been able to find something that does not require explaining verses away. The early church fathers have helped a lot with this. I argue and discuss these foundational doctrines with others to make sure my teaching really lines up with Scripture. I am encouraged by the fact that the several missionaries and pastors that I know well and admire as holy men love the things I teach. I hope you will be encouraged too. I am indeed tearing up old foundations created by tradition in order to re-establish the foundations found in Scripture and lived on by the churches during their 300 years of unity.
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6 Responses to Why Is Jesus Knocking at the Door?

  1. Bob Durocher's avatar Bob Durocher says:

    Paul thank you for the explantion.

  2. Kal El Anakin Skywalker's avatar Kal El Anakin Skywalker says:

    Great Article Paul, right on target. By the way you have “dos” at the top of your article and at the last paragraph I think it should be “do’s” and not “dos”.I could be wrong.

    The Atonement, It Is The Central Doctrine,
    Washing MyGarment/Robe In His Blood
    In His Eternal Debt/Grace
    He Died To Make Man Holy,
    It’s Not Just 6 Words To A Song, They Have Eternal Meaning

    • Paul Pavao's avatar Paul Pavao says:

      Hi Kal El. Actually, “dos” is “correct.” An apostrophe before a plural is never “correct” by grammar standards, but I am not sure grammar standards are what we ought to consider correct. The average person uses “do’s,” not “dos,” despite what the grammar authorities teach. Eventually, common usage will become dictionary usage, which will become grammar authority usage. I’m never sure what to do with that, but for now I am using “dos and don’ts.”

  3. Jim's avatar Jim says:

    Good post Paul!

    Christ offers us a new life and an opportunity to become like Him. That’s what Christianity is all about. The initial forgiveness of sins is the starting point. Not the end point. From there, we start a journey that never ends. We are invited to become like Jesus.

    That journey takes a lot of effort and ….work. The Holy Spirit helps us along the way, but he doesn’t act for us. We must choose our actions. If I have to forgive somebody who has wronged me…I have to do it. God doesn’t do it for me. If I have to change a behavior, I have to do it. God won’t do it for me. We make the hard choices of saying “no” to the world and its values and “Yes” to God and the Kingdom’s values. He may help us see the right path, but we must physically walk down it ourselves. That requires effort.

    God has done his part. We’re called to do ours.

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