Theology Q&A
By Dr. J. Rodman Williams
Theologian
Dr. J. Rodman Williams answers theological questions, exclusively on CBN.com.
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from Dr. J. Rodman Williams
6. Sin, Death, Satan
- Are practicing homosexuals
accepted by God?
- Please help me
find passages in the New Testament concerning homosexuality showing
that it is a sin. A person I am counseling does not believe it is such
- Why were Sodom and Gomorrah
destroyed?
- I am an artist, and I know
I have knowledge and the power to reach others and point them in a good
direction, but what is the point? Life is meaningless because everything
you do goes away; anything you do is just momentary with no real long
lasting effects. All things end, so what is the point of doing anything
at all. You can't get into heaven with good deeds, and most good deeds
will be forgotten in a few years to come, so what is life all about?
Why are we here? Death is better, maybe because we all go there. Why
not get there faster and save this meaningless trip called life. I need
help with an answer.
- What happens to a Christian person
when he/she dies?
- I want to know and understand
where sin came from. I know it entered the world through deception by
the serpent, but how did it enter into Lucifer? Where did it come from?
- Twice, recently, I have
seen a reference made about God's permissive will which is what prayer
touches. I think I have an understanding regarding His perfect will
as Scripture teaches His desires toward us, and trusting Him in all
situations. I wonder if I need to know more about His "permissive will"
and the things I pray about.
- Are pastors committing the
unpardonable sin by stating that speaking in tongues and the manifestations
of the gifts of the Spirit are all demonic?
- Why do we hear about demons
and evil spirits in the New Testament and not so often in the Old Testament?
- Can a Christian believer be demon-possessed?
- When our body dies, where in Scripture
do we find what happens to us?
- What is sin, from a theological
prospective, and why is redemption so important?
- "God does not hear a sinner's
prayer." Could you please clarify this?
- What do you believe happens
to babies when they die? Do they go to heaven?
- I would like to know what happens
to Christians who kill themselves?
- Is it OK to pray for the soul
of someone who died several years ago?
- Why do you think God hardened
Pharaoh's heart?
- If you are a Christian
and commit fornication, can God still forgive you?
- Where in the Bible does it talk
about Satan and his fall?
- How can there be an unpardonable
sin?
- Is there such a place as purgatory?
- Why is it that Satan works so
hard to break certain people?
- If God created the devil, does
that mean that God is the cause of all evil?
- Since God created all that is in
our universe is it fair to say He also created evil?
- How is God's permissive will
related to the occurrence of sin and the Fall?
- What does the doctrine of "original
sin" affirm?
Are practicing homosexuals accepted by God?
Yes, surely, if they cease from their practice!
This is akin to asking the question, "Are practicing adulterers
accepted by God?"! Paul includes homosexuals and, for that matter,
adulterers among those who will not inherit the kingdom of God: so "do
not be deceived; neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers,…nor
homosexuals ["abusers of themselves with mankind," KJV]…shall
inherit the kingdom of God." Paul adds, "Such were some of you;
but you were washed…sanctified…justified in the name of the
Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Corinthians 6:9-11).
This is the way out -- far beyond the practice!
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Please help me find passages in the New Testament concerning
homosexuality showing that it is a sin. A person I am counseling does
not believe it is such.
Two main passages in the New Testament declaring homosexuality to be
a sin are Romans 1:24-27 and 1 Corinthians 6:9-10. In the former, Paul
speaks of the world as given over to "degrading passions; for their women
exchanged the natural function for that which is unnatural, and the same
way also the men abandoned the natural function of the woman and burned
in their desire towards one another, men with men committing indecent
acts." In the Corinthian passage, Paul includes homosexuals among those
who will not inherit the kingdom of God. "Do not be deceived; neither
fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers nor homosexualsshall inherit
the kingdom of God." Paul adds, "Such were some of you; but you were washedsanctifiedjustified
in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ." Thank God, there is a way out!
On homosexuality as a sin in the New Testament also see 1 Timothy 1:10
and Jude 7. The former links together "immoral men and homosexuals," and
the latter speaks of Sodom and Gomorrah as those who "indulged in gross
immorality and went after strange flesh." They are "exhibited as an example,
in undergoing the punishment of eternal fire."
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Why were Sodom and Gomorrah destroyed?
Read carefully the story of Sodom and Gomorrah as found in Genesis 18
and 19 and as summarized in 2 Peter 2:6-10 and in Jude 7. The climactic
picture is that of citywide perversion, the Genesis account reading: "All
the men from every part of the city of Sodom---both young and old---surrounded
the house. They called to Lot, 'Where are the men who came to you tonight?
Bring them out to us so that we can have sex with them'" (Genesis 19:4
NIV). This situation of citywide corruption brought complete destruction
upon them after Lot and his company escaped: "Then the Lord rained down
burning sulfur on Sodom and Gomorrah---from the Lord out of the heavens"
(verses 24-25).
For more on this, see Renewal
Theology, 1: pages 250-253.
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I am an artist, and I know I have knowledge and the power to
reach others and point them in a good direction, but what is the point?
Life is meaningless because everything you do goes away; anything you
do is just momentary with no real long lasting effects. All things end,
so what is the point of doing anything at all. You can't get into heaven
with good deeds, and most good deeds will be forgotten in a few years
to come, so what is life all about? Why are we here? Death is better,
maybe because we all go there. Why not get there faster and save this
meaningless trip called life. I need help with an answer.
I suggest you read and meditate on the Book of Ecclesiastes all twelve
chapters. Especially note the climax in chapter 12 verses 13-14.
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What happens to a Christian person when he/she dies?
The spirit of the Christian believer at death goes directly to be with
the Lord in heaven. The body is resurrected on the Last Day when Christ
returns.
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I want to know and understand where sin came from. I know it entered
the world through deception by the serpent, but how did it enter into
Lucifer? Where did it come from?
The wording of your question implies that sin was some external force
that entered into Lucifer. Rather, Lucifer was the author of sin. Being
the highest of angels, he pridefully determined to set himself above God.
This he did of his own free will and volition (for more on this, see my Renewal Theology, 1: chapter 10 on "Sin").
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Twice, recently, I have seen a reference made about God's
permissive will which is what prayer touches. I think I have an understanding
regarding His perfect will as Scripture teaches His desires toward us,
and trusting Him in all situations. I wonder if I need to know more about
His "permissive will" and the things I pray about.
God in His will functions either actively or permissively. For example,
in God's creation of the universe He operated actively. In the freedom
He gave man, He operated permissively allowing Adam to obey or disobey.
Even in man's disobedience, which God permitted, God still was in control.
In that sense, the situation was never out of His will. God remains the
sovereign Lord. God's perfect will includes both His active and His permissive
will (for more on "God's Permissive Will," see my Renewal
Theology, 1: pages 229-230).
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I know that the unpardonable sin is blasphemy against
the Holy Spirit, which is to call the work of the Holy Spirit demonic.
Are Christian pastors and teachers committing the unpardonable sin by
stating that speaking in tongues and the manifestations of the gifts of
the Spirit are all demonic?
The Apostle Paul declares that the gifts of the Holy Spirit are "the
manifestation of the Spirit" (1 Corinthians 12:7). The gifts stand
out as exhibitions of the Holy Spirit in word and deed, signifying that
He is on the scene in sovereign grace and power. Thus to declare the gifts
of the Holy Spirit to be demonic is a terrible offense against Him and
His work. Such an attitude is unpardonable whether or not it is labeled
as "blasphemy against the Holy Spirit.".
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Why do we hear about demons and evil spirits in the New
Testament and not so often in the Old Testament?
Since Christ's coming was in part an attack on the demonic realm, evil
was more and more exposed by Him. "The Son of God appeared that He might
destroy the works of the devil" (1 John 3:8). The New Testament records
the crisis for which the Old Testament is preparation.
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Can a Christian believer be demon-possessed?
A Christian may be demon oppressed but not possessed. A true believer
has the Holy Spirit dwelling within. Although a Christian may have many
struggles against sin and evil, he or she cannot be possessed by that
evil reality. "Greater is He who is in you than he who is in the world"
(1 John 4:4).
(For a discussion of demonic possession see Renewal
Theology, 2: 257-263.)
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When our body dies, where in Scripture do we find what
happens to us, spiritual or otherwise. I'm not asking about the Second
Coming, I'm asking about our physical death and what transpires after
we take our last breath prior to the return of Jesus. Do we go to heaven,
hell, a holding pen, or what?
Those who believe in Christ go immediately to be with Him. For example,
the repentant thief on the cross was told by Jesus, "Truly I say
to you, today you shall be with Me in paradise" (Luke 23:43). Paul
writes about his desire "to depart and be with Christ" to occur
immediately upon his death" (Philippians 1:23). In another place
Paul writes about being "absent from the body and at home with the
Lord." (2 Corinthians 5:6). There is no "holding pen"!
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What is sin, from a theological prospective, and why is
redemption so important?
Sin is the personal act of turning away from God and His will and the
breaking of any of His commandments. This results in bondage to sin-"Every
one who commits sin is the slave of sin" (John 8:34). Redemption
is so important because all people are sinners in bondage to sin from
which they cannot free themselves. Only through Christ is redemption possible
and the bondage to sin broken. Thanks be unto Him! (See Renewal
Theology, 1: chapter 10, "Sin")
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"God does not hear a sinner's prayer." Could
you please clarify this?
I was raised Apostolic, and my grandfather is a minister, but there's
one thing that my grandfather teaches that I do not understand. He's ALWAYS
said that "God does not hear a sinner's prayer." How can that
be true? In order for a sinner to be saved, he must first ASK (pray) for
God to come into his life. That IS prayer! If God does not hear a sinner's
prayer, then wouldn't that mean NO ONE could be saved, or forgiven for
that matter? I'm a sinner, and I pray, and I feel that God hears, sees,
and knows my every thought and want. Could you please clarify this for
me?
Your position, I believe, is correct. Sin may block a prayer from getting
through, but God is always ready to listen.
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Recently my youth group has been asking questions about
infant death. What do you believe happens to babies when they die? Do
they go to heaven?
I suggest you look at Matthew 18:2-4 and 19:13-14. Note especially the
words "Let the children alone, and do not hinder them from coming
to Me; for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these." Since
Jesus graciously received them during His ministry, surely He will do
so in heaven. This does not mean that little children, or infants, are
innocent, but they have no ability to make a decision for or against Christ,
which is the requirement for salvation.
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I would like to know what happens to Christians who kill themselves?
Do they go to hell or are they still considered saved?
Suicide, though it is a grave sin, does not necessarily mean the forfeiture
of one's salvation. It is sometimes said that taking one's own life is
"the unpardonable sin," since there is no opportunity for repentance
after death (on the unpardonable sin see Mark 3:28-30-definitely not suicide).
No Christian believer in his right mind will take his own life-a life
redeemed by Christ-but there may be cases in which due to a variety of
circumstances-such as stress, worry, anxiety, and the like-when even a
Christian, out of his right mind, might do this extreme thing. Suicide
is definitely wrong; however, we may believe that Christ's death can cover
such a person's death and allow him to enter heaven.
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Is it OK to pray for the soul of someone who died several
years ago?
There is no suggestion in Scripture of praying for the souls of those
who have died. The decision in this life is determinative of a person's
future state of continuing lostness or blessing. Further, the view that
there is a purgatory after death, and that prayers may be offered to help
in an ongoing purification before entering heaven, is totally foreign
to Scripture.
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I have a hard time understanding in the Book of Exodus
where it says that God hardened Pharaoh's heart. Why do you think God
did this?
During the time of the plagues in Egypt, frequently the statement is
made that "the Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart" (Exodus 9:12;
10:1, 20-27; 11:10; 14:8). It is to be noted that the Scripture also says
that "Pharaoh hardened his heart" (Exodus 8:15, 32; 9:34). Both
of these seemingly contradictory statements are true. Pharaoh's heart
was of such a kind that when God did His mighty miracles, a hardness set
in. God did it in one sense because His act caused the hardening; in another
sense Pharaoh did it himself. Several other verses simply say that "Pharaoh's
heart was hardened" (Exodus 7:13, 22; 8:19; 9:7, 35) without specifying
either God or Pharaoh to be the cause. Perhaps you have heard the saying
that "the same sun that melts wax hardens clay." The hardening
is not caused by the sun, but is due to the nature of the substance: so
with Pharaoh's heart.
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If you are a Christian and commit fornication, can God still
forgive you?
Fornicators have no place in the kingdom of God. Paul writes: "Do
not be deceived; neither fornicators nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor
effeminate [by perversion], nor homosexuals, nor thieves, nor the covetous,
nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers, shall inherit the kingdom
of God" (1 Corinthians 6:9-10). Paul then adds: "Such were some
of you" (note the past tense "were"). A basic change has
occurred in regard to fornicators, and all the others mentioned: "But
you were washed, but you were sanctified, but you were justified in the
name of the Lord Jesus Christ, and in the Spirit of our God" (verse
11). Fornication, if it happens by a Christian, is all the more heinous
since such belongs to the old life of sin and is contrary to the Christian's
new nature. Can God forgive? Yes, if one truly repents. Paul writes about
being "made sorrowful to the point of repentance" (2 Corinthians
7:9). If a Christian commits an act of fornication but is so deeply sorrowful
as to repent and turn from it, God in His mercy will forgive.
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Where in the Bible does it talk about Satan and his fall?
I have been told that he is the prince of music and that he used to be
the head angel, but I can't seem to find this.
In Isaiah 14:12 are the words: "How art thou fallen from heaven,
O Lucifer [literally 'son of the morning']." This passage, while
relating to the king of Babylon and his fall (see verse 4), goes far beyond
into a fall "from heaven." Also, in Ezekiel 28:12 are words
directed specifically to the king of Tyre, but that likewise suggest more,
"You were blameless in your ways, you sinned, therefore I have cast
you as profane from the mountain of God" (verses 15-16). Jesus speaks
of seeing, "Satan fall from heaven like lightning" (Luke 10:18),
and in the book of Revelation there is the vivid declaration that "the
great dragon was thrown down, the serpent of old who is called the devil
and Satan" (12:9). These are important references relating to Satan
and his fall.
The Bible does not speak of Satan as "prince of music" (however
much he does seem to dominate many forms of music today!). That Satan
was "head angel" seems to be implied in the words that follow
in Revelation 12:9-"Satan and his angels." (For more, see Renewal
Theology, 1, page 226 and notes.)
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If Jesus' blood on Calvary can save us from all sin, then
how can there be an unpardonable sin? Also, if someone committed it but
wanted to be right with God, couldn't he be?
First, we need to note Jesus Himself spoke of the unpardonable sin: "All
sins shall be forgiven the sons of men, whatever blasphemies they utter;
but whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit never has forgiveness,
but is guilty of an eternal sin" (Mark 3:28-29). The unpardonable
sin is blasphemy against the Holy Spirit. In another Gospel, the Scripture
reads: "Whoever shall speak a word against the Son of man, it shall
be forgiven him; but whosoever shall speak against the Holy Spirit, it
shall not be forgiven him, either in this age, or in the age to come"
(Matthew 12:32, cf. Luke 12:10). The unpardonable sin is not some extremely
vile sin of gross immorality, for all such may be forgiven. Nor is it
the terrible sin of denying, even repudiating, Christ. Even this may be
forgiven. What then is the unpardonable blasphemy or speech against the
Holy Spirit? The Scripture clearly states it in the following words: "For
they were saying He has an unclean [or 'evil, NIV] spirit." "They"
were the scribes and Pharisees who had just been saying about Jesus, "He
is possessed by Beelzebub" and "He casts out demons by the ruler
of the demons" (Mark 3:22). The unpardonable sin was to maliciously
attribute to Christ the work of the devil, to declaim as evil what is
of the Lord, to viciously label an act or work of the Holy Spirit as a
demonic spirit. Blasphemy against the Holy Spirit shows a conscience so
perverse and hardened as never to be able to receive forgiveness.
Those who commit this sin are not the murderers, the thieves, the liars,
the worldly corrupt, not even the atheists who deny Christ, but religious
leaders (like the scribes and Pharisees) who fight against the Holy Spirit.
(For more details see Renewal
Theology, 1: page 256 and note 54; also 2: page 66, note 24 and
page 132.)
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Is there such a place as purgatory?
According to Roman Catholic doctrine, purgatory is a place where the
souls of believers go for the further purging away of sins before entering
heaven. However, Scripture makes clear that the souls of believers at
death are immediately in the presence of God. In the book of Hebrews there
is the picture of heaven as a place where "the spirits of righteous
men are made perfect" (12:23). No purgatory is needed: upon death
believers are made perfect in the presence of God. (See Renewal
Theology, 3: page 400.)
The belief in purgatory leads people unfortunately to much anxiety and
to prayers for the dead that their loved ones' time of punishment may
be shortened. It is a blessing to know that believers at death are "made
perfect" and enter into the joy of heaven.
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Why is it that Satan works so hard to break certain people?
I am in such shame, I rebuke him every moment. No matter what I do, he
will not leave me. It seems I am losing this battle, or am I?
Rebuking Satan is important, but such needs to be undergirded by calling
on the name of Jesus for deliverance. Satan cannot withstand a living
faith in Christ.
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If God created the devil and the devil is the prince of the
world, does that mean that God is the cause of all evil, since the devil
is the one who hurts us and he was originally a creation of God?
God did not create the devil! He did create the angels, one of whom-possible
the highest-became the devil through his own willful action against God.
The fact that the devil is instrumental in all evil thereafter does not
mean that God is the cause of such since the devil was not originally
God's creation. (For more on the devil's role in human evil, see Renewal
Theology, 1: pages 224-229.)
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Since God created all that is in our temporal universe
(including abstract realities such as love and kindness), is it fair to
say He also created evil? I realize, theologically, that Satan is the
father of evil and that Adam and Eve opened the door with their disobedience.
But can evil exist without first being created?
God did not create evil. According to Genesis 1, everything God created,
or made, was declared "good" (verses 4, 10, 12, 18, 21, 25),
indeed altogether "very good" (verse 31). Among the highest
good there is the gift of freedom: "Man is that entity made to be
free" (see Renewal
Theology, 1: pages 215-19). Genuine freedom includes freedom of
decision for or against God (man was not made a robot!). It was man's
decision against God and His command that brought evil upon the earth.
(Satan was also involved but not the cause of this evil; man was fully
responsible.) Evil is disharmony that man willfully brought into the world.
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How is God's permissive will related to the occurrence
of sin and the Fall?
Sin could not have occurred without God's permissive will. It was a matter
both of God's permission and of His will. God permitted it to happen,
yet also through its occurrence He purposed to make it an instrument to
manifest His grace and glory.
There is undoubtedly a strange paradox here. God surely did not will
the sin of man, else He would have been the author of evil; yet He did
will that through sin and the fall His purpose should be fulfilled. One
aspect of this surely will be the demonstration of His grace, for only
through sin will the glory of God's grace become utterly manifest. Without
the sin of the human race, there would have been no Calvary and no demonstration
of the incredible love of God. Thus it is through the very sin and fall
of man that the "amazing grace" of God the Father in Jesus Christ
will be made known.
The permissive will of God stands ultimately behind the sin and fall
of mankind. This by no means mitigates the heinousness of sin and evil
nor the ensuing misery of the human condition. But it does say that through
it all God is sovereignly working out His purpose to manifest the heights
of His grace and glory. (See Renewal
Theology, 1: chapter 10, "Sin.")
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What does the doctrine of "original sin" affirm?
"Original sin" refers to the fact that the human race is sinful
in nature. This by no means refers to human nature as God made it-or makes
it-but to the fact that before man commits any sin he is already a sinner.
This situation may be described in terms both of sin being passed on to
all people from the first man and our identification with primal man in
his sin. However depicted, the important feature is that man does not
come into the world as an innocent or neutral creature but is affected
by sin in all aspects of his being (Psalm 58:3; cf. Psalm 51:5). Indeed,
by virtue of this fact, man is vitiated in every area of his nature-body,
soul, spirit-so that he is utterly incapable himself of restoration and
salvation. His only hope is in Jesus Christ. (See Renewal
Theology, 1: chapter 11, "The Effects of Sin.")
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