Have We Eternal Life Now?
A POPULAR answer
would be, Yes! The Scriptural answer is undoubtedly, No.
1. Because
eternal life is a matter of promise.
"This is the
promise that he hath promised us, even eternal life" (1 John 2:25). "Eternal
life, which God, who cannot lie, promised before the world began" (Titus 1:2).
"According to the promise of life which is in Christ Jesus" (2 Tim. 1:1).
The fact of eternal
life being a subject of promise is proof that it is not the subject of present
possession, for what a man has in his possession is no longer "promised" to him.
2. Because it is
in the world or age to come that eternal life is to be received and enjoyed.
"He shall receive
... in the world to come, eternal life" (Mark 10:30). "He that hateth his life
in this world shall keep it unto life eternal" (John 12:25). "God will render
... to them who ... seek for glory, honour, and immortality, eternal life ...
in the day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ" (Rom. 2:7,
16). "The righteous shall go into life eternal" (Matt. 25:46).
If it is in the age
to come that eternal life is to be conferred, it is manifest that it cannot be
possessed in the present age.
3. Because
"eternal life" means strictly "the life of the Age to come"; the word in the New
Testament being derived from the Greek word for "Age". It is truly life which
will never end, and therefore is also translated "everlasting life".
"They who shall
be accounted worthy to obtain that world ... neither can they die any more"
(Luke 20:36). "I give unto my sheep eternal life, and they shall never perish"
(John 10:28). "The wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life
through Jesus Christ our Lord" (Rom. 6:23).
If eternal life is
everlasting life, it follows that in the present state we lack it, seeing our
life is not everlasting, but comes to an end, necessitating our return to mother
earth.
4. Because
eternal or everlasting life results from a change of this corruptible and mortal
body into an incorruptible and immortal one.
"He shall change
our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body" (Phil.
3:21). "This corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on
immortality" (1 Cor. 15:53). "Clothed upon, that mortality may be swallowed up
of life" (2 Cor. 5:4).
Our present mortal
and corruptible state is therefore evidence that we do not now possess immortal
life.
BUT YOU WILL SAY
"There are passages
that plainly say we have eternal life," e.g., "Ye have eternal life" (1 John
5:13); "God hath given to us eternal life" (verse 11) "He that believeth on the
Son hath everlasting life" (John 3:36). True, there are such passages: but what
are we to do with them? Are we to put such a meaning upon them as will
contradict and make the other passages meaningless and useless? or are we to
understand them in harmony with the other passages? There is only one wise
answer: We must find the point of view that harmonizes them. The Scripture is at
one with itself, and if we make it clash, there is something wrong in our
interpretations.
You cannot make the
idea of an actual present possession of eternal life agree with the passages
which tell us it is a future thing: but you can make the idea of an actual
future possession agree with statements that speak of it as a present
possession. You ask, "How?" The answer is: By noting the custom of Scripture to
speak of future things that are certain as though they were present. Examples:
"A father of many
nations have I made thee" [when as yet Abram had no son] -- (Gen. 17:5).
"Unto thy seed
have I given this land" [when as yet there was no seed] -- (Gen. 15:18).
"I [Isaac] have
made him [Jacob] thy [Esau's] Lord and all his brethren have I given to him
for servants and with corn and wine have I sustained him" [when as yet Jacob
had realized none of these things] -- (Gen. 27:37).
There are many
other examples. A single New Testament illustration may suffice: Jesus in prayer
said to the Father, "The glory which thou hast given me, I have given them"
(John 17:22), when as yet, even Jesus himself was not glorified (John 7:39).
Jesus said, "I give my sheep eternal life". In the sense in which he gives it to
them -- in promise and guarantee -- in that sense they "have" it -- not
actually, but in the certainty of its future possession.
Christ now has it
actually, and those who possess him possess it, for he is our life (Col. 3:4),
and that life is eternal life, and this life is in Christ only (1 John 5:11).
Christ dwells in the believer's heart by faith (Eph. 3:17). In this sense, and
in this sense only, eternal life abides in him. But this sense is a very
important sense, for the possession of eternal life by faith will lead to its
actual glorious possession in the age to come.