Quick Prayerism

August 3, 2005 by  David Cloud,   The following is excerpted from the second edition of the book Repentance Is More Than a Sinner’s Prayer, copyright 2000, David W. Cloud, which is available from Way of Life Literature:

 Speaking very broadly and very generally, I praise the Lord for the fundamental Baptist church movement. It represents a variety of congregations that hold certain things in common, chiefly (again, speaking very generally) Baptist Bible doctrine, independence from denominational structures, and a fundamentalist militancy for the truth. Fundamental Baptist churches have exhibited a tremendous zeal for evangelism and world missions. Multitudes throughout the world have been saved because of this zeal. Fundamental Baptist churches have also been at the vanguard for the defense of the truth in these end times. George W. Dollar, one of the foremost historians of the Fundamentalist movement, makes the following observation: “Increasingly, independent Baptists have dominated the scene of Fundamentalism from 1935 onward. Their hard-hitting evangelism produced some large churches; their constant emphasis on soulwinning and the erection of independent Baptist schools, with a strong push from interdenominationalism, have given them a commanding place on the American continent. … One added factor in this new situation has been the deepening apostasy among organized Baptists, Presbyterians, and Methodists. Fundamentalists among the last two groups have had great difficulty in getting many people to leave the old-line denominations. In fact, few Presbyterians and Methodists have been willing to leave at all, even in the face of outrageous apostasy and Liberalism” (Dollar, A History of Fundamentalism in America, third edition 1989, p. 213). These positive factors aside, in recent decades, a great error has swept through many realms of the fundamental Baptist movement. I call it “QUICK PRAYERISM.” It is an evangelistic methodology whereby people are told that they are Heaven-bound Christians and are counted as such in reports merely because they have prayed a sinner’s prayer, even though they often give no evidence that they have been born again. I call it “prayerism” because it focuses on a prayer as the means of salvation. I call it “quick prayerism” because it specializes in quick presentations and quick decisions and an overall shallowness of depth. The churches that have adopted this unscriptural method of evangelism have produced millions of false professions. It is not uncommon that one percent and less of the “converts” demonstrates genuine salvation. There are many churches that can show only a handful of new creatures in Christ for every thousand converts they claim. There is something extremely wrong about that picture. It is a great confusion. For years I have observed the sad fruit of this technique: multitudes of false professions, confusion about salvation, indifference to biblical truth, agnosticism, reprobate living, and blasphemy against God. In many communities across the land a large percentage of the population has prayed a sinner’s prayer and been baptized at churches practicing quick prayerism. Vast numbers of these have never been born again and they are now almost inoculated against biblical salvation. When challenged about their lifeless spiritual condition, they commonly reply, “I have done that,” meaning they have prayed a prayer and have been given assurance of eternal life. Since they were not told that God requires that they repent of their sin, they are comfortable and self-assured that they have a ticket to Heaven. Those who observe these things are made to think that salvation means little or nothing in relation to one’s manner of life. My Personal Experience I was saved at age 23 by God’s grace in the summer of 1973 and soon joined a fundamental Baptist church. I was overjoyed to find churches that took the Bible seriously, that did not want to soft-sell God’s requirements for Christian living, that were genuinely zealous for biblical truth and were willing to stand for the truth and AGAINST error. I was devouring the Bible and had read the New Testament through three or four times the first few months after I was saved, and I knew that this was the type of church that God wanted me to join. There is no perfect fundamental Baptist church, and the one I joined as a new Christian certainly was far from perfect. It was zealous and bold for the Lord, though, and I was thrilled to find a home there. A year later I attended a fundamental Baptist Bible school to further my education in the Scriptures and to prepare my life for the Lord’s service. I didn’t know what the Lord was calling me to do, but I knew that whatever I did in God’s will required a strong foundation in His Word. While there, I worked in the bus ministry of a large fundamental Baptist church (Highland Park Baptist Church, Chattanooga, Tennessee) and preached at a small chapel associated with that church. I was trained in soul-winning techniques that were designed to produce a high number of “professions of faith.” Preaching and demanding repentance was not part of the technique. It focused, rather, on manipulating people to admit that they were sinners (without taking the time to clarify exactly what that meant), to acknowledge that they would like to go to Heaven when they die, and to pray a sinner’s prayer. Those who prayed the prayer were immediately told they were saved, were given assurance of salvation, and were reported as saved, though the vast majority demonstrated no biblical evidence of salvation. I witnessed this type of thing many times. A group of soul winners would return to the church claiming to have won ten people to Christ, but, typically, not even one of those “saved” people would show any further interest in the things of God. If this type of thing happened once or twice, no one would think much of it. No church can avoid false professions entirely; but the reporting of massive numbers of empty professions is the standard procedure for these churches. No one seems disturbed that only a tiny percentage of the many salvations being reported exhibit any evidence of regeneration. For several weeks in 1977, my wife and I followed up on a Phoster Club soul-winning program in a church in Florida. Though the Phoster Club ladies reported many salvations, we did not find even one person who demonstrated biblical evidence of salvation. (I know that people are saved through these programs, but the large statistics do not reflect reality.) I have a friend who pastored a fundamental Baptist church in northern Indiana near First Baptist Church of Hammond. In 1980, a Hyles-Anderson student in his church obtained roughly 1,000 decision cards from the First Baptist Church’s visitation ministry. They diligently followed up on these individuals but were extremely disappointed to find that not even one was interested in the things of Christ. This batch of professions was entirely void of spiritual reality. He testified to me that this opened his eyes to the danger of the Hyles approach to evangelism and underscored the duplicity of the reports that are published by First Baptist. I will not give his name, because I don’t want him subjected to harassment; but I have it on record. During my first year at Bible school when I went soul winning with various expert soul winners, I witnessed this type of thing repeatedly. The soul winner would take someone through the “Roman’s Road” although the individual often showed practically no interest in what was being said and although he appeared to be itching to get away from us and to go about his or her business. In spite of the lack of any evident Holy Spirit conviction or repentance, the soul winner would manipulate the person into praying a prayer and then would announce them “saved” and would go on to give them assurance of “salvation.” I always cringed at this technique. How could the person be saved when he or she was obviously not convicted or repentant of his sin against God, not even very interested in God, in fact, when by all appearances he had only prayed a prayer merely hoping for an easy ticket to Heaven which would require no change on his part and wanting also to get rid of the soul winners? A godly man described such a scene to me recently. It is similar to ones I have personally witnessed many times. While visiting a large fundamental Baptist church in California, he went on visitation with the most notable soul winner in the church. A lady answered the bell at one house and stood impatiently behind the screen door while the soul winner went quickly through the plan of salvation. She wanted to attend to her child, who was fussing in the background, but he begged her to listen to the presentation. During the entire time, she was looking back into the house, severely distracted. At the end of his presentation, he boldly demanded that she open the door partially and take his hand. She seemed shocked by his request, but she cautiously did as he said. He then asked her if she wanted to go to Heaven when she died. When she answered in the affirmative, he asked her to pray after him the sinner’s prayer, which she did. He announced her gloriously saved, and she immediately closed the door and went about her business. This is what I call quick or manipulative prayerism. This lady, and millions like her, have prayed the sinner’s prayer without Holy Spirit conviction of sin, careful understanding of the gospel, or repentance toward God and saving faith toward Jesus Christ. It is impossible to imagine the Apostles and pastors in the early churches acting like this, and I have refused to follow this practice in my own ministry. I learned many biblical things at Bible school and I praise the Lord for the good things that I gained from my years there, but God tells me in His Word to “prove ALL things” (1 Thess. 5:21), and that includes the things that I was taught at a fundamental Baptist Bible school. I have every right and responsibility to reject things that are not in accordance with the Bible even while “holding fast that which is good” in my training. It is not uncommon for Bible schools to try to require an unquestioning loyalty from their graduates, and those who question and reject things the school teaches or stands for are “blacklisted.” That is absolutely unscriptural and ungodly. The only One to whom we can give unquestioning loyalty is the Lord Jesus Christ. No other man or institution is beyond being tested by the Word of God. Every preacher is to be continually proven by the Scriptures (1 Cor. 14:29). Pastoral authority is real authority that requires submission by the church members (Heb. 13:7, 17), but the submission is not unquestioning or blind. The Scriptures limit the pastor’s authority; he has no authority whatsoever to lead in ways contrary to the Word of God, and it is wrong for pastors (or Bible college leaders, etc.) to treat people as enemies when they refuse to follow things that they believe are not scriptural. I rejected the unscriptural evangelistic methodology when I was first taught it over 30 years ago, and I reject it even more vehemently today. It is not the type of evangelism we find in the New Testament, and I refuse to follow man-made theology and practice regardless of what label it bears. Baptists and fundamentalists who teach and practice contrary to the Bible are as wrong as Protestants and New Evangelicals who do so. This unscriptural evangelism methodology has permeated a large segment of the independent Baptist church movement during the past three decades. Though many men have been guilty of promoting this, I believe the one man who has wielded the largest influence is the late PASTOR JACK HYLES, First Baptist Church, Hammond, Indiana. His influence waned in recent decades due to various scandals, but in the 1970s and 1980s, his influence was vast through Hyles-Anderson College, his books, and the annual Pastor’s Schools. THE ZENITH OF QUICK PRAYERISM “Quick prayerism” reached it’s apex on May 3, 1998, when Pastor Hyles claimed that more people were saved and baptized at his church on that day than were saved and baptized on the day of Pentecost or on any other day in church history. Hyles estimates that around 15,000 people were saved on their special day and 5,112 were baptized. When the events at Hyles’ church are compared with those of Acts chapter two, though, five serious discrepancies appear. (1) Peter preached the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ; whereas Hyles preached on Heaven. (2) Peter demanded repentance; whereas Hyles did not even mention repentance or even hint that it might be necessary for salvation. (3) Those saved on the day of Pentecost were added to the church; whereas those who prayed on Hylescost were not allowed to join the church. (4) The only “methodology” used at Pentecost was prayer, the preaching of the Word of God, personal testimony, and the supernatural power of the Holy Spirit; whereas Hyles used a multiplicity of man-made promotions to attract people to his meetings and to manipulate people into making “decisions” and submitting to baptism. (5) Those saved at Pentecost “continued stedfastly in doctrine, fellowship, and prayer”; whereas very few of those who were counted in Hyles’ salvation statistics exhibited such plain evidence of salvation. [See Chapter Five of the book Repentance Is More Than a Sinner’s Prayer, “Pentecost vs. Hylescost.”] (I was told that prior to his death in 2001 Jack Hyles was preaching on repentance and a change of life. I was told that he did this at the Wally Beebe Bus Conference in January 2000, for example. But if he truly changed his mind about repentance and decided to define repentance biblically and historically as a change of mind that results in a change of life, and if he truly believed that it is important to look for genuine repentance and conversion in a professor’s life, then he should have publicly renounced his former statements about repentance as well as his unscriptural “do-you-want-to-go-to-heaven-then-pray-this-prayer” methodology that has filled the land with unconverted professors. He should also have renounced the outrageous claim that more people were saved at his church on May 3, 1998, than were saved on the day of Pentecost. In other words, if he repented about repentance, then we would have truly seen it! Biblical repentance can be seen. It is great hypocrisy and incredible confusion for a man to say he believes in biblical repentance while at the same time claiming thousands of empty prayers as “salvations.” A man who says 15,000 people were saved at his church in one day when he knows very well that large numbers of them were not born again, DOES NOT BELIEVE IN REPENTANCE, no matter what he says with his mouth.) I believe it is carnality that allows “quick prayerism” to dominate a church’s evangelistic program. Why follow a methodology that produces massive numbers of empty professions? Why report empty prayers as salvations? Why not admit that the large numbers are not reflective of genuine salvation? I believe the answer often lies in the carnality of the leadership. Pride (using inflated numbers to exalt themselves) and the exaltation of man (following men of reputation rather than God and His Word alone and allowing men to exalt themselves above that which is scriptural and decent) are the product of carnality. The same carnality that has allowed unscriptural “quick prayerism” to permeate many independent Baptist churches has born unspiritual fruit in other areas. Multitudes of prominent independent Baptist preachers (including Jack Hyles son, Dave, and many of Hyles’ closest preacher friends) have been involved in moral scandals, often leaving their congregations in shambles. Countless church members have become embittered by these incidents and are steadfast enemies of biblical fundamentalism today because of the carnality and unscriptural nonsense they have observed in independent Baptist churches. (I am not excusing these people, because they should have had their eyes on the Lord rather than on men; I am merely pointing out a fact.) Many of the largest churches have collapsed and have closed their doors or are a mere shell of their former “glory.” None of this puzzles me greatly. Men who are willing to employ unscriptural techniques of “soul winning,” who are willing to use human manipulation to produce questionable professions of faith, who are willing to turn the house of a holy God into a carnival, who report large numbers of converts even though the vast majority of them exhibit no evidence of salvation, who are self promoters and braggarts, are carnal men. “For he that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption…” (Gal. 6:8). It is no surprise that many of these men have turned out to be adulterers, thieves, liars, perverts, and charlatans. (I praise the Lord, on the other hand, that there are also pastors of some large independent Baptist churches who are godly, humble, compassionate, Christ-centered men.) Many other large independent Baptist churches have quickly become ecumenical and have adopted unscriptural New Evangelical church growth philosophies (employing a positive message, using rock music, letting the people set the standards of living, associating with Promise Keepers and other ecumenical organizations, using a hodgepodge of modern versions, etc.). This, too, does not surprise me. Too many independent Baptist pastors have been consumed with a pragmatic approach to church building. The pragmatist uses whatever method will most effectively achieve the goal of building a large church, regardless of whether or not that method is strictly scriptural or glorifying to Jesus Christ. I see little difference between the independent Baptist who uses carnival gimmickry to build a large church from a New Evangelical who uses a “contemporary service.” Both are unscriptural and neither glorifies Jesus Christ. In light of the pragmatism that has permeated independent Baptist church growth philosophy the past 30 years, it is not surprising that so many today are adopting New Evangelical methodology. Thirty years ago the largest churches in the country were independent Baptist; today the largest are New Evangelical and Charismatic. The pragmatist sees that and jumps on the most successful bandwagon without consideration of the teaching and example of the New Testament Scriptures. His first concern is not truth but numbers and prestige. CHANGING THE DOCTRINE OF REPENTANCE The widespread adoption of “quick prayerism” has resulted in a change in the doctrine of repentance. One of the errors of the method of evangelism that produces large numbers of empty professions is the failure to preach and demand biblical repentance or the redefinition of repentance to mean a mere change of mind that does not necessarily result in a change of life. Consider the following examples of this change in the definition of repentance: “What makes the wrath of God abide on a person? Believing not! So, from what must a person repent in order to be saved? He must repent of that which makes him lost. Since ‘believing not’ makes him lost, ‘believing’ makes him saved. The repentance there is a turning from the thing that keeps him from being saved to the thing that saves him. So, yes, there is a repentance from unbelief in order to believe. It is simply a change of direction. It means a turning around. You are going away from believing, and you decide to turn around and believe. You change your direction; you change your mind. With your will you believe and rely upon Christ to save you. In order to believe, you have to repent of unbelief. That which makes a man lost must be corrected” (Dr. Jack Hyles, Enemies of Soulwinning, 1993). “10,446 professions of faith in 1995. … Repentance is not a doctrine. The word ‘repent’ is not even found in the book of John. It is obviously assumed by God that ‘repentance’ is a part of ‘believing.’ … Repentance is not turning from your sins. … Repentance is to change one’s mind from unbelief to belief in Christ” (Bob Gray, “A Message from the Pastor,” The Soulwinner, January 1996, Longview Baptist Temple, Longview, Texas). “The emphasis upon repentance has created confusion among preachers young and old. It has been a source of discouragement to soulwinners. … I have two choices. I can follow those who wear their soulwinning pins and carry New Testaments, or I can follow those who are critical of leading people to Christ. May the critics repent and may the soulwinners realize that we are on the same team” (Brent Neal, “Is Repentance an Attack on Soulwinning?” The Baptist Contender, June 1996). “The many false conditions of salvation [include] water baptism and repentance” (Dr. Fred Afman, “The Way of Salvation,” Sunday School class, Highland Park Baptist Church, Chattanooga, Tennessee, May 1996; quoted from Chris McNeilly, The Great Omission, pp. 25,26; Dr. Afman is a teacher at Tennessee Temple). “If someone says: repent for sins and you are not saved, what do they mean by that? … repentance in the true sense of the word really means to turn from being an unbeliever and to become a believer” (Tolbert Moore, “Repentance and Lordship Salvation,” The Gospel Preacher, September 1996). “The problem and confusion is not preaching repentance but attaching the wrong definition to the word. For instance, to say that repentance means to turn from sin, or to say that repentance is a change of mind that leads to a change of action, is to give a wrong definition to the word” (Curtis Hutson, Repentance: What Does the Bible Teach? Sword of the Lord, 1986, p. 16). I believe the above statements about repentance represent serious error. I do not believe this is a light matter. To say that repentance has nothing to do with turning from sin, to deny that it is a change of mind that results in a change of life, and to claim that repentance does not have to be preached is false teaching. If it doesn’t need to be preached, why did the Lord Jesus Christ and Peter and Paul and the other Bible preachers preach it! I am convinced that this change in the doctrine of repentance is merely a justification for the unscriptural methodology that has risen to prominence during the past three decades. WHAT FUNDAMENTAL BAPTIST PREACHERS HAVE TRADITIONALLY BELIEVED ABOUT REPENTANCE How did fundamental Baptists get to this point? To claim that thousands are being saved when there is no evidence of salvation in the majority of the lives is confusion. This is not what fundamental Baptists believed and practiced before recent decades. John the Baptist It is plain that the first “Baptist,” the one named John, did not practice any sort of “quick prayerism.” He preached repentance and demanded evidence thereof: “In those days came John the Baptist, preaching in the wilderness of Judaea, And saying, Repent ye: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. . . . But when he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees come to his baptism, he said unto them, O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come? Bring forth therefore fruits meet for repentance” (Matt. 3:1,2, 7, 8). Apostolic Churches It is also plain that the Lord’s Apostles and the first churches did not slight repentance. Peter demanded repentance on the day of Pentecost: “Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost” (Acts 2:38). In his second epistle, Peter described salvation as coming “to repentance” (2 Peter 3:9). Paul, too, preached repentance to the unsaved pagans of his day. “And the times of this ignorance God winked at; but now commandeth all men every where to repent” (Acts 17:29-30). He obviously would not be impressed by the argument that the term repentance should not be used because unsaved people do not understand it or that repentance should not be preached because it is not mentioned in the Gospel of John! Furthermore, Paul demanded evidence of repentance from those who professed faith in Christ: “Whereupon, O king Agrippa, I was not disobedient unto the heavenly vision: But showed first unto them of Damascus, and at Jerusalem, and throughout all the coasts of Judaea, and then to the Gentiles, that THEY SHOULD REPENT AND TURN TO GOD, AND DO WORKS MEET FOR REPENTANCE” (Acts 26:19-20). There was not the slightest hint of modern “quick prayerism” in the evangelism practiced by the Apostles and the first churches. The Waldensians The Waldensians are an example of separatist, New Testament baptistic churches that existed through the “Dark Ages” and that were bitterly persecuted by the apostate Roman Catholic Church. I have done extensive research into these ancient churches, even visiting the Alps in northern Italy where they lived, and it has been very edifying and challenging. My library contains dozens of histories on the Waldensians, including Some Remarks upon the Ecclesiastical History of the Ancient Churches of Piedmont (1821) by Pierre Allix, Authentic Details of the Valdenses (1827) by D’Henri Arnaud, Martyrs Mirror by Thieleman Braght, History of the Waldenses of Italy (1889) by Emilio Comba, A History of the Medieval Church (1954) by Margaret Deanesly, The History of the Ancient Vallenses (1838) by George Faber, Acts and Monuments (1641) by John Foxe, Narrative of an Excursion in the Mountains of Piemont (1925) by William Gilly, The Inquisition of the Middle Ages (1906) by Henry Lea, General History of the Evangelical Churches of the Piedmontese Valleys (1669) by Leger, History of the Reformation in Italy (1856) by Thomas M’Crie, History of the Church of Christ (1819) by Joseph Milner, The Waldenses (1853) by A.W. Mitchell, History of the Evangelical Churches of the Valleys of the Piedmont (1658) by Samuel Morland, An Ecclesiastical History (1840) by Johann Mosheim, General History of the Christian Religion (1847) by Augustus Neander, History of the Christian Church (1910) by Phillip Schaff, History of the Ancient Christians (1846) by Jean Paul Perrin, Ecclesiastical Researches (1792) by Robert Robinson, The Waldenses by William Beattie (1838), and History of Protestantism (1896) by James Wylie. William Jones, a noted British Baptist pastor and scholar of the 18th and early 19th century, published an excellent history of the Waldenses in 1819. His History of the Christian Church in two volumes was recently republished by Way of Life Literature via the Electronic Baptist History Library at the Way of Life web site -- http://www.wayoflife.org/articles/jones00.htm. Using rare church history materials, Jones observed that the term “Waldensian” describes a variety of groups of separatist Christians who took the Bible as their sole authority for faith and practice and who rejected Rome as the great whore of Babylon. At least some of the Waldensians held to Baptist distinctives, including the Bible as the sole authority for faith and practice, a regenerate church membership, two church ordinances: believer’s baptism and the Lord’s Supper as a memorial meal, the priesthood of the believer, the right of private interpretation of Scripture, and separation of church and state. (By the 16th century, many of the Waldensians who remained after centuries of relentless and fierce persecution had been worn down and had so far corrupted their practice that they accepted certain Protestant errors as infant baptism; but there is irrefutable evidence that at least many of the earlier Waldensian groups rejected these errors.) The ancient Waldensian churches of Italy and France, as representatives of separatist Bible-believing churches of the Dark Ages, preached repentance and required evidence of repentance of those who professed Christ. The following is from a Waldensian Confession of Faith from 1544: “We believe that in the ordinance of baptism the water is the visible and external sign, which represents to us that which, by virtue of God’s invisible operation, is within us -- namely, the renovation of our minds, and the mortification of our members through [the faith of] Jesus Christ. And by this ordinance we are received into the holy congregation of God’s people, previously professing and declaring our faith AND CHANGE OF LIFE” (Jones’ History of the Christian Church, vol. II, “Waldensian sentiments and practices, collected from their own writings”). It is obvious that the ancient Waldensian churches would have rejected with abhorrence the modern idea that repentance does not necessarily result in a change of life and that churches can receive members who have no testimony of salvation other than a mere prayer that they have muttered. Roger Williams Hundreds of examples could be given of Baptists in England and America during the last few centuries to demonstrate that they have commonly stood for biblical repentance. As an example of what Baptists thought about repentance and conversion in the early history of America, we turn to Roger Williams. He formed what is widely looked upon as the first Baptist church in America. Though Williams later disassociated himself from the Baptists and other organized churches, he held sound views of the Gospel and of many aspects of Bible doctrine. He was very bold about the necessity of genuine conversion. In his Reply to George Fox (founder of the Quakers) of 1676, Roger Williams observes that “a Gospel Church must be made up of such regenerate men, and calls them actual believers, true disciples and converts, living stones, such as can give some account how the grace of God hath appeared unto them and WROUGHT THAT HEAVENLY CHANGE IN THEM” (cited from Thomas Armitage, A History of the Baptists, 1890). This change he calls “that gallant and heavenly and fundamental principle of the true matter of a Christian congregation, flock or society.” In his tractate “Christenings make not Christians,” published in 1645, Williams warns boldly against false professions and a failure to preach and demand genuine spiritual conversion. He tells his readers that he could have made multiplied thousands of “converts” among the natives of New England if he had been willing to use unscriptural means: “I know it to have been easy for myself, long ere this, to have brought many thousands of these natives, yea, the whole country, to a far greater antichristian conversion than ever was yet heard of in America.” After repeating that he could so have converted the Indians, he asks the following searching question, “Why have I not brought them to such a conversion?” and he replies: “I answer: Woe be to me, if I call light darkness, or darkness light; sweet bitter, or bitter sweet; woe to me, if I call that conversion unto God, which is, indeed, subversion of the souls of millions in Christendom, from one worship to another, and the profanation of the holy name of God, his holy Son and blessed ordinances. . . . It is not a suit of crimson satin will make a dead man live; take off and change his crimson into white, he is dead still. Off with that, and shift him into cloth of gold, and from that to cloth of diamonds, he is but a dead man still. For it is not a form, nor the change of one form into another, a finer and a finer and yet more fine, that makes a man a convert--I MEAN SUCH A CONVERT AS IS ACCEPTABLE TO GOD IN JESUS CHRIST ACCORDING TO THE VISIBLE RULE OF HIS LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. I speak not of hypocrites, which may but glitter, and be no solid gold, as Simon Magus, Judas, etc. But of A TRUE EXTERNAL CONVERSION. I say, then, woe be to me! if intending to catch men, as the Lord Jesus said to Peter, I should pretend conversion, and the bringing of men, as mystical fish, into a Church estate, that is, a converted estate, and so build them up with ordinances as a converted Christian people, and yet afterward still pretend to catch them by an after conversion.” On pages 17-18, Williams more fully defines what he held repentance and conversion to be: “First, it must be by the free proclaiming and PREACHING OF REPENTANCE and forgiveness of sins (Luke 14) by such messengers as can prove their lawful sending and commission from the Lord Jesus to make disciples out of all nations; and so to baptize or wash them, into the name or profession of the Holy Trinity. Matt. 28:19; Rom. 10:14,15. Secondly, SUCH A CONVERSION, so far as man’s judgment can reach, which is fallible, AS WAS THE JUDGMENT OF THE FIRST MESSENGERS, as in Simon Magus, etc., AS IN THE TURNING OF THE WHOLE MAN FROM THE POWER OF SATAN UNTO GOD. Acts 16. Such a change, as if an old man became a new babe (John 4); yea, as amounts to God’s new creation in the soul. Eph. 2:10.” That staunch old warrior for religious liberty, Roger Williams, was warning about the great crime of making and accepting Christian “converts” who are not truly converted by spiritual regeneration. It is obvious what Roger Williams would think of the practice among independent Baptists today whereby multiplied thousands of people throughout the world are proclaimed “saved” merely because they have prayed a prayer. Many Baptist missionaries have described to me the terrible confusion that has been wrought in various parts of the world through the practice of “quick prayerism” by their missionary brethren who have carried this unscriptural evil beyond the shores of America. Yea, I have seen it with my own eyes. During our years of missionary work in Nepal, we could have gotten massive numbers of “decisions” and “prayers” had we been willing to use the methodology of quick prayerism. What Hindu or Buddhist does not want “to go to heaven when he dies?” They will eagerly pray a prayer or go through any other religious ritual with that desired end. In reality, though, what they are commonly doing when they “pray that prayer” is merely adding Jesus to their other gods because they are not ready to repent of their idolatry. We have worked with Nepali university students in Oklahoma City, and at a gospel meeting I was talking with one of them. We had known him for a year and a half and had spent many hours with him and had explained the gospel to him. In fact, he had attended several churches and had heard the gospel many times. He told me that he had come “to accept Jesus Christ as God and Savior.” At that point a “quick prayerism” soul winner would have gotten him to pray a “sinner’s prayer,” but such haste is folly when we are dealing with the eternal souls of men. I said, “That is great; what do you think about the Hindu gods now?” He replied: “They also are gods. There is one God but he has many manifestations and ways of worship. For me, I like the Christian way of worship.” This is typical of the path many Hindus take when they become interested in Christianity. They accept Jesus Christ as God but not as the only God. They do not reject idolatry. They add Jesus to their other gods. When a Hindu (or anyone else, for that matter) is ready to be saved, he is ready to turn from idolatry and to receive Jesus Christ ALONE as God and Savior (1 Thess. 1:9-10)! The churches we have started are very careful about those who profess Christ and who want to join the church. They require some evidence that the individual is born again (Acts 26:20). If they did not do this, if they accepted anyone in that culture who wanted to “profess Christ,” the churches would quickly become overrun with unregenerate “Christianized Hindus.” And this is precisely what you find in many of the other churches. One church in the States that is famous for the many “decisions” that are generated by its evangelistic program has followed up on some of my wife’s Nepali contacts there. In some cases, they have gotten the Nepalis to pray a salvation prayer and they have gotten some of them “down the aisle and into the baptismal pool.” Yet the Nepalis remain unregenerated and unrepentant of their idolatry. We once had a meal with one of the Nepali couples who have prayed the sinners prayer. Prominently displayed on a living room wall were Hindu gods. The lady told my wife that, yes, they still pray to them. It is not surprising to find a Hindu who wants to add Jesus to his or her gods, but what should be surprising is to find a church that claims to believe and follow the Bible but which accepts such empty professions as “salvations” and counts them on its reports. Baptist Forefathers Required an Experience of Regeneration Not only did the first Baptist church in America take salvation seriously and require evidence thereof from those who were baptized, but that was the common lot of the early Baptist churches in North America. Pastor David Benedict published his General History of the Baptist Denomination in America in 1813. He labored eight years on this monumental work, during the process of which he traveled nearly 7,000 miles through the southern and northern states and into Canada, gathering information on the churches. Most of these journeys were alone, on horse back, and in wilderness regions of the country. His history frequently mentions the caution with which the duly organized Baptist churches received members. They had a custom called “hearing the experience,” which preceded baptism. The following, for example, is a description of a revival that took place in 1807 in Argyle, Nova Scotia: “Many were wounded to their hearts, and made to groan under the weight of their sins. The last Sabbath in March, twenty came forward and were baptized. I must conclude with adding, that one hundred and twenty have been baptized. There were five baptisms in the winter season. Twenty-four have TOLD THEIR EXPERIENCES, who are not yet baptized, and a number of others are under hopeful impressions. The work is still going on in this place, and spreading rapidly in different parts of the province” (Benedict, A General History of the Baptist Denomination, vol. I, chapter 8). We see many important differences between the method of evangelism practiced by these Baptist forefathers and that practiced by many independent Baptists today. First, they looked for Holy Spirit-wrought conviction of sin. Second, they required a plain testimony of salvation of those who would be baptized. They required that the professors “tell their experiences” before the church. It is obvious that they were looking for more than mere lip service. Third, they did not count mere professions but they counted the baptisms of those who gave evidence of salvation. Fourth, they did not confuse “hopeful impressions” with genuine salvation. They knew that a person can be interested in Christ and can be convicted of his sin without being genuinely saved. We see many examples of this in the Gospels. J. Frank Norris Let’s come up closer to our own time. In the 1930s, 40s, ‘50s, and ‘60s, there were multitudes of aggressive fundamental Baptist churches that saw millions of souls saved by the grace of God. J. Frank Norris, for example, pastored two large churches at the same time from 1934 to 1947 -- First Baptist Church of Fort Worth, Texas, and Temple Baptist Church of Detroit, Michigan. Through the efforts of Norris and his co-worker, Dr. Louis Entzminger, the Sunday Schools of these two congregations became the largest in the world at that time (15,000 and 10,000 respectively). They discarded quarterlies and used only the Bible as the textbook in the Sunday Schools. Norris developed an aggressive house-to-house visitation program. In his memoirs, Entzminger would write, “From the human standpoint the secret of the growth of these churches may be summed up in one word ‘Visitation’” (The J. Frank Norris I Have Known for 34 Years, p. 255). The men went out on Monday evenings, coming directly to the church from work at 6 p.m., where they were served a warm supper prepared by the church ladies. At 6:30 they were given cards and went out to visit homes two by two. At 9 p.m. they would meet back at the church to give reports. The women went out on Thursday mornings, gathering at the church at 9:30, visiting in homes until 12:30, then meeting back at the church for lunch and fellowship, followed by reports on the visitation and a short message by Norris. Those two churches, in turn, produced dozens of other churches. By the year of Norris’s death (1952), First Baptist of Fort Worth had established more than 20 thriving churches in and around that one city alone. The same was true of Temple Baptist Church of Detroit. J. Frank Norris once preached an entire week on the subject of Hell without giving an invitation. Only after a full week of such preaching did he give an invitation, and more than a hundred and fifty were saved. He believed in plowing the ground of sinner’s hearts with the law of God to prepare the soul for genuine conviction and repentance. This is one of the missing elements of evangelism today. Norris never gave men the idea that they could be saved and go to Heaven without repentance concerning their sin toward God. In his message, “Is There a Hell?” he proclaimed: “Jesus said, ‘Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish.’ There is the one truth that saves a man from hell--repentance. Men don’t go to hell because of their sins, but BECAUSE THEY DON’T REPENT OF THEIR SINS.” Norris obviously believed in repentance from sin. In a series of messages titled “What Do Fundamental Baptists Believe,” preached at the American Baptist Association annual meeting in 1935, Norris stated plainly that repentance is “turning to God with unfeigned contrition, confession, and supplication for mercy” and that the “proper evidence” of the new birth “appears in the holy fruits of repentance and faith and newness of life.” He preached against those who instructed people to make mere “decisions” for Christ and who invited sinners merely to come forward for prayer. Of this kind of preaching, he said it “did not have enough gospel in it to save an ant.” There was no “quick prayerism” in Norris’s ministry or in the ministry of other fundamental Baptist preachers of old. They never gave the idea that people could be saved without evidencing a change of life. J. Oswald Smith Another example of an aggressive evangelistic ministry in a fundamentalist church in the early part of the 20th century was that of Oswald J. Smith in Toronto, Canada. He built a large congregation through gospel preaching and soul winning endeavors. He trained soul winners, set apart prayer warriors, used evangelistic services, gave invitations, and reaped a large harvest of souls both in Canada and around the world. There was nothing shallow, though, about his gospel ministry. There was no “quick prayerism.” He constantly emphasized conviction of sin, genuine spiritual revival, confession of sin, repentance, and the absolute necessity of the miracle-working power of God. The following statement is from a sermon he gave on evangelism before 3,000 university students. “Where there is genuine conviction of sin it is not necessary to urge, coax or press in the energy of the flesh; sinners will come without being forced; they will come because they must. … If we are to get Holy Spirit Fruit, God must prepare the ground; the Holy Spirit must convict of sin before men can truly believe. “It is right to tell people to believe when God has done His work in their hearts, but first they must feel their need. LET US WAIT UNTIL THE SPIRIT OF GOD HAS DONE HIS PART BEFORE WE SAY: ‘BELIEVE ON THE LORD JESUS Christ and thou shalt be saved.’ LET US FIRST SEE THE SIGNS OF CONVICTION as in the case of the Philippian jailer. … “‘There is another Gospel, too popular in the present day, which seems to exclude conviction of sin and repentance from the scheme of Salvation; which demands from the sinner a mere intellectual assent to the fact of his guilt and sinfulness, and a like intellectual assent to the fact and sufficiency of Christ’s atonement; and such assent yielded, tells him to go in peace, and to be happy in the assurance that the Lord Jesus has made it all right between his soul and God; thus crying peace, peace, when there is no peace. FLIMSY AND FALSE CONVERSIONS OF THIS SORT MAY BE ONE REASON WHY SO MANY WHO ASSUME THE CHRISTIAN PROFESSION DISHONOUR GOD AND BRING REPROACH ON THE CHURCH BY THEIR INCONSISTENT LIVES, AND BY THEIR ULTIMATE RELAPSES INTO WORLDLINESS AND SIN.’ … “IT IS ONE THING TO HOLD UP THE HAND AND SIGN A DECISION CARD, BUT IT IS QUITE ANOTHER THING TO GET SAVED. … It is one thing to have hundreds of professed converts during the excitement of the campaign, but it is another thing to come back five years after and find them still there” (Oswald J. Smith, The Passion for Souls, 1950). It is obvious that there was no “quick prayerism” in Oswald J. Smith’s ministry. He did not seek professions; he sought salvations. He defined repentance as a change of mind so radical that it always resulted in a change of life. Hundreds of other examples could be given of aggressive evangelistic fundamentalist and independent Baptist churches that existed between 1930 and 1970. The point I want to make is that while these churches had great zeal for evangelism, they did not practice the methodology of “quick prayerism.” Norris and others of that day counted numbers, but they did not give outrageous reports of empty professions of faith. What they typically counted was not “decisions” or “professions,” but baptisms and church memberships. For example, in 1946 there were reported 3,126 “additions to both churches” (Fort Worth and Detroit). In Entzminger’s biography of Norris, there is not one mention of mere professions of faith, and certainly, there is no example of empty professions being called “salvations.” WHAT FUNDAMENTAL BAPTISTS HAVE TRADITIONALLY BELIEVED ABOUT REPENTANCE In past decades most fundamental Baptists preached a biblical repentance. They taught that repentance is a turning to God from sin. They knew that true repentance results in a change in a person’s life, and they would have been amazed that a fundamental Baptist would deny this. They did not teach that repentance is a works salvation, but they knew that true repentance always produces good works. They understood repentance properly and they preached repentance boldly. Consider the following examples. I have gathered these quotations from a wide range of sources. I am especially thankful to the library at Baptist Bible College in Springfield, Missouri; to Dr. Chris McNeilly for his excellent book The Great Omission: Whatever Happened to Repentance (Fairhaven Baptist College, Chesterton, Indiana, 1999); to Evangelist Steve Ragland, Baptist Prison Ministry, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, who has done extensive research into the doctrine of repentance; and to Dr. Jack Green, pastor of the Landmark Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas, who operates J&R Distributors, through which the writings and audio tapes of hundreds of old-time fundamental Baptists are published. Dr. Green graciously allowed me to look through his own files on repentance. The following statements on repentance are by fundamental Baptists. (Statements by a wider range of Christians from the past 500 years are given in my book Repentance Is More Than a Sinner’s Prayer). “THE PROPER EVIDENCE [OF THE NEW BIRTH] APPEARS IN THE HOLY FRUITS OF REPENTANCE AND FAITH AND NEWNESS OF LIFE. … There was a time when the ministers never preached without giving a call for repentance. But it is out of date now. Oh, for a voice of a John the Baptist, ‘Repent ye, Repent ye, Repent ye, Repent ye!’ Jesus said, ‘Except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish.’ Paul preached repentance toward God and faith toward the Lord Jesus Christ. We believe that Repentance and Faith are solemn obligations, and also inseparable graces, wrought in our souls by the quickening Spirit of God; thereby, being deeply convicted of our guilt, danger and helplessness, and of the way of salvation by Christ, we turn to God with unfeigned contrition, confession and supplication for mercy; at the same time heartily receiving the Lord Jesus Christ and openly confessing Him as our only and all-sufficient Saviour” (J. Frank Norris, What Do Fundamental Baptists Believe, an address delivered at the annual meeting of the American Baptist Association at First Baptist Church, Fort Worth, Texas, 1935). “To repent literally means to have a change of mind or spirit toward God and toward sin. It means to TURN FROM YOUR SINS, earnestly, with all your heart, and trust in Jesus Christ to save you. You can see, then, how the man who believes in Christ repents and the man who repents believes in Christ. The jailer repented when HE TURNED FROM SIN to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ” (John R. Rice, What Must I Do to Be Saved? 1940). “Baptists preach the gospel of REPENTANCE FOR SIN. They preach and practice the very same gospel of repentance, of salvation, of baptism, as the first Baptist preacher we have any record of whose name was John and who came from God” (J. Frank Norris, Lectures on Romans, c. 1947). “We believe that Repentance and Faith are solemn obligations, and also inseparable graces, wrought in our souls by the quickening Spirit of God; thereby, being deeply convicted of our guilt, danger and helplessness, and of the way of salvation by Christ, we turn to God with unfeigned contrition, confession and supplication for mercy at the same time heartily receiving the Lord Jesus Christ and openly confessing Him as our only and all-sufficient Saviour” (Baptist Bible Fellowship, Articles of Faith, 1950). “Recognizing his guilt, there is a TURNING FROM SIN. There is a turning to God. The actual word ‘repentance’ means a turning completely around: a change of course; a change of mind. … TO THINK OF REPENTANCE THAT DOES NOT CAUSE THE SINNER TO TURN GLADLY FROM HIS SINS IS IMPOSSIBLE. … I know that we have a shallow religious movement in our times that will allow men to profess faith in Christ and at the same time continue to live in the world. Such a shallow religious faith is not real. These are mere professors and have no part with God in salvation” (Harold Sightler, Chastening and Repentance, 1963). “Repentance toward God -- that’s TURNING AWAY FROM ALL YOUR SIN and everything you know to be wrong, and TURNING RIGHT ABOUT FACE, then trusting Jesus Christ as your complete Redeemer” (B.R. Lakin, Prepare to Meet Thy God, 1964). “Repentance is a godly sorrow for sin. REPENTANCE IS A FORSAKING OF SIN. REAL REPENTANCE IS PUTTING YOUR TRUST IN JESUS CHRIST SO YOU WILL NOT LIVE LIKE THAT ANYMORE. Repentance is permanent. It is a lifelong and an eternity-long experience. You will never love the Devil again once you repent. You will never flirt with the Devil as the habit of your life again once you get saved. You will never be happy living in sin; it will never satisfy; and the husks of the world will never fill your longing and hungering in your soul. Repentance is something a lot bigger than a lot of people think. It is absolutely essential if you go to heaven” (Lester Roloff, Repent or Perish, 1965). “The very moment that soul that is dead, cut off, alienated from the very life of God, sees himself as a hopeless, helpless, Hell-deserving, and Hell-bound sinner; when that soul sees that Jesus Christ is the only Way, the only hope, and when he looks away from self; when he REPENTS OF HIS SIN and looks to the finished work of the crucified, buried and risen Lord for salvation -- that very moment, instantaneously, the Spirit of God operates” (G. Beauchamp Vick, The Biblical Faith of Baptists, Vol. II, Regular Baptist Press, 1966). “Sometimes it is helpful to emphasize the Lordship of Jesus Christ in explaining this matter of a personal surrender. More spiritual ‘miscarriages’ happen because the sinner does not understand what is involved in TAKING JESUS CHRIST AS HIS LORD, than over any other thing, in my judgment. A ‘BELIEVISM’ WHICH DOES NOT INCLUDE A HEART SURRENDER IS A MERE MENTAL BELIEVISM; this could no more result in a new birth for a sinner than it does for the devils!” (Robert Sumner, Biblical Evangelism in Action, 1966). “True repentance is sorrow for sin committed against a holy God and not only sorrow for sin, but TURNING FROM SIN, FORSAKING SIN AND TURNING TO GOD. Sin nailed the Savior to the cross and certainly that fact alone is sufficient reason why ALL WHO HAVE GENUINELY REPENTED HATE SIN AND FORSAKE SINFUL WAYS” (Oliver B. Greene, Commentary of Acts of the Apostles, Acts 2:37,38, 1969). “A ROTELY MEMORIZED PRAYER OR SOME REPEATED STATEMENT WITHOUT TRUE REPENTANCE AND FAITH NEVER SAVES ANYONE. He must be very serious about it and really mean it. … Consider a case where the person being dealt with is going to repeat a prayer after the soul winner as he calls on the Lord to save his soul. Here is a pattern which can be followed merely as an example: ‘Lord, I realize I am a sinner. I am lost in my sin. I TURN FROM MY SIN. I repent of my sin. Right here and now I do trust the Lord Jesus Christ as my personal Saviour…’ (Leon F. Maurer, Soul Winning: The Challenge of the Hour, Sword of the Lord, 1970). “What do I mean by repent? I mean TO TURN YOUR HEART FROM YOUR SIN. Turn from sin in your heart and start out to live for God. … A penitent heart that TURNS FROM YOUR SIN and turns to Jesus” (John R. Rice, “Repent or Perish,” Sword of the Lord, March 3, 1971). “Repentance is one of the lost notes in modern day preaching. It has long since been absent from the pulpits across America and across the world. As a result our churches are filled with people who have never known repentance in their hearts. … Repentance simply means a change of mind about myself and my spiritual state, ABOUT SIN, and about God. … The fruit of repentance is TURNING TO GOD FROM SIN. … The prodigal son had a change of mind, and he arose and came to the father, leaving the hog pens behind. So is everyone who has truly repented of sin. THEY TURN FROM SIN to serve the true and living God (1 Thes. 1:9)” (Charles Boone, The Witness, “The Necessity of Repentance,” June 1971). “There ought to be plain preaching against sin. People ought to be taught TO TURN FROM SIN in genuine repentance” (John R. Rice, Dr. Rice, Here Are More Questions, Vol. II, p. 425, 1973). “Repentance is doing an ‘about face,’ A TURN-AROUND. Repentance involves self-judgment which produces a CHANGE IN THE MIND TOWARD SELF, SIN and the Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ. Until a person repents, he will be satisfied living in sin and will die and go to hell” (Gene Hooker, “What Is Repentance,” Rock of Ages Prison Ministry, nd.). “The Greek words [for repentance] mean ‘A CHANGE OF MIND WHICH RESULTS IN A CHANGE OF ACTION.’ When that refers to man, there is a sorrow for sin involved. This definition is substantiated both by the scholarship of Trench and Thayer, as well as by the New Testament usage” (Bruce Lackey, Repentance Is More Than a Change of Mind, 1980). “Very little preaching, soul-winning, gospel tracts, or religious broadcasts even mention repentance casually. Those who do often excuse it away by saying it doesn’t mean turning from sin or even a willingness, but only a change of mind. What is true repentance? … Here in Acts 26:19-20, just as in Jonah chapter 3, repentance is clearly described as ‘TURNING FROM SIN to God,’ that will bring about a changed life. ‘Works meet for repentance’ is the real proof of salvation!” (Evangelist Bud Hunter, Baptist Bible Tribune, “Bible Repentance,” April 13, 1984). “[Repentance] is a change of mind that leads to a change of direction and EVIDENCES ITSELF IN CHANGED ACTION. … There is no true saving faith without repentance, just as there is no repentance without saving faith. The two are virtually inseparable, yet vitally necessary, components of the gospel” (Ed Dobson, “Is Repentance Part of the Gospel,” Fundamentalist Journal, February 1984). “For too long there has been taught in some circles that we are out to get souls saved when we go soul-winning. Friend, understand clearly, that no man, no preacher, no one, has any ability or any authority to save anyone, or even convict, anyone of their sin. … Without conviction there can be no conversion. Without repentance, there can be no regeneration. … if God Almighty hasn’t worked in your heart and life, my friend, it doesn’t make any difference how many times you raise your hand in a meeting like this. IT DOESN’T MATTER HOW MANY TIMES YOU WALK AN AISLE, OR PRAY A PRAYER … ONE CAN PHYSICALLY AND VERBALLY SAY A PRAYER, BUT IF ONE’S HEART ATTITUDE IS NOT RIGHT WITH GOD, THERE IS NO SALVATION. It doesn’t make any difference how many times you sign a decision card, or get dunked in somebody’s baptismal pool, or join a church! If God the Holy Spirit has not done His work of conviction in your heart, there is no salvation” (Evangelist Ken Lynch, The Forgiveness of Sin, c. 1985). “The word repentance means a ‘change of mind’--an inward turning. One’s view is altered concerning God, sin and himself. The change of mind produces a CORRESPONDING CHANGE IN HEART AND ACTION. … Though repentance has been largely forgotten by our generation, it has not been forgotten in heaven. ‘And the times of this ignorance God winked at, but now commandeth all men everywhere to repent” (Evangelist Harold Vaughan, Christ Life, March/April 1987). “Repentance is a change of mind which RESULTS IN A CHANGE OF ACTION” (Pastor Robert Sargent, Landmarks of Baptist Doctrine, Willetton Bible Baptist Church and Fundamental Baptist Bible College, Willetton (Perth), Western Australia, 1989). “THOSE WHO SAY REPENTANCE IS TO CHANGE ONE’S MIND FROM UNBELIEF TO BELIEF IN CHRIST ARE PROMOTING INTELLECTUAL SALVATION, WHICH CAN BE HAD BY A CHEAP PRAYER (Billy Graham differs from this only in that the listeners come to hear him, while these go to be heard) that expresses belief in the facts shown, such as Simon in Acts chapter 8 did. When we reject the belief of their converts as Peter did Simon’s we are called the enemies of soulwinning. In other words if we see no evidence of salvation in their converts and lead the lost one to repent we are considered the enemies of soulwinning. Something is not right when professed soulwinners are made angry by hearing of their professed converts getting saved after they have seen themselves lost. … The important thing is not how many numbers do you have to your account, but how many names are written in the Lamb’s book of life” (Evangelist Steve Ragland, “Is Repentance Only a Change of Mind?” Baptist Prison Ministry, 1996). “Preaching repentance as a part of saving faith and a necessary condition for all the benefits of salvation is a sacred duty no preacher is entitled to be silent on and still be regarded as a faithful servant of Christ (Luke 24:47). It is required by God in this dispensation as it was in preceding ones (Acts 17:30). Repentance is nowise meritorious, nor is it to be rested in, since it contributes nothing to our salvation; the same must be said of faith, yet without repentance the gospel cannot be savingly believed (Matt. 21:32; Mark 1:15). Repentance is a Spirit-given realization of the sinfulness of sin and taking sides with God against one’s self, accompanied by a genuine godly sorrow and PURPOSEFUL DETERMINATION TO TURN FROM IDOLS to serve the one and true living God (1 Thess. 1:9)” (Mike Harding, First Baptist Church, Troy, Michigan, Mid-America Conference on Preaching, 1996). “That lost boy [the Progidal Son] would have never come to the Father if not moved to do so by repentance. In our day of weakened, cheapened evangelism, we would tell that boy to call his dad and have him wire him the money to come home. Just cry on God’s shoulder a little, stay right where you are, and God’ll fix everything up. It just doesn’t happen like that. YOU SIMPLY CAN’T COME TO THE FATHER WHILE REMAINING IN AND LOVING THE MIRE AND MUCK OF SIN. … You can have the old, hardened sinner pray every sinner’s prayer ever written, but it will be of no avail without a penitent heart” (Pastor John Bishop, Cleborne County Baptist Church, Heber Springs, Arkansas, The Christian Challenge, March 1996). “The lack of preaching against sin has brought in multitudes of false professions and false beliefs. … In the New Testament concerning salvation, repentance is always a change for the better and ALWAYS A REPENTANCE FROM SIN. Biblical repentance is changing one’s mind about their sin, the Saviour, and the Scriptures, which brings about a great change of direction in their lives (Acts 3:19)” (Pastor John L. Graf, Valiant for Truth, March 1997). “Scriptural repentance is a change of mind which leads to a change of heart, a change of attitude and A CHANGE OF CONDUCT; a change of attitude toward self, toward sin, and toward the Lord Jesus Christ. It is an about-face of a soul that has been going away from God” (Pastor Roger Voegtlin, “God’s Command to Repent,” Fairhaven Baptist Church, Chesterton, Indiana, 1998). “Repentance causes a person to abhor themselves, brings a deep sorrow for sin, causes a person to turn from idols, CAUSES A DIFFERENCE IN A PERSON’S LIFE, evidences itself when a person wants to make things right, and causes a person to acknowledge the truth” (Pastor Doug Hammett, Salvation Bible Basics, Lehigh Valley Baptist Church, Emmaus, Pennsylvania, 1998). “Repentance expresses the CONSCIOUS TURNING FROM SIN, a change of mind and of the whole inner attitude to life, without which true conversion is not possible” (Dr. Chris McNeilly, The Great Omission: Whatever Happened to Repentance, Fairhaven Baptist College, 1999). A CHANGE IN EVANGELISM METHODOLOGY LED TO A CHANGE IN DOCTRINE It is obvious that fundamental Baptists have traditionally defined repentance as a radical change of mind that results in a change of life. They have defined it as turning to God from sin and idolatry. Again, I believe the change in the definition of repentance among some fundamental Baptists is the product of the change in evangelism methodology that has spread widely throughout fundamental Baptist circles. It is a justification for an unscriptural, manipulative, man-centered, pressurized, numbers-oriented methodology of soul winning. If a man boasts that thousands are getting saved when only a tiny percentage of them demonstrate any evidence of regeneration, it is not surprising that he would want to redefine repentance to mean a mere change of mind without any necessary change of life. The late Jack Hyles said that repentance as defined traditionally (as a change of mind in relation to God and sin so radical that it results in a change of life) is one of the enemies of soul winning. He redefined repentance to mean a mere change from unbelief to belief. The late Curtis Hutson, who assumed the editorship of the Sword of the Lord following the death of its founder, John R. Rice, boldly claimed in 1986 that repentance is not to turn from sin and is not a change of mind that leads to a change of action. These two men have had a vast influence on the thinking of fundamental Baptists in the matter of repentance. Most others who have changed the traditional biblical definition of repentance have done so upon the “authority” of these two men. How did Dr. Hyles and Dr. Hutson get to that point in their thinking? This is not what fundamental Baptists have traditionally taught about repentance. Their old friends John R. Rice and Lester Roloff certainly did not define repentance as merely a change from unbelief to belief. They defined it biblically as turning to God from sin. We have quoted what they taught about repentance. John Rice said: “What do I mean by repent? I mean to turn your heart from your sin. Turn from sin in your heart and start out to live for God.” Evangelist Lester Roloff said: “Repentance is a forsaking of sin. Real repentance is putting your trust in Jesus Christ so you will not live like that anymore.” Obviously, John Rice and Lester Roloff did not think that by so defining repentance they were teaching a lordship or a works salvation. That idea is a smokescreen that is spread by those who want to change the historic definition of repentance. By changing the doctrine of repentance and by calling the old doctrine of repentance the “enemy of soul winning,” I believe Dr. Hyles was acknowledging that a biblical understanding of repentance gets in the way of his methodology. The old doctrine of repentance is not the enemy of biblical soul winning; it is the enemy of the Jack Hyles type soul winning. A traditional biblical understanding of repentance does not allow a man to claim that thousands of sinners are being saved when most of them show no evidence of regeneration. A traditional biblical understanding of repentance does not allow a man to count a mere sinner’s prayer as salvation. It is one thing to say that 100 or 1,000 people prayed a prayer; it is another thing to say that those people are saved. If they are saved, there will be a change. “Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new” (2 Corinthians 5:17). Some readers might be thinking, “Of course, Brother Cloud, it is wrong to claim people are saved who merely pray a prayer without evidence of regeneration, but does anyone really make such a claim?” The answer is that absolutely, there are large numbers of men making such a claim. I was discussing the doctrine of repentance with a missionary a few years ago in another country. He had told me that many people were being saved through their soul winning ministry, but when I asked about their services, he explained that they only had a handful of people in their services and admitted that most of the people being “saved” were not attending. I challenged him about the claim that the people were actually being saved. I said, “How can you say they are saved when there is no evidence of it in their lives.” He become very upset at me and strongly countered that I had no right to judge the salvation of people who were making professions through his ministry. This man had attended Hyles Pastor’s School only a few weeks before he met me, and he said the featured topic that year was repentance! The idea that you cannot tell if someone is saved is unscriptural nonsense. It is possible, of course, for a person to show false signs of salvation and to deceive those who observe him, as Judas did the other Apostles; but on the other hand, if someone is genuinely saved, there will definitely be evidence of it in his or her life. Profession of salvation is not the same as possession. “They profess that they know God; but in works they deny him, being abominable, and disobedient, and unto every good work reprobate” (Titus 1:16). Many Are Rejecting “Quick prayerism” I praise the Lord that many of the preachers who have been trained in the unscriptural evangelistic methodology of quick prayerism are turning away from it. When I first published “Pentecost vs. Hylescost” (see chapter five of the book Repentance Is More Than a Sinner’s Prayer) in April 1998, I received the largest response from preachers that I have ever received for any other article or book, and the response was overwhelmingly positive. Hundreds of fundamental Baptist preachers have thanked me for speaking out about this error. One Ontario pastor’s response was typical. He said, “I have been to Hyles Pastor’s School many times; twenty years ago I would have rejected your statements as nearly blasphemous, but today I know that you are right and that it is important that this error of quick prayerism be exposed. I am thankful for your willingness to do so and praise the Lord for your O Timothy magazine.” “Whereupon, O king Agrippa, I was not disobedient unto the heavenly vision: But shewed first unto them of Damascus, and at Jerusalem, and throughout all the coasts of Judaea, and then to the Gentiles, THAT THEY SHOULD REPENT AND TURN TO GOD, AND DO WORKS MEET FOR REPENTANCE” (Acts 26:19-20). [This article is excerpted from the second edition of the book Repentance Is More Than a Sinner’s Prayer, copyright 2000, David W. Cloud, Way of Life Literature, P.O. Box 610368, Port Huron, MI 48061, 866-295-4143, fbns@wayoflife.org.] See also "Biblical Repentance"