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Are only a few people going to be saved?
(J. C. Ryle, "Few Saved!" 1877)
"Lord, are only a few people going to be saved?" He said to them, "Make every effort to enter through the narrow door, because I tell you, many will try to enter and won't be able." Luke 13:23-24
There is a wide-spread delusion abroad about the number who shall be saved, and that this very delusion is one of the greatest dangers to which our souls are exposed.
What do people generally think about the spiritual state of their relatives, and friends, and neighbors, and acquaintances? They know that all around them are going to die, and to be judged. They know that they have souls to be lost or saved. And what do they consider their end is likely to be?
Do they think those around them are in danger of hell? There is nothing whatever to show they think so. They eat and drink together; they laugh, and talk, and walk, and work together. They seldom or never speak to one another of God and eternity--of heaven and of hell.
Will they allow that any of their friends are wicked or ungodly? Never!--whatever may be his way of life. He may be a neglecter of the Bible; he may be utterly without evidence of true religion. Yet his friends will often tell you, "It does not matter! He has a good heart at the bottom, and is not a wicked man."
And what do people generally think about the spiritual state of others--after they are dead?
I say that there is an unhappily common fashion of speaking well of the condition of all who have departed this life. It matters little, apparently, how a man has behaved while he lived. He may have given no signs of repentance, or faith in Christ; he may have shown no evidence whatever of conversion or sanctification; he may have lived and died like a creature without a soul. And yet, as soon as this man is dead, people will dare to say that he is "happier than ever he was in his life." They will tell you complacently, that "he has gone to a better world." They will follow him to the grave without fear and trembling, and speak of his death afterwards as "a blessed change for him." They may have disliked him, and thought him a bad man while he was alive; but the moment he is dead, they turn around in their opinions, and say that he is gone to heaven!
And what does all this prove? It proves that people flatter themselves there is no great difficulty in getting to heaven. It proves plainly that people are of opinion that most people will be saved.
Now what solid reason can people show us for these common opinions? Upon what Scripture do they build this notion--that salvation is an easy business, and that most people will be saved?
They have none--literally none at all. They have not a text of Scripture which supports their views. They have not a reason which will bear examination. They speak smooth things about one another's spiritual state, just because they do not like to admit that there is danger. They build up one another into an easy, self-satisfied state of soul, in order to soothe their consciences and make things pleasant. They cry "Peace, peace," over one another's graves, because they want it to be so, and would gladly persuade themselves that so it is. Surely against such hollow, foundationless opinions as these, a Christian may well protest.
Whether we like to believe it or not, hell is filling fast.
Many are in the broad way that leads to destruction!
Few are in the narrow way that leads to life!
Many, many will be lost. Few, few will be saved.
"Enter in by the narrow gate; for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leads to destruction, and many are those who enter in by it. How narrow is the gate, and restricted is the way that leads to life! Few are those who find it." Matthew 7:13-14
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