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How Many is Enough?


© Richard Maffeo

Some days he signs as many as a thousand autographs - all without charge. Each year he appears at numerous benefits -- without cost. Since his retirement from professional sports his weeks are full with what he calls, "good deeds." Why does he do it? He believes each good work will help get him into heaven.

He is not alone in his faith. Millions across the globe share his conviction that God keeps a celestial tally of our deeds. God, they believe, will use that record at the Great Judgement to determine our eternal destiny.

On the surface, that philosophy might seem reasonable: but a closer look raises more questions than it answers. Is God really a Great Accountant hunched over an open ledger spread across His desk? Is He eternally busy jotting down our good and bad works as we perform them? How many good works does it take to earn eternal life?

And suppose when we die we are only one good deed short of the number needed to earn admission to heaven. Would God close our file and say, "sorry, but you missed it by one. It's off to hell with you"? Or might He give us an extra day of life to make up our deficit? Surely a person could perform one good deed in 24 hours . . . just enough to put him or her over the top.

Then again, suppose the person was not one, but ten good deeds away from eternal life. Might the merciful God give him or her another week? After all, what is one more week of life when eternity is in the balance?

And speaking of balance, how many goods does it take to balance bads? Would helping an elderly person across the street compensate for two lies? Would ten kind words about another cover the cost of several lustful thoughts? Would being a Boy Scout leader for a month remove from the scales an adulterous fling? Would a fifty-dollar theft require fewer good deeds than those required for stealing a thousand?

To add to the confusion, what if the person who signs a hundred free autographs does so -- not out of kindness -- but because he wants to ensure he gets into heaven? Does his selfish motive turn all hundred good deeds into a hundred BAD deeds?

Two thousand years ago a prison guard asked a question much the same as our sports champion: "What must I do to be saved?" (Acts 16:30). The jailer wanted to know what we all want to know: How many and how much is enough?

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

7.   Aug 6, 1999 8:54 AM
PJ, concisely and well explained. Thank you.

-- posted by Dan_Ellsworth


6.   Aug 6, 1999 6:40 AM
Wood and straw, gold, jewels, and stone is all put to the test of the flame.

And as the text reads in I Cor 3:15, "If anyone's work is burned, he will suffer loss; but, he himself will be saved, ye ...


-- posted by Phil_J


5.   Aug 4, 1999 2:23 PM
If someone's wood-and-straw temple of works burns on that day, does that mean the person burns? How do you read that metaphor? ...

-- posted by Dan_Ellsworth


4.   Aug 4, 1999 9:48 AM
You are absolutely correct, Dan. There is a place for works.

I think that Paul, being the master builder that he is, explains it all so neatly. We are to lay our works, course by course, upon the ...


-- posted by Phil_J


3.   Aug 4, 1999 9:30 AM
...including baptism. But one thing that has helped summarize it for me is that once you accept Jesus Christ as Savior, then Christian ethics can be seen as response ethics - the proper behavi ...

-- posted by Dan_Ellsworth





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