How can I know that I am saved for sure?

TL;DR

You can be sure you’re saved because salvation rests on God’s promises, not your performance. If Jesus saved you by grace through faith, He will keep you, and no one can snatch you from His hand.

WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?

Believers' assurance of our salvation comes from the objective truth of God's Word and the promises in it. The Old Testament is filled with God's fulfilled promises (Leviticus 26:12-13). One example is God's promise to Abraham that the whole world would be blessed through His descendants (Genesis 12:2-3), a fulfillment that Jesus noted in His coming (John 8:56).

The main assurance of salvation comes in the New Testament, though. The Bible indicates that those who accept Christ as Savior become God's children (John 1:12) and receive eternal life (John 3:16; Acts 16:31). Scripture teaches that this is a free gift of God, not based on our works (Ephesians 2:8-9). If we didn't save ourselves, we can't unsave ourselves. Jesus made it clear that once we are saved, nothing can separate us from Him (John 10:28-29). The Bible lays out a clear path to salvation: the admittance that we cannot reach God alone and the belief that salvation comes through faith and trust in Jesus alone. Jesus promises that those who have taken those steps are truly saved and cannot be removed from Him, providing assurance of salvation.

FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT

FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT

IMPLICATIONS FOR TODAY

"I like you. Do you like me? Check the box yes or no"—As kids, the uncertainty the first crush can be scary. As adults, the uncertainties are bigger: Will my MRI results be okay? Which college should I go to? Should I buy this house? But the most important circumstance in our lives is 100% certain: our salvation.

We can be confident in our salvation because Jesus has said of us, "no one will snatch them out of my hand" (John 10:28). Sometimes the doubts we feel are from ourselves, but they can also come from our enemy, the devil, who would love nothing more than for us to question our identities in Christ. Jesus identified Satan as "the father of lies" (John 8:44). Why should we believe the lie that we can lose our salvation? We shouldn't.

When doubts arise, tune out the enemy, pray to the Father, and open the Bible. Don’t treat your salvation like a checkbox waiting to be marked. It is a promise sealed by Christ, not a feeling to be re-evaluated. Instead of listening to the voice that whispers “What if?”, anchor yourself in the voice that declares “It is finished.”

UNDERSTAND

REFLECT

ENGAGE