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What
About Those Who Have Never Heard?
By Gabriel Fackre, Ronald H.
Nash and John Sanders
Reviewed by Paul Kroll
What
is the fate of those who died without hearing the gospel or having an
opportunity to put their faith in Christ? Can they receive salvation, or are
they lost? What about babies and the mentally retarded and those who lived
before the time of Jesus?
"These questions raise one of
the most perplexing, provocative and perennial issues facing Christians," writes
Sanders.
The book presents three main
views in answer to this mystery of the destiny of the unevangelized.
Ronald Nash, the late professor
of theology and philosophy at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, presents
the view in the book called restrictivism. This view claims that for a person to
be saved he or she must know about Christ’s saving work and exercise faith in
him before death.
John Sanders, Assistant
Professor of Religion at Hendrix College, advocates a position called
inclusivism. "In this model God saves people only because of the work of Christ,
but people may be saved even if they do not know about Christ" (page 13).
Gabriel Fackre, Abbot Professor
Emeritus of Christian Theology at Andover Newton Theological School, proposes
the view called divine perseverance or what is often called "postmortem
evangelization." This view suggests that people who die unevangelized can still
receive an opportunity for salvation after death.
The book refers to other views
regarding the fate of the unevangelized not discussed in its pages. One idea is
that God will ultimately save the vast majority of humans, though proponents
sometimes refuse to take a stance on the method God will use to save the
unevangelized. Another view is that Christ encounters all people at the moment
of death, at which time they receive an opportunity for salvation. Others
advocate universalism, which teaches that everyone will be saved.
Sanders points out that the
three positions discussed in the book or others referred to are not new ideas.
They have had adherents throughout church history. While the three authors
disagree about the destiny of the unevangelized, they do agree that the Bible is
authoritative and that salvation is possible only through Jesus Christ.
The book won’t provide a glib
and iron-clad solution to the age-old question of the fate of the unevangelized.
Yet, it will allow readers to become better informed about the complex issues
involved and the texts of Scripture that are relevant to the topic.
After each author discusses his
view, the other two contributors respond. The authors provide a succinct chart
of the five main positions and a helpful list of suggested readings for those
who want to pursue the topic further.
What About Those Who Have Never
Heard? Three Views on the Destiny of the Unevangelized, by Gabriel Fackre,
Ronald H. Nash & John Sanders, edited by John Sanders (Downers Grove, Ill.:
Inter? Varsity Press, 1995), paperback, 168 pages.
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copyright 2007
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