You just
prayed to receive
Jesus Christ –
“What Do I Do Now?”
by Dennis Pollock
Congratulations!
You just made the smartest decision
in your life. You have called upon
Jesus for the forgiveness of your
sins and the gift of eternal life.
And if you have asked based your
request upon His cross, and asked
with sincerity and genuine faith,
you can be certain that He has heard
you, and that you are now a child of
God.
The question
arises, “What do I do now?” A good
question, a very good question. If
you have been born again, you
instinctively realize that there is
more to come. You decision to follow
Christ was a real one, and it will
have consequences for all the rest
of your years on earth, and
throughout eternity. Allow me to
give you eight Biblical challenges
for every new believer in Jesus
Christ.
1. You
must follow through.
“If any man would come after Me, let
him take up his cross, deny himself
daily, and follow Me.” (Luke
9:23).
Serving Christ
starts with a prayer to receive Him,
but it does not end there. You must
make you service to Him a daily
adventure! This means denying
ourselves of those things He tells
us are wrong, and following Him in
whatever direction He takes us. This
will involve a radical change of
lifestyle. Anything He tells us to
quit, we quit, and whatever He tells
us to do we do. This is what it
means to make Jesus Lord, and
without this we must not pretend to
be Christians. Jesus said, “Why do
you call Me Lord, Lord, and do not
do the things I say?” (Luke 6:46).
2. Be
baptized as soon as possible.
“He that believes and is
baptized shall be saved, but he that
believes not shall be condemned.”
(Mark 16:16)
Why must I be
baptized? The answer is very simple
– Jesus commands it! Baptism is the
faith response of the believer who
has put their trust in Jesus. The
Bible likes it to a burial: the old
nature has been crucified with Jesus
and is buried, and we are given a
new nature by the Holy Spirit which
delights to do the will of God. The
act of baptism is an expression of
our radical commitment to Jesus
Christ and a public demonstration of
our faith. When the apostle Paul saw
a vision of the Lord Jesus, he lost
his vision for a few days. When an
aged disciple came to him, he prayed
for him, Paul received his sight,
and the Bible tells us “He arose and
was baptized.” If you have given
your life to Jesus, arise and be
baptized. If you were sprinkled as a
child, be baptized this time by
immersion. The Biblical pattern is
to believe first and then be
baptized. You will find this
experience far more meaningful,
knowing that you have personally and
consciously chosen Jesus for
yourself this time.
3.
Confess Jesus with your mouth.
“If you confess with your mouth
the Lord Jesus, and believe in your
heart that God has raised Him from
the dead, you will be saved.”
Like baptism, the
public confession of our faith is
vitally important to the new
Christian. To confess means to be a
witness of, to tell publicly what
you have seen or experienced. When
most people receive Jesus, it is a
very private business. Many pray
quietly at home or in a church
service as they sit in the
congregation. And you can be sure
that Jesus hears the softest cry of
a seeking heart. But the time must
come when our acknowledgment of Him
goes beyond the confines of the
quietness of our heart. We must
confess Him with our mouth to
others. Jesus said “Whoever
confesses Me before men, him will I
also confess before My Father who is
in heaven, but whoever denies Me
before men, him will I also deny
before My Father ...” (Mathew
10:32,33).
Many make their
first confession of Jesus at
baptism, but you don’t have to wait
until then. You can call a friend, a
parent, or a neighbor and tell them
the good news: “I have made Jesus
Christ my Lord and Savior today! I
have become a child of God.”
4. Get a
Bible, and Start Reading It.
“Faith comes by hearing, and
hearing by the Word of God.”
(Romans 10:17)
When a baby is
born, most mothers are thrilled.
This new bundle of joy is a gift of
God to them, and how they delight to
hold their baby and admire the cute
little face, the ten fingers and
toes, and to hear the little baby
sounds that come from their child’s
mouth. But they must do more than
admire that baby, if they are to
have it around for very long. Almost
immediately they have to supply that
baby with food. That baby has to
eat!
Just as God
provides mothers with breast milk
for the feeding of their babies, He
has provided His new creations in
Christ with a marvelous formula that
is guaranteed to sustain life and
promote growth. Peter tells us, “As
newborn babes desire the pure milk
of the word, that you may grow
thereby” (1 Peter 2:2). You must
start reading the Bible regularly.
No reading the Bible doesn’t save
you, but it will strengthen you and
enable you to grow spiritually.
Find a
translation that you can understand,
and yet is reliable such as the
NASV, the New King James Version, or
the New International Version. Try
to read a few chapters a day, and
meditate on what you read (take time
to think it over). Let God speak to
you through His Word, and spiritual
growth will be nearly impossible.
5. Find a
Church To Attend. “Not
forsaking the assembling of
ourselves together, as is the manner
of some, but exhorting one another,
and so much the more as you see the
day approaching” (Hebrews
10:25).
One of the
biggest excuses for not serving the
Lord is that often heard whine: “You
don’t have to go to church to serve
the Lord.” They may go on to say how
that their are hypocrites in the
church, or that they can worship God
by admiring the beautiful mountains
or looking at the face of their new
baby and so forth.
The truth is, you
do have to go to church in order to
serve God. The Bible expressly
commands us not to forsake
assembling with other Christians. If
we refuse to go to church, we are
disobeying a commandment of God, and
how can we claim to serve God when
we consistently break one of his
commandments? The Bible tells us
“Christ loved the church, and gave
Himself for it ...” (Ephesians 5:25)
If Jesus has not given up on His
church, who are we to pretend to be
too good for it? No, there is no
perfect church, but then again,
there are no perfect people either,
so it works out pretty good.
What should you
look for in a church? Certainly not
perfection, but there are some basic
requirements that your church should
meet. Make sure to find a church
where the pastor preaches from the
Bible and lifts up Jesus. If you
never hear the preacher invite
people to come to Christ, something
is wrong there. Better stay away.
Find a church where the people
worship with joy and where the Holy
Spirit’s presence is experienced in
the worship. If these things are
present, you can overlook some of
the faults you will eventually see.
Churches, like people, can
disappoint you, but you can no more
give up on the church of Jesus, than
you can people in general. God
hasn’t called you to be a spiritual
Lone Ranger.
6. Pray,
Pray, Pray. “Then He
(Jesus) spoke a parable to them,
that men always ought to pray and
not lose heart” (Luke 18:1)
By prayer we keep
in contact with our Heavenly Father.
Prayer is the means of staying in
touch with God, asking and receiving
His blessings, and pouring out our
hearts to Him. Just as green plants
dry up without water, so Christians
become spiritually dry and parched
without prayer. Prayer is not an
option to exercised when we have
little else to do. It is an absolute
necessity of our new lives, and we
cannot hope to get along without it.
Make the time to pray. Prayer is
simply talking to God. Praise Him,
tell Him your fears, ask Him for
your needs and wants, and thank Him
for His blessings. But by all means
pray!
Just as a baby’s
first cries are a sweet sound to the
new parents, so prayer is a sweet
sound to our Father in heaven.
Prayer is an indicator that
spiritual life is indeed present,
and it is the means by which
spiritual life is maintained and
strengthened.
Satan will try to
keep you so busy, your prayer life
is reduced to a quick sentence or
two before bedtime (if that). Don’t
let it happen to you! Give God your
best. Put off other things if you
have to, but don’t put off pray.
Blessings will come into your life
because you pray. Disaster may be
avoided because you prayed. Only
heaven will reveal the tremendous
ways your life was altered because
you made time to pray.
7. Trust
Christ For Deliverance From Bad
Habits. “For sin shall
not have dominion over you, for you
are not under law but under grace”
(Romans 6:14).
One of the
greatest weapons Satan uses to
destroy the faith and spiritual life
of a new believer, is in the area of
sinful habits. When you first come
to Christ you don’t realize the
tremendous power of the sin. You
have let sin have its way thus far
and have not tried to restrain or
conquer it. Now, as a new believer,
you soon realize that there are
areas of your life that need to
change. You make great effort, only
to realize that you don’t seem to
have the power to change yourself.
So far you are right on schedule.
All this is standard fare for the
new Christian.
When you get to
this point, you must immediately
look to Jesus. The Bible says some
amazing things about what He has
done for us by His death on the
cross and His resurrection. We are
told that we have been set free from
sin (Romans 6:18), that sin shall
not boss us around (Romans 6:14),
and that we are to consider
ourselves dead to sin, but alive to
God in Christ (Romans 6:11).
You will find
that victory over sinful habits
comes not from resolutions, or will
power, or mental struggle, but by
our faith in Jesus. He has provided
for our freedom and the more we
meditate on His victory, and
acknowledge the freedom His blood
has purchased for us, the more
victory we will see.
8. Don’t
Add To Jesus. “Whoever
transgresses and does not abide in
the doctrine of Christ does not have
God...” (2John 9).
If Satan cannot
stop you from associating with
Jesus, he will try to get you to
“add to” Jesus. He will try to get
you to believe that your right
standing before God is based upon
Jesus plus something else. For some
it is Jesus plus their church (or
cult). They feel that they are
accepted in God’s sight because of
Jesus, yes, ... but also because
they go to the right church which
has so much more “truth” than all
the other churches.
Others trust in
Jesus plus their spiritual labors.
Because they knock on doors or
perform some ministry, they feel
that they will be accepted on that
basis. My friend it is never Jesus
plus, it is simply Jesus. On that
great and awesome day of Judgment we
will stand before our King, and
those who were truly His children
will gladly acknowledge to Jesus:
“You and You alone have purchased my
salvation by your death on the cross
for my sins and your resurrection.”
No matter how much you may grow, no
matter how spiritual you may become,
no matter how big your ministry is,
you must recognize that every good
thing you are or have done is all
His doing. He alone is our
salvation. Not our church, not our
works, not our ministry, but Jesus,
for “We are the circumcision (the
true people of God) who worship God
in the Spirit, rejoice in Christ
Jesus, and have no confidence in the
flesh” (Philippians 3:3). |