I. What Is a Backslider?
 II. Why People Backslide; the Old Adamic Nature
 III The Sorrows of Backsliding
 IV. Backsliders; Saved or Lost?
 V. How to Get Back to Full Fellowship With God
“The backslider in heart shall be filled with his own ways.” – Prov. 14:14.
“Thine own wickedness shall correct thee, and thy backslidings shall reprove
 thee: know therefore and see that it is an evil thing and bitter, that thou hast
 forsaken the Lord thy God, and that my fear is not in thee, saith the Lord God of
 hosts.” – Jer. 2:19.
Christians sin. Some of the saintliest of God’s people have fallen into outrageous
 sin. And that has puzzled honest hearts and has been the sneer of the wicked
 down through the ages.
Infidels who hate the Bible have claimed that God’s Book is immoral because it
 tells frankly of the frailties and sins of the saints of God. But really only God
 could write a book like that, honestly telling, without excuse, without glossing
 over, the constant downward tendency in the human race, revealed even in the
 saintliest characters.
Men who write books about their heroes make much of their good points, and
 gloss over or excuse their sins and failures. Men who write books about their
 enemies make much of their sins and failures, and gloss over their good qualities.
 But the Bible, written by an honest and holy God, simply tells the truth about
 mankind. We are a race of sinners, and the best men that ever lived still sinned.
The problem of sin is still present with Christians, as real as when they were
 unsaved. I find everywhere I go defeated Christians, sad Christians who fear that
 God has forsaken them or who doubt that they were ever saved. The problem of
 backsliding is ever with us. So I have prepared this Bible message to show what
 is a backslider, why people backslide, the sorrows and punishment of
 backsliding, to show that the true backslider is really saved, and to show how
 any Christian who has fallen into sin can get back into full fellowship with God
 and have the joy of his salvation restored.
I. What Is a Backslider?
A backslider is a saved person who falls into sin. A lost sinner cannot be a
 backslider. You have to go somewhere before you can slide back. But one who is
 truly born again, a child of God who falls into sin, is a backslider. It may be
 outrageous and gross sin known to everyone, or it may be merely coldness of
 heart, a lukewarmness of heart instead of the burning fire of love for God. But
 when a Christian loses any of his joy, or loses part of his sweet fellowship with
 God, or falls into sin, then he is a backslider. Remember that only Christians can
 backslide.
We have many examples of this in the Bible. What an honest Book the Bible is to
 tell us of the failures and sins of God’s people through the ages! God wanted us
 to know that the men of the greatest faith, saints who had truly been born again,
 were frail people such as we are and subject to the same temptations and
 surrendering sometimes to the same sins.
God tells how Noah got drunk and lay naked in his tent. He tells how Lot sought
 the fellowship of the wicked Sodomites, lost all his influence, got drunk and
 ruined his own daughters. The Bible tells how Abraham deceived, calling Sarah
 his sister. Even saintly Moses lost his temper. When God commanded him to
 speak to the rock that Israel might be watered from it a second time, in a temper
 he beat upon it with his rod and so dishonored God that he lost his chance to
 enter the Promised Land.
David, a man after God’s own heart, a man used to write the Psalms, that
 blessed book of devotions for the saints through all these centuries, committed
 adultery with Bathsheba and then had her husband Uriah slain to hide his sin. The
 Bible tells how Samson, a judge of Israel who had been filled with the Holy Ghost
 and was a Nazarite from his birth, kept company with harlots until God left him
 powerless, a slave of the Philistines with his eyes burned out.
The Bible tells how Peter denied Christ and cursed and swore; how all the
 disciples forsook Jesus and fled; how later Peter, fearing the Jewish Christians,
 played the coward again, and led even good Barnabas away with his
 dissimulations. The Bible tells how Joseph of Arimathea, a disciple of Jesus, was a
 coward, a secret disciple. Even Paul the apostle went up to Jerusalem against the
 plain leading of the Holy Spirit.
So the saints of the Bible fell into sin. They were backsliders.
These examples should humble us and teach us that even the mightiest of God’s
 saints sometimes backslide, fall into sin, and so lose the sweet joy that every
 Christian ought to have.
A Christian who backslides is like a child who disobeys his parents. It does not
 affect his sonship but it affects his fellowship, his joy, and the approval of the
 Father.
But it is well to note there are some in the Bible who did not backslide. For
 example, Adam, when he fell into sin in the Garden of Eden, was not a backslider.
 He had never been born again. He had never been saved and so could not
 backslide. In the Garden of Eden he had been created a perfect man and had
 perfect fellowship with God as one of His creatures, made in His image. But he
 had not been redeemed by blood. Up to that time in the Bible blood had never
 been mentioned as a remedy for sin. There had never been an animal sacrifice
 picturing the coming of the Saviour. There had never been a gospel message nor
 any need of one. There had never been a prophecy of the coming Saviour.
Adam, as a sinless being in the Garden of Eden, like Eve his wife, was not a
 Christian. He was simply a perfect man, as she was a perfect woman. When
 Adam fell into sin and ate the forbidden fruit, he was not a backslider. He was,
 for the first time, a poor lost sinner who had never been converted, who had
 never been born into God’s family, who had never been born again, who had
 never been redeemed by the blood.
And so fallen angels are not backsliders. Angels in Heaven are perfect and sinless
 and have fellowship with God, but they are not Christians. Angels, who have
 never been saved and given everlasting life as forgiven sinners, cannot backslide.
Judas Iscariot was not a backslider. In John 6:64,70,71 we are told that Judas did
 not believe in Christ, was not saved but was a devil.
“But there are some of you that believe not. For Jesus knew from the beginning
 who they were that believed not, and who should betray him … Jesus answered
 them, Have not I chosen you twelve, and one of you is a devil? He spake of Judas
 Iscariot the son of Simon: for he it was that should betray him, being one of the
 twelve.”
Judas heard the preaching of Jesus but never repented. He was a moral man who
 evidently depended on his morality and would not turn to Jesus in saving faith. At
 last he fell into grossest sin and betrayed Jesus for thirty pieces of silver. But
 Judas was not a backslider. No one can be a backslider who has not first been a
 “frontslider.” Only Christians, born again children of God, are backsliders.
Strange as it may seem, all Christians backslide, for all Christians sin. In I John
 1:8 we are told, “If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the
 truth is not in us.” Every Christian is taught to pray daily in the Lord’s Prayer
 (that model prayer for all who can look up in the face of God and call Him, “Our
 Father which art in heaven”), “And forgive us our sins” (Luke 11:4). All Christians
 sin, and that means that all Christians backslide.
When you remember that “the thought of foolishness is sin” (Prov. 24:9), that
 “whatsoever is not of faith is sin” (Rom. 14:23), that “to him that knoweth to do
 good and doeth it not, to him it is sin” (Jas. 4:17), then it becomes clear that all
 of us have fallen short even after we are saved. We have all had foolish thoughts;
 we have all done some things without any special faith about them; we have all
 left undone things that we knew were proper and right for us to do. Who will say
 that every minute of your life you have loved God all you ought to, that you
 never pray a second less than you ought to pray, that you never leave undone a
 single thing that God wants you to do? You cannot say that; neither can I. And
 that is proof of sin.
Christians grow old. Our teeth decay, our hair turns gray or falls out, we grow
 decrepit in body, and finally even Christians die. That proves that Christians are
 sinners. for everywhere in the Bible we are told that death is the result of sin.
Adam was warned that if he sinned, “thou shalt surely die” (Gen. 2:17). James
 1:15 says that “sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death.” Ezekiel 18:4 says
 that “the soul that sinneth, it shall die.” Romans 6:23 plainly says that “the
 wages of sin is death.”
Oh, we Christians are yet frail sinners; so it is clear that all Christians backslide.
 And that is the reason why God must save us by grace and keep us by grace. We
 did not earn salvation, and we cannot keep it. We did not deserve it when we got
 it, and we do not deserve it now.
Dear reader. will you test yourself by this simple rule? Was there ever a time
 when you were nearer to God than you are now? Was there ever a time when you
 read the Bible more, or enjoyed it more than now? Was there ever a time when
 you prayed more, when you had your prayers answered more frequently? Was
 there ever a day when you won more souls than you have won today? Was there
 ever a time when you were more completely absorbed in the Lord’s business? If
 there was ever a time when you were nearer the Lord than today, you are a
 backslider. You have slid back from that close intimacy with God, from that high
 place of blessing which you once had.
Remember that our text in Proverbs 14:14 says, “The backslider in heart shall
 be filled with his own ways.” Backsliding is not necessarily getting drunk nor
 committing adultery, nor any outward course of sin seen by the public.
 Backsliding is in the heart!
It may be, dear Christian, that you have drifted somewhat but have never
 noticed it. You may be like Samson who “wist not that the Lord was departed
 from him” (Judges 16:20). We need to search our hearts and we need to watch
 and pray lest sin creep up on us.
Are you a backslider?
II Why People Backslide; the Old Adamic Nature
I remember when I first became conscious of my backsliding. I had been saved at
 about nine years of age. I had trusted Christ to forgive me, and I am sure He did.
 Three years later I joined the church, was baptized, and had received full
 assurance that my sins were forgiven. But my mother was dead, and my
 boyhood companions in the wild west Texas cow town were rough and wicked.
 One day it dawned on me that I had drifted far from God in my heart, I had
 grieved Him in my life. I had gotten to the place where prayer was not a joy and
 the Bible was not sweet.
I was attending special services in a little Presbyterian church. Many young
 people found Christ, and many Christians had their joy restored. I alone seemed
 left without a blessing. How sweet was the singing! What a light on the faces of
 the happy people! And one night as they sang,
 Pass me not, O gentle Saviour,
 Hear my humble cry;
 While on others Thou art calling,
 Do not pass me by.
I cried out, “Lord. is everybody going to get a blessing but me? Do not pass me
 by!”
And, thank God, all the joy came back and peace flooded my soul! I knew that
 my failures and my sins had been forgiven. It was as definite as if my Father had
 taken me in His arms and kissed away my tears and told me so!
As I walked home across the prairie that night and looked up at the stars, I made
 a vow to God, “O God. I will never fail You again! I will never forget my prayer
 time. I will never give way to temptation and sin!” You may well smile; I think
 perhaps a loving and kindly God smiled at my great promises that night. How
 well He knew my sinful nature, my frailty and sin!
It was not more than two weeks before I had sinned in a way that shocked me
 terribly, though I do not now remember the details. I found my joy gone. And
 when I went to God in prayer to confess my sins, again I made great promises,
 “God, I failed You this time, but if You will give me one more chance, I will not fail
 You again. I promise You I will be more faithful. I will be true this time, if You will
 only try me once more!” How little I knew that God wanted trust instead of
 promises, that He wanted me to depend upon Him instead of on myself. But He
 again gave me sweet peace.
But the tragic story was repeated, until in despair I felt I had lied to God, had
 failed Him, and that He must be so disappointed in me that He would never trust
 me again, and would never give me back the joy of His presence.
At long last I learned that I have an evil nature as well as a new nature which is
 from God. Like every child of God, I am two persons in one. I am the old man I
 was before I was saved, with a human body and human frailty and a human
 tendency toward sin; I am also a new creature in Christ who loves the Lord and
 hates sin. And I learned that God knows all about me, and that what He wants me
 to do is to regularly confess my sins and earnestly turn from them, depending on
 His never-failing mercy to forgive and cleanse, as He promised to do.
So the reason that people backslide is this old carnal nature that every saint of
 God has. The best people that ever lived have had a constant tendency toward
 sin ever since Adam (and with him the whole race) fell.
It is easier to do wrong than it is to do right. It is easier to tell a lie than it is to
 tell the truth. Honest, good people have to continually watch themselves so they
 will be accurate and truthful in their speech and to avoid deceit. It is easier to
 loaf than it is to work. The best Christians in the world have to watch themselves
 and set themselves to work diligently, to do their duty. It is easier to get angry
 than it is to be even-tempered, forgiving and sweet. Even Christians sometimes
 have to “count ten” before they speak. And how often we have to confess that we
 have sinned with a sharp tongue or a critical spirit.
The book of Hosea is a book on backsliding. There the prophet often speaks of
 Israel as if the nation were an individual who had gone away from God. And in
 Hosea 4:16 he says, “Israel slideth back as a backsliding heifer.” In Hosea 6:1 he
 says, “Come, and let us return unto the Lord: for he hath torn, and he will heal
 us; he hath smitten, and he will bind us up.” And then Hosea 11:7 says, “And my
 people are bent to backsliding from me.”
BENT TO BACKSLIDING! God’s people are bent to backsliding from Him. Oh, how
 true that is of every one of us!
That blessed old song, “Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing,” has the revealing
 heart-cry of every Christian that ever found himself a backslider. It says,
 “Prone to wander, Lord, I feel it;
 Prone to leave the God I love”!
The modernists do not like that, so have changed it in some song books, but it is
 still true that all of the people of God are prone to wander. We are prone to leave
 the God we love. We are “bent to backsliding,” as God’s Word puts it.
An old proverb says, “As the twig is bent, the tree is inclined.” And all of us were
 bent when we were twigs. We were bent before we were born! We were bent
 away from God by nature when Adam fell. And not until Christians get a
 resurrected body, with no more disease, no more gray hairs, no more weakness.
 will we have our old carnal natures perfectly redeemed and the curse entirely
 removed.
Holiness people sometimes claim that the carnal nature has been eradicated in
 them, that the fire of God has burned it all out. Yet. strangely enough, they too
 backslide.
At Des Moines, Iowa, a sad-faced man attended my services who told me he had
 been a Holiness preacher but was at the time living in the grossest sin and did
 not even claim to be a Christian. The facts belied his doctrine. The carnal nature
 had not been taken away.
Thank God, we can have day-by-day victory over the carnal nature by judging
 self, by confessing our sins, and by having daily cleansing; but we still have the
 carnal nature; and that is why people backslide.
The struggle all real Christians have today, Paul had too. We read in Romans
 7:14-25:
“For we know that the law is spiritual: but I am carnal, sold under sin. For that
 which I do I allow not: for what I would, that do I not; but what I hate, that do I. If
 then I do that which I would not, I consent unto the law that it is good. Now then
 it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me. For I know that in me (that
 is, in my flesh,) dwelleth no good thing: for to will is present with me; but how to
 perform that which is good I find not. For the good that I would I do not: but the
 evil which I would not, that I do. Now if I do that I would not, it is no more I that
 do it, but sin that dwelleth in me. I find then a law, that, when I would do good,
 evil is present with me. For I delight in the law of God after the inward man: But I
 see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind, and
 bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. O wretched
 man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death? I thank God
 through Jesus Christ our Lord. So then with the mind I myself serve the law of
 God; but with the flesh the law of sin.”
As a Christian, Paul did things he did not want to do and ought not to have done.
 With his mind he served the law of God, but with his flesh the law of sin. Even in
 the last verse quoted above where Paul could thank God through Jesus Christ our
 Lord for the possibility of deliverance, he followed that statement by this: “So
 then with the mind I myself serve the law of God; but with the flesh the law of
 sin.” Paul did not condone his sin, and neither should we. Paul knew that he could
 have daily victory over it, and so can we. But we must not deny the presence of
 this old sinful nature. We need constantly to be on our guard, and we need to be
 continually confessing and forsaking our sin to have daily cleansing and to keep
 on walking in the light.
And Christians who understand this truth can understand the further truth in the
 eighth chapter, where Paul looked forward so grandly to the glory that should be
 revealed, for “the earnest expectation of the creature waiteth for the
 manifestation of the sons of God. For the creature was made subject to vanity,
 not willingly, but by reason of him who hath subjected the same in hope.” And
 then he tells how the creature shall one day be delivered from this bondage of
 corruption into glorious liberty, and that the whole creation groans together,
 waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption, of our bodies (Rom. 8:19-23).
Christian, do you find yourself “bent to backsliding”? Then you are like Paul and
 like every other born-again child of God. But, thank God, there is victory for you
 through Christ, as I will show you soon.
III. The Sorrows of Backsliding
Jeremiah 2:19 says:
“Thine own wickedness shall correct thee, and thy backslidings shall reprove
 thee: know therefore and see that it is an evil thing and bitter, that thou hast
 forsaken the Lord thy God, and that my fear is not in thee, saith the Lord God of
 hosts.”
Oh, the trouble that comes to the backslider in heart! Again, Proverbs 14:14
 says, “The backslider in heart shall be filled with his own ways.” How many,
 many people have told me that their backsliding brought them only grief and
 trouble, and that they had enough of it!
First, the backslider is sure of the chastising of God. God still hates sin, and He
 has promised to chasten His beloved when they sin. Hebrews 12:5,6 tells us:
“And ye have forgotten the exhortation which speaketh unto you as unto
 children, My son, despise not thou the chastening of the Lord, nor faint when
 thou art rebuked of him. For whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth
 every son whom he receiveth.”
And verse 11 in the same chapter tells us:
“No chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous, but grievous: nevertheless
 afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto them which are
 exercised thereby.”
So God whips every backslider, and He does it in love. He does it to correct their
 backsliding and to bring “the peaceable fruit of righteousness” in His children.
I love my children so much that I want them to do right and be happy and
 succeed in the Christian life. So sometimes I have to whip them for their
 disobedience. It is painful, but it is done in love and for their good, and at the last
 it “yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness.”
For David’s sin, God smote his child and the baby died. One son, Amnon, raped
 his sister, Tamar. Then Absalom killed Amnon, then he grew embittered and tried
 to seize the kingdom from David. David paid fourfold for his sin, but David did
 not lose his soul. When David confessed his sin, God’s message came to him.
“And Nathan said unto David, The Lord also hath put away thy sin; thou shalt
 not die. Howbeit, because by this deed thou bast given great occasion to the
 enemies of the Lord to blaspheme, the child also that is born unto thee shall
 surely die.”
David was a backslider. God forgave his backsliding but still punished him for his
 sin.
And when the saints at Corinth got drunk at the Lord’s table, or made an
 unseemly feast of it, and when there were divisions and strife among them which
 they did not confess and forsake, the Lord had Paul write to them, “For this
 cause many are weak and sickly among you, and many sleep” (I Cor. 11:30). For
 their sins some were weak and sickly, and some had already died and gone to
 Heaven prematurely. God punishes His children who sin.
It is apparent that God is more determined to punish the sins of Christians than
 the sins of lost people. For lost people will go to Hell forever and there will suffer
 for their sins. But God must be just, and the only time He can punish His own in
 actual chastising, we suppose, is in this world. So like a faithful father, who
 chastises his disobedient children but loves them still, God punishes the
 backslider.
Besides the personal chastising of a loving Father, the backslider reaps the
 natural wages of his sin. When a Christian gets drunk, he wastes his money and
 wakes up with a headache and is just as apt to lose his job or to break up his
 home as a lost man. It never pays anybody to sin, and it never will!
What a trail of trouble followed Lot’s sin! He lost all his property in Sodom. All
 but two of his children were burned to death in that wicked city. His wife turned
 to a pillar of salt. A broken man, he lived in a cave in the mountains, then got
 drunk and ruined his own daughters who still had the ways of Sodom in their
 hearts!
That is what backsliding can do to the child of God. If you have tasted it, you
 know that the dregs of the cup are bitter and that “thine own wickedness shall
 correct thee, and thy backslidings shall reprove thee.” Surely, if you have been a
 backslider, you have found that “it is an evil thing and bitter, that thou hast
 forsaken the Lord thy God.” If one reads this who is persistent in going away
 from God and who is not yet ready to turn and beg forgiveness and cleansing. I
 warn you now, a hard, rough, bitter, sad road is ahead of you – the Backslider’s
 Way.
Again, the backslider will have remorse of conscience over his sins. If you have
 truly been saved, then you love Christ and you love God. If you are truly a child
 of God, there is something in you which rebels against your sins. When you were
 a lost man, you may have enjoyed sin, but now that you are God’s child, the cup
 of sin will turn bitter to your taste before the drink is well down.
Can you see in your mind Peter going out to weep bitterly after his denial of
 Christ? He quit the ministry and went back to fishing and was almost in despair,
 until he met Jesus again by the Sea of Galilee and had his joy restored.
Read the fifty-first Psalm which shows the brokenhearted David after his sin with
 Bathsheba. Hear him cry, begging to be cleansed: “For I acknowledge my
 transgressions: and my sin is ever before me.” The sense of his blood guiltiness,
 his soul-realization of the wickedness of his nature, is made clear in every verse
 of that Psalm, and he pleads, “Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation: and
 uphold me with thy free spirit.” And when God will give him the assurance of
 forgiveness and cleansing, David promises, “My tongue shall sing aloud of thy
 righteousness”!
Some of you who read this have known, as I have, the broken heart that David
 had over his own sins. Oh, the burning conscience of a backslider!
At Gary, Indiana, a man came down the aisle at the invitation to say, “Five years
 I have been a backslider! Oh, Brother Rice, five years is a long time to be away
 from home!” and he broke into weeping.
Well, poor backslider, I wouldn’t stay away any longer. I would come home today
 for it is a sad, bitter business when you have known the joy of salvation, the
 presence of God, the sweetness of the Bible and of answered prayer, then to lose
 all that joy and not be able to see the face of the God whom you love.
The poor, prodigal boy in the hog pen, dreaming about the plenty at home while
 he perished with hunger, a stranger, half-naked and despised in a far land, knew
 the sorrows that a child of God has who sins and falls away from the sweet
 communion and joy which every Christian has a right to have.
Last of all, let us remember that “we must all appear before the judgment seat of
 Christ; that every one may receive the things done in his body, according to that
 he hath done, whether it be good or bad.” Even when we get to Heaven we will be
 sad that we were backsliders. There we will have to stand before Christ to give
 an account for our deeds. Even in Heaven the backslider will be ashamed that he
 drifted away from full fellowship with the Saviour and with his Heavenly Father.
 When his works are burned up, he will “be saved; yet so as by fire” and will
 “suffer loss” (I Cor. 3:12-15).
IV. Backsliders; Saved or Lost?
Everywhere people want to know whether the backslider is saved or lost. After
 one has sinned, is he still a child of God? When he has lost the joy of salvation,
 does he still have the salvation?
Well, the answer to this question is that the backslider does not deserve to be
 saved but deserves to go to Hell; that other people will often think that he is not
 saved; that he himself is likely to doubt his salvation or to believe that God has
 forsaken him utterly; but, thank God, the backslider still is a child of God. He is a
 disobedient child of God and he will be punished for it, yet every born-again child
 of God who falls into sin is still God’s child.
It is true that the backslider does not deserve salvation. What a tragedy when a
 child of God brings reproach on the cause of Christ! It may be an outrageous sin
 such as drunkenness or adultery. Or it may be sins like the sins of those other
 backsliders – Noah, Lot, David. Or it may be a backsliding in the heart that does
 not seem so bad to outsiders but really results in damning souls that might have
 been won.
Who knows whether in God’ s sight a cold heart, that does not win souls and
 never has the anointing for power, may be more wicked than the man who is
 tempted and falls into drink or blasphemy or adultery! What could be worse than
 letting a soul go to Hell for millions of years because of our carelessness, our
 love for the things of this life? But in either case, the backslider deserves nothing
 good from God. That means that I ought to have gone to Hell long ago! How
 many times I have failed God! How many vows I have broken! How many duties I
 have neglected!
But then the same thing could be said about every Christian in the world. We
 deserve nothing good from God. No one does. It would have served us right for
 Him to let us all go to Hell.
But, thanks be to God, my salvation is not depending upon my works. I did not
 deserve salvation when I got it, and I have never deserved it any thirty seconds
 since that time! Salvation is all of grace. How sweet to all of us poor sinners is
 Ephesians 2:8,9, “By grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of
 yourselves; it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast.” And
 when we get to Heaven there will not be one living soul who can say, “I deserved
 this. I earned my way to Heaven.” No, how our hearts will run over with gratitude
 and rejoicing when we say there that
 Jesus paid it all,
 All to Him I owe;
 Sin had left a crimson stain,
 He washed it white as snow.
And that is true of my life today as it was the first day I trusted Jesus as my
 Saviour. Oh, thank God for His mercy that never fails! He saves every sinner
 who trusts in Him, and He keeps every one of His erring children. He chastises
 them but He does not lose them.
Not only does the backslider not deserve his salvation, but others will often judge
 him and think he is not saved. Had I seen Noah lying drunk and naked in his tent,
 I might have said, “You old hypocrite! God ought to have let you die in the flood
 with the rest of the drunkards!” I would have thought, perhaps, that there was no
 difference in Noah’s lying there drunk and another man whom I saw two days
 ago lying drunk outside a saloon in Philadelphia.
I think my indignation would have mounted high against David had I been there
 and had I known how he seduced Bathsheba and had her husband killed. I might
 well have thought, “You hypocrite, you psalm-singing sinner! You pious adulterer
 and murderer! You ought to be in Hell!” Had I been the judge, I probably would
 have sent David on to Hell.
So with Lot down in Sodom, calling those wicked, licentious wretches “brethren.”
 So with Peter when he cursed and denied that he even knew Christ. Doubtless I
 would have thought he was unconverted. If God had left it to me, I might have
 sent these backsliders on to Hell. Certainly I would have doubted their sincerity
 when they told me that they loved God.
Oh, but I would not have known the agony in David’s heart which later found
 expression in the pleading confession of the fifty-first Psalm! And I could not
 have known the distress of soul in Peter as, weeping bitterly, he went out into the
 cool morning of that spring day after he had denied the Saviour! And I could not
 have known that Lot “vexed his righteous soul from day to day with their
 unlawful deeds” down in Sodom, as II Peter 2:8 says happened.
The backslider in heart still has in him the voice of God, still has dwelling in him
 the Spirit of God, and is still God’s child. Others will criticize and judge him and
 think him unsaved.
Even the backslider himself may feel that he is unsaved. In the first chapter of II
 Peter we are urged to add certain graces so that we will not be as backsliders –
 barren and unfruitful. Verse 9 says: “but he that lacketh these things is blind,
 and cannot see afar off, and hath forgotten that he was purged from his old
 sins.” How many Christians have forgotten that they were purged from their old
 sins! There are many, no doubt, who give up their hope.
I remember when I gave mine up. When I asked to join the church after my
 profession of faith, my father thought I was too young to be saved, so he
 discouraged me. Then I threw all my hope away. For three years I had no joy and
 no assurance of salvation.
Many a man tells me, “Well, I thought I was saved once, but l guess I was not.” A
 letter came this week from a good woman who told me of her temper, her harsh
 words to her husband and children, of grudges that arose in her heart. She said:
 “Could I be a Christian and be like this?”
So backsliders lose the joy of salvation and lose the assurance of salvation, too.
 How many decide that God has forsaken them! They know that they were once
 saved, but now that they have fallen into sin, they do not have any joy. They feel
 that God does not love them any more. Only day before yesterday a sad-faced
 woman came to tell me how she had been so preoccupied and had so neglected
 prayer and the Lord’s Word that she felt perhaps she had committed the
 unpardonable sin! In fact, of the scores of people who come to me wondering if
 they have committed the unpardonable sin, perhaps not one of them has, but all
 are backslidden Christians. If one had really committed the unpardonable sin, he
 would not be worried about it. He would not hear God’s Spirit calling. Besides, the
 unpardonable sin is committed only by lost people. But backsliders often feel
 that God has forsaken them forever.
Thanks be to God, that is not true! God never forsakes one of His own, even
 though we sin grievously and even though He may punish us severely. The
 backslider is still God’s child and is still saved.
I have six daughters. Though they are precious children whom I love dearly, they
 are not little angels who can do no wrong. Sometimes they have been so bad that
 I felt I must punish them severely. I have had to lay on the whip or a heavy
 leather belt while they cried and begged for another chance. It was not easy at
 all. But you may be sure that when the whipping was over, they were still my
 children. They never lost their place at the table, nor their bed in the home, nor
 the love of a father’s heart when they did wrong. I punished my children when
 they needed it, but they are still my children.
And is God a poorer Father than I? Do you think God’s love for His children is
 weaker than a father’s love for his children? Would God forsake one of His own
 quicker than a human parent would? How strange to ask such a question! It
 answers itself! God punishes His backslidden children and grieves over them but
 He never forsakes a one of them.
In Hosea, the book about backsliding Israel, is a precious word. Chapter11,
 verse 7, says:
“And my people are bent to backsliding from me.”
But now let us read the next two verses, Hosea 11:8,9:
“How shall give thee up, Ephraim? how shall deliver thee, Israel? how shall make
 thee as Admah? how shall set thee as Zeboim? mine heart is turned within me,
 my repentings are kindled together. I will not execute the fierceness of mine
 anger, I will not return to destroy Ephraim: for I am God, and not man; the Holy
 One in the midst of thee: and I will not enter into the city.”
Do you see the yearning heart of God after Ephraim and Israel? How would He
 be content to deal with them as with the wicked in Admah and Zeboim, the towns
 destroyed with Sodom and Gomorrah? In the midst of His chastising, God’s heart
 was turned back toward Israel and He was repenting from even the punishment.
 And so God says: “I will not execute the fierceness of mine anger. I will not return
 to destroy Ephraim: for I am God, and not man.”
God’s love does not fail, as a man’s love fails. A mother may forsake her sucking
 child, but God will not forsake one of His own! A father might drive his wayward
 son from the door, but never will God drive one of His own away, for He is God
 and not man. Men may criticize the backslider and judge him and say he is not
 saved, but God is not a man. His mercy is beyond human mercy, His love is
 greater than any human love.
How sweet is the promise of the Lord to David and his seed in Psalm 89:30-34:
“If his children forsake my law, and walk not in my judgments; If they break my
 statutes, and keep not my commandments: Then will I visit their transgression
 with the rod, and their iniquity with stripes. Nevertheless my loving kindness will
 I not utterly take from him, nor suffer my faithfulness to fail. My covenant will I
 not break, nor alter the thing that is gone out of my lips.”
If David and his descendants. the kings of Judah, should break God’s statutes and
 keep not His commandments, then God promised to visit their transgression with
 the rod and their iniquity with stripes; but God would never utterly take His
 loving kindness from these, and God’s faithfulness would not fail, and God would
 never break His covenant nor change the thing He promised! That is the way God
 deals with men.
In my boyhood I remember hearing a cowboy preacher on that great text, “The
 gifts and calling of God are without repentance” (Rom. 11:29). And that saintly
 but unlettered preacher went on to recount that in all his dealings with God, he (
 the preacher) had never needed to repent of anything God had done for him. He
 had never been sorry of any gift God had given him. I thought it was a great
 sermon, and it was. But when I commented on it to my father, he showed me that
 that man of God had missed the meaning entirely!
God does not mean that we shall never repent of His gifts and His callings.
 Rather, He promises that He will never repent, will never change, will never turn
 from one of His gifts and one of His callings. Oh, we who have been called of God
 to he saints, we who are His born-again children, we who have the promise of
 everlasting life and a home in Heaven, may be sure that God will never repent in
 this matter. He will not change His calling nor take back His gift, for “the gifts
 and calling of God are without repentance.”
The sins of the backslider are all laid on Jesus, are already blotted out, are
 already forgiven. When Jesus died, He died for all my sins. When I trusted Him, I
 trusted Him for forgiveness for all of them – the sins of the future as well as
 those of the past. And so David cries exultantly, “Blessed are they whose
 iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered. Blessed is the man to whom
 the Lord will not impute sin” (Rom. 4:7,8). The backslider is a blessed man “unto
 whom God imputeth righteousness without works” (Rom. 4:6).
Jesus promised, “Him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out.” The backslider
 deserves to be cast out, but he does not get what he deserves, God is faithful
 even when we are unfaithful. God keeps His covenant and fulfills all His
 guarantees.
God promised to all who believe in Christ “everlasting life” and “eternal life.” “He
 that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life” (John 3:36). Notice the “hath”
 which means “has.” One who trusted Christ already has everlasting life. And
 Jesus said in John 6:47. “Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that believeth on me
 hath everlasting life.” And John 5:24 says that one who has trusted in Him has
 everlasting life and shall not ever come into condemnation but is already passed
 out of death into life. Everlasting life is for the backslider, and all of us who have
 put our trust in Christ are at times backsliders, but we still have what God
 Himself gave us out of His own abundance, everlasting life.
The Holy Spirit lives in the body of every Christian. When the Christian sins, that
 unease, that unrest, that conviction which he has, is wrought in him by the
 blessed Holy Spirit who still goes with the backslider and never leaves him. The
 backslider is one of God’s sheep, and Jesus said, “My sheep hear my voice. and I
 know them, and they follow me: And I give unto them eternal life; and they shall
 never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand” (John 10:27,28).
Bless God for that promise! The word man in this verse is in italics in your Bible
 which means it was not in the original. Actually that verse says: “Neither shall
 any pluck them out of my hand.” No man nor devil, not even self, can pluck a
 child of God, one of God’s sheep, from His hand, for He has already given him
 eternal life and such shall never perish, He says!
O backslider, remember that you have a place still in the Father’s house! Arise
 from the hog pen of sin! Come back home for the Father’s kiss of forgiveness
 and the ring of assurance of sonship and the fatted calf of rejoicing! God loves
 you still! You are His own, dear to His heart, bought with the blood of His Son.
 He will not let you go!
Years ago I read in a Chicago paper in the personals column a classified ad that
 stirred my heart, and I have never forgotten it. It ran about like this:
“Emma, please come home. Mother is sick and is calling for you. All if
 forgiven. Dad.”
I do not know what poor girl had broken the hearts of her father and mother,
 had gone down in sin with her wild companions so that she felt a stranger at
 home and thought that they no longer loved her. But whoever she was and
 wherever she was, they loved her still. The sick mother’s heart could not be
 comforted without her daughter. So the father paid for the ad in a million copies
 of a newspaper, longing for Emma to see it and to know that she was still loved
 and was forgiven, and that they wanted her to come home.
O backslider, I broadcast this plea from the Father’s house, that you are to come
 on Home! God loves you still. His heart yearns over you, and He will never let
 you go! Oh, come on back from your wandering and make God’s heart glad
 today!
V. How to Get Back Into Full Fellowship With God
If you are a backslider, then I have good news for you. The simplest and shortest
 part of this sermon is how to get back to God. Simply turn to God in your heart,
 confess your sin and backsliding, and He will receive you with open arms and
 forgive you of all your sins, failures and mistakes.
In I John 1:9 is this sweet verse for Christians, “If we confess our sins, he is
 faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all
 unrighteousness.” Isn’t that simple? We simply confess our sins honestly, then
 God is faithful and just to forgive us and cleanse us.
Notice the terms “faithful” and “just.” What a strange saying about God! Why,
 that would seem as if God owed it to us to forgive us and cleanse us when we,
 His wayward children, confess our sin! A man is faithful when he keeps his
 promises, when he does his duty. Yes, and that is what God is. God is faithful and
 just to forgive us, when we confess our sin, our backsliding, because that is
 within God’s bargain! The keeping. the forgiving, the cleansing day by day is all a
 part of God’s covenant with us when we were saved. All that was purchased for
 us on Calvary and is promised to every child of God, and so God simply keeps
 His promise faithfully. Every time we confess our sins, our backslidings, He
 quickly forgives them and cleanses us from them.
As a young preacher, I preached on the prodigal son. I pictured the long, hard
 way home. How tired the poor fellow was! How his feet hurt as he stumbled
 along the rocky road without any shoes! Would he ever get home? And would the
 father receive him or send him away with scorn? I had that poor, prodigal boy
 plodding a long, painful way back to the father’s house.
Then one day I discovered that I had made that up out of whole cloth. It was not
 even hinted in that wonderful story as Jesus told it in Luke 15:11-32. In one
 moment the boy is saying, “I will arise and go to my father.” And the very same
 verse that tells us that the boy “arose, and came to his father,” we are told that
 “when he was yet a great way off, his father saw him, and had compassion, and
 ran, and fell on his neck and kissed him.”
What a lesson for anybody who wants to come to God! Whether for a lost sinner
 who wants salvation, or a backslider who wants his blessing renewed and his joy
 restored, it is only one step to the Father’s house! Oh, believe me, if you honestly
 in your heart confess your sin to God, He will forgive you and cleanse you in a
 moment!
Be sure that you do not excuse your sin. Be sure that you do not make an alibi
 for it and cover it over. Any honest confession will mean you have a penitent
 heart that turns from your sin with shame.
And if you feel like weeping, you may weep. I suppose the prodigal boy wept
 when he came home. I know that when I was a backslider and seemed a long way
 from God, I wept as I came back to confess my failures and my sins. But
 remember this: whether there is weeping or no weeping, God wants honest
 heart-confession of your sin. And when you have confessed your backsliding,
 your coldness, your lack of joy, then you ought to believe that God has forgiven
 it as He promised, and that He has cleansed it.
I think it would help you if you would get on your knees and read the fifty-first
 Psalm and let that divinely inspired prayer be the heart-cry of your own soul. It
 is the prayer of David, a backslider, and you might let it be your own, too. But
 remember this: All you need do is to make an honest heart-confession of your sin
 to the Father and believe that He forgives you as He promised, and that He
 cleanses you from all your sins. And then you will have sweet fellowship with the
 Father.
My six daughters are all different. Each one has her own peculiar temptations.
 One is better about one thing, another is better about another thing. But one of
 these girls I have never been able to whip very much. For just as certain as she
 was caught in some sin, some disobedience, she would run and throw her arms
 around me, and weeping, say, “O Daddy, I’m sorry! I’m so sorry! Forgive me,
 Daddy!”
And so, if the prodigal son has already returned, why should the father send the
 sheriff and bloodhounds after him? And if the poor backslider is sorry for his
 sins and is willing to confess them to God, should God lay on the lash of
 chastisement?
So, backslider, come back today to God with your hungry heart and find peace
 and forgiveness.
There is a life of victory and joy for every Christian, and you may have it. Since
 you are still a sinner, you will find that you will need daily to commit your sins to
 God. First John 1:7 says, “But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have
 fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us
 from all sin.” You may walk in the light every day. When a sin appears, confess it
 quickly to God, ask Him to forgive it, and He does then and there. And so every
 day you may live in the smile of God’s presence, in a conscious communion of
 His blessed Spirit. You need not wait to fall into outbroken sin and shame but can
 have rich blessing and victory every day.
Perhaps some backslider who reads this today is ready to come back to God. It
 would comfort my heart, and I believe would make the matter more definite and
 clear and joyful in your own, if you would write it down and say so. Suppose you
 write me the following letter, or one similar to it, and send it to me, if you today,
 dear backslidden Christian, will come back to the Father’s house.
A Backslider’s Return
 Evangelist John R. Rice
 P. O. Box 1099
 Murfreesboro, Tennessee 37130
  
Dear Brother Rice:
I have read your message on BACKSLIDERS. I once trusted in Christ as my
 Saviour, and believe that He forgave me, but I now confess that I have wandered
 away. I have grieved God by my sins. But I want to come back, and I believe His
 promise, “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins. and
 to cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (I John 1:9). Therefore I here and now sign
 this statement confessing my backsliding and repenting of my sin. I trust my
 Heavenly Father to forgive me as He promised, and to cleanse me today. By His
 help I will strive to live to please Him.
                                 Date ___________________
 Signed ___________________________________________
 Address __________________________________________
 __________________________________________________
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