The Sinner's Prayer:
"Modern apostasy and false teaching
that prevents men from being saved." The earliest notion of sinners prayer is less
than 500 years old. It wasn't formalized as a theology until
around the time of Billy Graham.
"No one in the Bible
ever prayed for their initial salvation. They did
however believe, repent, confess Jesus and be immersed
in water for the forgiveness of their sins. The sinners
prayer is a innovation that thwarts God's plan of
salvation. First
they replaced believers baptism by immersion with
infant baptism by sprinkling. Second
they later replaced baptism altogether with the "sinners
prayer" so that baptism is no longer even part of
the plan of salvation. If you prayed the "sinners
prayer" for your salvation, you are still lost in
your sins, because it is not what God said to do."
The Sinner's Prayer
C.S. Lewis used the term "a great cataract of nonsense"
to describe how people use a modern idea to construe Bible
theology. One such example, perhaps the best example, is
a conversion method called the Sinner's Prayer. It is more
popularly known as the Four Spiritual Laws.
Lewis used this term to describe what happens when someone
looks backward at the Bible based only on what he or she
has known. Instead, an evangelical should first discern
conversion practices from Scriptures and then consider the
topic in light of two thousand years of other thinkers.
As it is, a novel technique popularized through recent revivals
has replaced the biblically sound practice.
Today, hundreds of millions hold to a belief system and
salvation practice that no one had ever held until relatively
recently. The notion that one can pray Jesus into his or
her heart and that baptism is merely an outward sign are
actually late developments. The prayer itself dates to the
Billy Sunday era; however, the basis for talking in prayer
for salvation goes back a few hundred years.
Consider the following appeal:
"Just accept Christ into your heart through prayer and
he'll receive you. It doesn't matter what church you belong
to or if you ever do good works. You'll be born again at
the moment you receive Christ. He's at the door knocking.
You don't even have to change bad habits, just trust Christ
as Savior. God loves you and forgives you unconditionally.
Anyone out there can be saved if they ... Accept Christ,
now! Let us pray for Christ to now come into your heart."
Sound familiar? This method of conversion has had far-reaching
effects worldwide as many have claimed this as the basis
for their salvation. Yet, what is the historical significance
of this conversion? How did the process of rebirth, which
Jesus spoke of in John 3, evolve into praying him into one's
heart? I believe it was an error germinating shortly after
the Reformation, which eventually caused great ruin and
dismay in Christendom. By supplying a brief documentation
of its short, historical development, I hope to show how
this error has served as "a great cataract of nonsense".
The Reformation
Although things weren't ideal after the Reformation, for
the first time in over a thousand years the general populace
was reading the Scriptures. By the early 1600s, one hundred
years after the Reformation was initiated, there were various
branches of European Christendom that followed national
lines. For instance, Germans followed Martin Luther. There
were also Calvinists (Presbyterian), the Church of England
(Episcopalian), various branches of Anabaptists and, of
course, the Roman church (Catholics). Most of these groups
were trying to revive the waning faith of their already
traditionalized denominations. However, a consensus had
not been reached on issues like rebirth, baptism or salvation--even
between Protestants.
The majority still held to the validity of infant baptism
even though they disagreed on its significance. Preachers
tended to minimize baptism because people hid their lack
of commitment behind sayings like "I am a baptized Lutheran
and that's that." The influence of the preachers eventually
led to the popular notion that one was forgiven at infant
baptism but not yet reborn. Most Protestants were confused
or ambivalent about the connection between rebirth and forgiveness.
The Great Awakening
The Great Awakening was the result of fantastic preaching
occurring in Europe and the eastern colonies during the
early to mid 1700s. Though ambivalent on the practice of
baptism, Great Awakening preachers created an environment
that made man aware of his need for an adult confession
experience. The experiences that people sought were varied.
Jonathan Edwards, George Whitfield and John Wesley furthered
ideas of radical repentance and revival. Although there
is much to be learned from their messages, they did not
solve the problems of the practices associated with baptism
and conversion.
Eventually, the following biblical passage written to and
inspired for lukewarm Christians became a popular tool for
the conversion of non-Christians:
"To the angel of the church in Laodicea write: These are
the words of the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the
ruler of God's creation. ....Those whom I love I rebuke
and discipline. So be earnest, and repent. Here I am! I
stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and
opens the door, I will come in and eat with him, and he
with me." (Revelation 3:14-20)
This passage was written explicitly for lukewarm Christians.
Now consider how a lecturer named John Webb misused this
passage in the mid 1700s as a basis of evangelizing non-Christians:
"Here is a promise of Union to Christ; in these words,
I will come in to him. i.e. If any Sinner will but hear
my Voice and open the Door, and receive me by Faith, I will
come into his Soul, and unite him to me, and make him a
living member of that my mystical body of which I am the
Head." (Christ's Suit to the Sinner, 14)
Preachers heavily relied on Revelation 3:20. By using the
first-person tense while looking into the sinner's eyes,
preachers began to speak for Jesus as they exhorted, "If
you would just let me come in and dine with you, I would
accept you." Even heathens who had never been baptized responded
with the same or even greater sorrow than churchgoers. As
a result, more and more preachers of Christendom concluded
that baptism was merely an external matter--only an outward
sign of an inward grace. In fact, Huldreich Zwingli put
this idea forth for the very first time. Nowhere in church
history was such a belief recorded. It only appears in Scripture
when one begins with a great cataract of nonsense. In other
words, it only appears in the New Testament through the
imagination of readers influenced by this phenomenon.
Mourner's Seat
A method originated during the 1730s or '40s, which was
practically forgotten for about a hundred years. It is documented
that in 1741 a minister named Eleazar Wheelock had utilized
a technique called the Mourner's Seat. As far as one can
tell, he would target sinners by having them sit in the
front bench (pew). During the course of his sermon "salvation
was looming over their heads." Afterwards, the sinners were
typically quite open to counsel and exhortation. In fact,
as it turns out they were susceptible to whatever prescription
the preaching doctor gave to them. According to eyewitnesses,
false conversions were multiplied. Charles Wesley had some
experience with this practice, but it took nearly a hundred
years for this tactic to take hold.
Cane Ridge
In 1801 there was a sensational revival in Cane Ridge, Kentucky
that lasted for weeks. Allegedly, people barked, rolled
over in the aisles and became delirious because there were
long periods without food in the intense heat. It resulted
in the extreme use and abuse of emotions as thousands left
Kentucky with wild notions about rebirth. Today it is generally
viewed as a mockery to Christianity.
The excesses in Cane Ridge produced expectations
for preachers and those seeking religious experience.
A Second Great Awakening, inferior to the first, was
beginning in America. Preachers were enamored with
the idea that they could cause (manipulate) people
into conversion. One who witnessed such nineteenth
century hysteria was J. V. Coombs who complained
of the technique:
"The appeals, songs, prayers and the suggestion from the
preacher drive many into the trance state. I can remember
in my boyhood days seeing ten or twenty people laying unconscious
upon the floor in the old country church. People called
that conversion. Science knows it is mesmeric influence,
self-hypnotism ä It is sad that Christianity is compelled
to bear the folly of such movements." (J.V. Coombs, Religious
Delusions, 92ff).
The Cane Ridge Meeting became the paradigm for revivalists
for decades. A lawyer named Charles Finney came along a
generation later to systemize the Cane Ridge experience
through the use of Wheelock's Mourner's Seat and Scripture.
Charles Finney
It wasn't until about 1835 that Charles Grandison
Finney (1792-1875) emerged to champion the system
utilized by Eleazar Wheelock. Shortly after his own
conversion he left his law practice and would become
a minister, a lecturer, a professor, and a traveling
revivalist. He took the Mourner's Seat practice, which
he called the Anxious Seat, and developed a theological
system around it. Finney was straightforward about
his purpose for this technique and wrote the following
comment near the end of his life:
"The church has always felt it necessary to have something
of this kind to answer this very purpose. In the days of
the apostles, baptism answered this purpose. The gospel
was preached to the people, and then all those who were
willing to be on the side of Christ, were called out to
be baptized. It held the place that the anxious seat does
now as a public manifestation of their determination to
be Christians"
Finney made many enemies because of this innovation. The
Anxious Seat practice was considered to be a psychological
technique that manipulated people to make a premature profession
of faith. It was considered to be an emotional conversion
influenced by some of the preachers' animal magnetism. Certainly
it was a precursor to the techniques used by many twentieth
century televangelists.
In opposition to Finney's movement, John Nevin,
a Protestant minister, wrote a book called The Anxious
Bench. He intended to protect the denominations from
this novel deviation. He called Finney's New Measures
"heresy", a "Babel of extravagance", "fanaticism",
and "quackery". He also said, "With a whirlwind in
full view, we may be exhorted reasonably to consider
and stand back from its destructive path." It turns
out that Nevin was somewhat prophetic. The system
that Finney admitted had replaced biblical baptism,
is the vertebrae for the popular plan of salvation
that was made normative in the twentieth century by
the three Bills --- Billy Sunday, Billy Graham
and Bill Bright.
Dwight Moody and
R. A. Torrey
However, it wasn't until the end of Finney's life
that it became evident to everyone and himself that
the Anxious Bench approach led to a high fallout rate.
By the 1860s Dwight Moody (1837-1899) was the new
apostle in American evangelicalism. He took Finney's
system and modified it. Instead of calling for a public
decision, which tended to be a response under pressure,
he asked people to join him and his trained counselors
in a room called the Inquiry Room. Though Moody's
approach avoided some of the errors encountered in
Finneyism, it was still a derivative or stepchild
of the Anxious Bench system.
In the Inquiry Room the counselors asked the possible convert
some questions, taught him from Scripture and then prayed
with him. The idea that prayer was at the end of the process
had been loosely associated with conversion in the 1700s.
By the late 1800s it was standard technique for 'receiving
Christ' as Moody's influence spread across both the United
States and the United Kingdom. This was where a systematic
Sinner's Prayer began, but was not called as such until
the time of Billy Sunday.
R. A. Torrey succeeded Moody's Chicago-based ministry
after his death in 1899. He modified Moody's approach
to include "on the spot" street conversions. Torrey
popularized the idea of instant salvation with no
strings attached, even though he never intended as
much. Nonetheless, "Receive Christ, now, right here"
became part of the norm. From that time on it became
more common to think of salvation outside of church
or a life of Lordship.
Billy Sunday
and the Pacific Garden Mission
Meanwhile in Chicago, Billy Sunday, a well-known baseball
player from Iowa, had been converted in the Pacific Garden
Mission. The Mission was Chicago's most successful implementation
of Moody's scheme. Eventually, Sunday left baseball to preach.
He had great public charm and was one of the first to mix
ideas of entertainment with ministry. By the early 1900s
he had become a great well-known crusade leader. In his
crusades he popularized the Finney-Moody method and included
a bit of a circus touch. After fire and brimstone sermons,
heavy moralistic messages with political overtones, and
humorous if not outlandish behavior, salvation was offered.
Often it was associated with a prayer, and at other times
a person was told they were saved because they simply walked
down his tabernacle's "sawdust trail" to the front where
he was standing. In time people were told they were saved
because they publicly shook Sunday's hand, acknowledging
that they would follow Christ.
Billy Sunday died in 1935 leaving behind hundreds of his
imitators. More than anything else, Billy Sunday helped
crusades become acceptable to all denominations, which eventually
led to a change in their theology. Large religious bodies
sold out on their reservations toward these new conversion
practices to reap the benefits of potential converts from
the crusades because of the allure of success.
Both Dwight Moody and Billy Sunday admitted they were somewhat
ignorant of church history by the time they had already
latched on to their perspectives. This is highly significant
because the Anxious Seat phenomenon and offshoot practices
were not rooted in Scripture nor in the early church.
Billy Graham, Bill Bright
Billy Graham and his crusades were the next step in the
evolution of things. Billy Graham was converted in 1936
at a Sunday-styled crusade. By the late 1940s it was evident
to many that Graham would be the champion of evangelicalism.
His crusades summed up everything that had been done from
the times of Charles Finney through Billy Sunday except
that he added respectability that some of the others lacked.
In the 1950s Graham's crusade counselors were using a prayer
that had been sporadically used for some time. It began
with a prayer from his Four Steps to Peace with God. The
original four-step formula came during Billy Sunday's era
called in a tract called Four Things God Wants you to Know.
The altar call system of Graham had been refined by a precise
protocol of music, trained counselors and a speaking technique
all geared to help people 'accept Christ as Savior.'
In the late 1950s Bill Bright came up with the exact form
of the currently popular Four Spiritual Laws so that the
average believer could take the crusade experience into
the living room of their neighbor. Of course, this method
ended with the Sinner's Prayer. Those who responded to crusades
and sermons could have the crusade experience at home when
they prayed,
"Lord Jesus, I need You. Thank You for dying on the cross
for my sins. I open the door of my life and receive You
as my Savior and Lord. Thank You for forgiving my sins and
giving me eternal life. Take control of the throne of my
life. Make me the kind of person You want me to be."
Later, in 1977 Billy Graham published a now famous work
entitled, How to Be Born Again. For all the Scripture he
used, he never once uses the hallmark rebirth event in the
second chapter of the book of Acts. The cataract (blind
spot) kept him away from the most powerful conversion event
in all Scripture. It is my guess that it's emphasis on baptism
and repentance for the forgiveness of sins was incompatible
with his approach.
The Living Bible and Beyond
By the late 1960s it seemed that nearly every evangelical
was printing some form of the Four Spiritual Laws in the
last chapter of their books. Even a Bible was printed with
this theology inserted into God's Word. Thus, in the 1960s,
the Living Bible's translation became the translation of
choice for the crusades as follows:
"Even in his own land and among his own people, the Jews,
he was not accepted. Only a few welcome and received him.
But to all who received him, he gave the right to become
children of God. All they needed to do was to trust him
to save them. All those who believe this are reborn!
--not a physical rebirth resulting from human passion or
plan--but from the will of God."(John 1:11-13, Living Bible,
bolds mine)
The bolded words have no support at all in the original
Greek. They are a blatant insertion placed by presuppositions
of the translator, Kenneth Taylor. I'm not sure that even
the Jehovah's Witnesses have authored such a barefaced insertion
in their corrupt Scriptures. In defense of Taylor's original
motives, the Living Bible was created primarily with children
in mind. However, the publishers should have corrected the
misleading verse in the 1960s. They somewhat cleared it
up in the newer LB in the 1990s, only after the damage has
been done. For decades mainstream evangelicals were using
the LB and circular reasoning to justify such a strong 'trusting
moment' as salvation, never knowing their Bible was corrupted.
A whole international enterprise of publishers, universities
and evangelistic associations were captivated by this method.
The phrases, "Receive Christ," and "Trust Jesus as your
personal savior," filled airwaves, sermons, and books. James
Kennedy's Evangelism Explosion counselor-training program
helped make this concept of conversion an international
success. Missionaries everywhere were trained with Sinner's
Prayer theology. Evangelicalism had the numbers, the money,
the television personas of Graham and Kennedy and any attempt
to purport a different plan of salvation would be decried
as cultic and "heresy."
Most evangelicals are ignorant of where their practice
came from or how Christians from other periods viewed biblical
conversion. C.S. Lewis regarded it as chronological snobbery
when we don't review our beliefs against the conclusions
of others:
"Most of all, perhaps, we need intimate knowledge of the
past. Not that the past has any magic about it, but because
we cannot study the future, and yet need something to set
against the present, to remind us that the basic assumptions
have been quite different in different periods and that
much which seems certain to the uneducated is merely temporary
fashion. A man who has lived in many places is not likely
to be deceived by the local errors of his native village;
the scholar has lived in many times and is therefore in
some degree immune from the great cataract of nonsense that
pours from the press and the microphone of his own age."
(Learning in Wartime, 1939)
While most do this unknowingly, evangelicals are skewing
church auditoriums all over the world from a clear picture
of conversion with a nonsensical practice.
Written and copyright by Steven Francis Staten. This article
is an overview of a book being written on the origins of
the Sinner's Prayer.