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Does Ezekiel 33 Teach You Can Lose Salvation?
Q: How would you defend Ezekiel 33:12 to a nonbeliever that says our actions get us into or out of heaven and also that we have no security in our salvation, as if when a righteous person does wrong they are damned?
Summary
In this episode, Dr. E tackles a challenging passage from Ezekiel 33 and a thoughtful question about salvation, righteousness, and eternal security. At first glance, the passage seems to suggest that a righteous person can lose everything by sinning—or that a wicked person can escape judgment by doing good. But Dr. Easley clarifies the deeper point: no amount of good behavior exempts anyone from sin, and no amount of bad behavior removes the need for repentance.
The heart of the issue isn’t about earning or losing salvation through actions. Instead, it reveals a universal truth—every person stands accountable for sin, and no one becomes right before God through their own righteousness. Dr. Easley draws from both the Old and New Testaments to show that God has always grounded salvation in His mercy, not human effort.
This conversation also addresses a common misunderstanding: the idea that we must “balance the scales” of good and bad deeds. Scripture rejects that mindset entirely. Our security comes from Christ alone. The ground is level at the cross—every person needs a Savior, and eternal life comes through Him, not through works.
Takeaways:
- No amount of righteousness can cancel out the reality of sin.
- Good works never save—they simply reflect a transformed life.
- Scripture consistently teaches that all people stand guilty apart from Christ.
- Salvation is based entirely on God’s mercy, not human effort.
- Eternal security rests in Christ’s work, not our performance.
- The “scales” mindset of balancing good and bad deeds is not biblical.
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If you’ve got a question for Dr. Easley, call or text us your question at 615-281-9694 or email at question@michaelincontext.com.