Share This Episode
Pathway to Victory Dr. Robert Jeffress Logo

Why Every Other Religion is Wrong

Pathway to Victory / Dr. Robert Jeffress
The Truth Network Radio
April 23, 2025 3:00 am

Why Every Other Religion is Wrong

Pathway to Victory / Dr. Robert Jeffress

On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 463 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


April 23, 2025 3:00 am

No one likes to admit to being wrong. And while sometimes, our mistakes are relatively harmless, other times, the stakes are much, much higher! Well, there’s nothing more important than our eternal destiny. And Dr. Robert Jeffress shows us why Christianity is the only right answer.

 

To support Pathway to Victory, go to ptv.org/donate.

COVERED TOPICS / TAGS (Click to Search)
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
Family Policy Matters
NC Family Policy
Sekulow Radio Show
Jay Sekulow & Jordan Sekulow
Truth Talk
Stu Epperson
Delight in Grace
Grace Bible Church / Rich Powell

Hey, podcast listeners! Thanks for streaming today's podcast, From Pathway to Victory. Pathway to Victory is a nonprofit ministry featuring the Bible teaching of Dr. Robert Jeffress. Our mission is to pierce the darkness with the light of God's word through the most effective media available, like this podcast. To support Pathway to Victory, go to ptv.org slash donate or follow the link in our show notes. Now, here's today's podcast, From Pathway to Victory.

God's Word with you every day on this Bible teaching program. On today's edition of Pathway to Victory. Welcome to Pathway to Victory with author and pastor, Dr. Robert Jeffress.

You know, nobody likes to admit being wrong. And while sometimes our mistakes are relatively harmless, other times the stakes are much, much higher. Well, there's nothing more important than our eternal destiny. And today on Pathway to Victory, Dr. Robert Jeffress shows us why Christianity is the only right answer. Now, here's our Bible teacher to introduce today's message.

Dr. Jeffress. Thanks, David, and welcome again to Pathway to Victory. I can't speak for you, but in my experience, some of my very best friends are Jewish. We have a beautiful bond that ties us together. First, many of our Jewish friends deeply respect our Christian faith. And second, many of them are truly grateful that I love the land of Israel. And when I travel to their country, I never feel more welcome.

It's like coming home to family. Well, along those lines, we've decided to create a coffee table book that would inspire your love for Israel. It's a photo album with stunning photographs from key sites in the Holy Land through pictures and written paragraphs.

The Power of the Cross tells the story of Jesus' life from his grand entrance into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday to his glorious resurrection Easter morning. And this book is yours when you give a generous gift to support the growing ministry of Pathway to Victory. As you prepare to give your gift today, I'm going to challenge you to become one of our valued missionaries at Pathway to Victory as well.

We call them Pathway Partners. By giving a monthly gift, you're casting the seed of the gospel far and wide, just like a missionary. And right now, we're asking God to help us add at least 50 new Pathway Partners. When you feel his nudge, please respond to his call by going to ptv.org. I'll be sure to send you my book, a keepsake called The Power of the Cross. More details later on. But right now, let's get to the important topic at hand.

I've titled today's message, Why Every Other Religion is Wrong. Several years ago, I was in Seattle, Washington, and finishing up a book tour there. I'd been in four cities in three days and was very anxious to get back home. And having finished the interviews early, I called the airline to see if it's just possible that I could get out on an earlier flight. And they said, well, there's one leaving in the morning at seven o'clock. If you'll get here, it's wide open.

You'll have no problem. So I got up at five that morning, raced to the airport, went to the ticket counter, and they said, well, we're sorry, Dr. Jeffress, it was available, but another flight canceled and they have all of the seats and therefore you don't have a place. But if you'll wait around till nine o'clock, there's another possibility. So I went down to another gate at nine o'clock and same story. It was full, they said, but there's great hope for the eleven o'clock flight. And like a linen, I went down to the gate for the eleven o'clock flight and it was sold out. Finally, after seven hours of waiting in the Seattle airport, I finally found an empty seat on a plane.

It was the one I was originally booked on at five o'clock that afternoon. And so I walked on, I plopped down in my seat, exhausted of the day of waiting. And as soon as I got in my seat and pulled out the in-flight magazine, the guy next to me decided he wanted to talk. And so he asked me the question, he said, what do you do for a living? Now, how I answer that question depends on how much I want to talk. If I've got a briefcase filled with work and don't want to engage in conversation, I answer, I'm a preacher. And if I really don't want to talk, I say, I'm a Southern Baptist preacher. Trust me, that is a conversation stopper every time.

Nobody wants to talk. But as I thought about the day's activity and the fact that I tried to get on another plane but couldn't, I thought maybe, just maybe, God has me on this flight, seated next to this person for a reason. And so when he asked the question, what do you do for a living, I said, well, I'm a writer.

And that certainly was partially true. And he said, well, that's interesting. What kind of books do you write? I said, well, I write Christian books. He said, well, that's very interesting because I used to be a Christian. For the next four hours as we winged our way from Seattle to Dallas, my new friend shared with me the reasons that he abandoned Christianity.

Part of his reasons included unanswered prayer in his own life, problems he had believing in the truthfulness of the Scripture, a broken marriage. But finally we got to the heart of his objection to Christianity. He said, Pastor, I just cannot believe that Jesus Christ is the only way to God. Because if that claim is true, then it means the majority of people in the world are going to hell and I cannot believe in a God who's that intolerant.

In just a couple of sentences, my seatmate voiced the mother of all politically incorrect statements that Christians hold in today's world. It's the belief that Jesus himself is the only way to be saved and therefore every other religion is wrong. What is it about this claim that Christ is the only way to heaven that causes people to reject Christianity?

Why do people object to this idea of exclusivity? Objection number one, write it down on your outline, people say you are being intolerant. If you claim that Jesus is the only way to be saved, you are being intolerant. Now today the term tolerance has undergone a radical transformation. A number of years ago my grandmother who is now in heaven wrote a poem that was widely published entitled A Plea for Tolerance. Now according to my grandmother and people who lived in her era, tolerance simply meant a respect for other people's right to believe what they want to believe. And certainly none of us here today would argue with that idea of tolerance. We ought to respect people's right to believe whatever they want to believe.

People have the right to be wrong, but we ought to give them that right. By the way, our nation was founded on that principle of tolerance because it reflects the nature of God. God gives us the freedom to believe whatever we want to believe.

We have the freedom to believe a lie and to be wrong if we want to, that's the freedom God affords us. But today the word tolerance, as I said, has undergone a metamorphosis. Today we have changed tolerance to mean a respect for everybody's right to believe what he wants to believe to this idea that all beliefs are equally valid.

Thomas Helmbach, the Executive Vice President of the National Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity writes, The definition of new tolerance is that every individual's beliefs, values, lifestyle, perception of truth claims are equal. There is no hierarchy of truth. Your beliefs and my beliefs are equal and all truth is relative.

Now I want you to stay with me here. All major religions answer the question, what must I do to be right with God? But what our culture has done is we have taken the answer to that question and moved it from the realm of objective truth that has a correct answer. We have moved that to the realm of subjective truth to which everybody's opinion is equally valid. And whenever we as Christians attempt to shift it back to the realm of objective truth, there is one answer we are called intolerant. And that leads to the second objection that people have to this idea of the exclusivity of Christ. And that is the objection that exclusivity promotes hatred. That is if you claim that there is only one way to God, not only are you being intolerant, but you're actually being hateful and persecuting other people.

By the way, that assumption is held widely in the academic world today. That anybody who claims to have the truth is a hateful person and will persecute others. This demonization of those who claim to have the truth has now spilled over into evangelical Christianity. I read an amazing statistic. 88% of all evangelicals believe this book, the Bible, is the word of God.

Did you know that? 88% of evangelicals believe this book is the depository of God's truth. And yet, as we saw last week, 68% of Christians say there's no such thing as absolute truth. That is there are no truths that apply to everyone regardless of their religion or culture. Now how do you reconcile those two beliefs? Christians believe this book is the truth, but they don't believe this is a truth that necessarily applies to everyone. You see, Christians have bought hook, line, and sinker this assumption that exclusivity leads to persecution and hatred.

But is that contention logical? I want you to imagine for just a moment that you have a small child at home. The child has an uncontrollable cough, running a high fever. You take your child to the doctor. The doctor looks at the child and says, Well, your child has pneumonia. And you say, Oh, no, no, no, no, my child doesn't have pneumonia. And the doctor says, Yes, your child has pneumonia.

And you say, Well, what makes you think your opinion is better than my opinion? And the doctor says, Well, I've seen hundreds of cases of pneumonia. Your child has all of the symptoms and the only way your child is going to get well is by taking a round of antibiotics. Now, is that doctor being hateful when he says that your child is sick? Is he being hateful when he says there is only one way for your child to get well?

Of course not. In fact, he's showing love toward you and your child by correctly diagnosing the problem and prescribing the only way that that problem can be remedied. Ladies and gentlemen, when we say to people, Christ is the only way to be saved, don't let people push you into believing that's being hateful. If indeed all people are lost without Christ and in danger of spending eternity in hell without Christ, the most loving thing we can do is to share the gospel with them. Obviously, this idea that exclusivity promotes hatred is seriously flawed.

Objection number three, people have exclusivity. That is, how could so many people be wrong? That is, if Jesus is the only way to be saved, what about the billions of people who have never trusted in Christ?

How could so many people be wrong? I want you to turn in your Bible to Matthew chapter 7. Let's see how Jesus weighed in on this question. Matthew chapter 7 verses 13 and 14. As we're going to see in this passage, Jesus in fact predicted that the majority of people in the world are going to be wrong, not right about the way of salvation. Matthew 7 verses 13 and 14. Jesus said, Enter by the narrow gate, for the gate is wide and the way is broad that leads to destruction, and many are those who enter by it. But the gate is small and the way is narrow that leads to life, and few are those who find it.

Do you hear what the Lord is saying? The highway that leads to hell is a wide road, and most people in the world are on that road. The road that leads to heaven is a very narrow road, and few are those who ever even find that road. Jesus predicted that the majority of people will spend eternity in hell, not in heaven. But as jarring as such a thought is, even more jolting is the idea that many of those who are in hell will be religious people. Notice what he says again in verse 21. He says, Not everyone who says to me, Lord, Lord, will enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. For many will say to me on that day, the judgment day, Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and in your name cast out demons, and in your name perform many miracles? Then I will declare to them, I never knew you.

Depart from me you who practice lawlessness. Many people who will be consigned to an eternity in hell will be religious people who miss the way of salvation. Now hear me on this. When people raise this point, when they say, Don't you realize that if what you're saying is true, the majority of people in the world, billions and billions, are going to be in hell forever? They expect us to kind of hang our head down and say, Oh, gee, I never thought of that before. You must be right. Obviously, such a thought is too terrible to ever comprehend you win the argument. But what I want to suggest to you this morning is the fact that the majority of people are going to miss the way to heaven doesn't negate the truth of exclusivity. It proves it because Jesus predicted it.

And hear me on this. If Jesus Christ was right in His prediction of the number of people who will be in hell, isn't it logical that Jesus Christ is also right in His prescription of how to escape hell through faith in Him? Oh, this fact that the majority of people will miss heaven undergirds, it doesn't negate the truth of exclusivity. A fourth objection that many people make to this idea of Jesus being the only way to be saved is, quote, all religions teach basically the same thing. All religions teach basically the same thing. So why do you have to say your religion is the only right religion? By the way, this is a good point to perhaps answer the question, where did all these world religions come from?

Have you ever wondered that? How did all of these religions come into being? The liberal will say to you, well, it's sincere people in their own culture formulating their own way to God, but all paths are leading to the same God. It's the result of sincere people seeking after God.

The Word of God says absolutely not. The fact that there are so many religions in the world is not evidence of the sincerity of man, but of the sinfulness of man. Turn over to Romans chapter one for just a moment where Paul talks about this, how there are so many false religions in the world. In Romans one, verses 22 and 23, the apostle says, professing to be wise, they became fools, and they exchanged the glory of the incorruptible God for the image in the form of a corruptible man and of birds and four-footed animals and crawling creatures.

In other words, these people who have constructed these miniature idols and representation of animals and so forth, they don't really believe that's God. Instead, what they did is they took the truth of the true God and they rejected that truth and they replaced it with a God of their own liking. And the same thing is true of every man-made religion today. Religions in the world today, first of all, are the result of man-made invention. People have rejected the truth of God that Paul says is even available through nature. They have rejected that truth and replaced it with a truth of their own creation.

As somebody once said, in the beginning, God created man in His own image, and ever since that time, man has been trying to return the favor. And the fact that there are so many religions in the world today are testimony to the sinfulness of man and his rejection of the truth. But there's a second explanation for the world religions today, not only man's invention, but Satan's deception. Satan's deception.

We don't have time to look at the passage. Jot down Psalm 106, verses 36 and 37. The psalmist says that the gods that Israel was sacrificing to, the false gods, were not in fact gods. Behind every one of those false gods was a demon. A demon used to deceive Israel from following after the true God. Now I know this is not going to be popular to say, but it's God's truth. Behind every major religion in the world, Mormonism, Hinduism, Islam, behind every one of those religions is a demon. A demon that Satan has sent in order to deceive people and lead them from the truth. And just because that religion has a respectable name attached to it, even though it has some nice thoughts associated with it, remember the Bible says Satan appears as an angel of light to deceive some.

And the way you deceive people is mixing a lot of error with just a little bit of truth. And that's how Satan works in world religions today. No, the number of religions in the world is not a testimony of man's sincere looking for God, it is a testimony of his sinfulness. But pastor, even if there are all of these religions, don't they all teach the same thing basically? Now listen to me, only Christianity says that the way to God is not through what we do for God, but through what God has done for us. It's not our works for God, it's God's work for us and sending Christ to die for us. Ladies and gentlemen, all the religions of the world are not the same. And that leads to perhaps the most prevalent objection to exclusivity, and I bet you've heard it before. It is unfair for God to send people to hell just because they haven't believed in Jesus.

Haven't you heard that before? It's unfair for God to send people to hell just because they haven't believed in Jesus. After all, Acts 17, 26 tells us God is the one who determines where we live our lives.

He sets the boundaries whether we're born in America or India or Africa. Acts 17, 26 says God determined that. Now if God has placed somebody in an area where the gospel has never been preached, how in the world could God be justified in sentencing someone to hell just because they've never believed in Jesus? As Clark Pennock said in his objection to this idea of exclusivity, Clark Pennock added, he said, to think here are people in a third world country who have spent all their life suffering, and now we're saying they're gonna spend all eternity suffering just because they haven't had an opportunity to believe. But adding insult to injury, Christians who believe the Bible are not only saying that those who have never trusted in Christ are gonna spend eternity separated from God, we're also saying that a person who lives a wicked, godless, immoral life all of his life and at the very last moment trust in Christ as Savior is gonna spend eternity in heaven?

How could that be? Phil Donahue again succinctly expresses how ludicrous it seems with this following question to a Jewish Christian. Donahue, so you're telling me if a Nazi killed a Jew, a good Jew, a practicing Jew, the Jew goes to hell, but the Nazi still has a chance to get to heaven. That would be the consequence of your position. Admittedly, such a position does seem preposterous. How can we say that with a straight face, that somebody who has led a godless life and at the last minute trust in Christ is going to heaven while a sincere practicing follower of another religion who loves his family, who keeps the commands as best he can, he's gonna spend eternity in hell.

How can we say that? Well, next time we're gonna look at four answers, four things you can say to those who deny that there's only one way. Well, I hope your curiosity has been piqued in such a way that you'll join us again next time. I want you to hear my upcoming message on what to say to those who deny there's only one way. In addition to my message, you're invited to request an exclusive resource I've written and prepared for you. I'm referring to the colorful coffee table book called The Power of the Cross.

It's a travel guide of sorts that walks you through seven days of Jesus' life, from his triumphal entry to his glorious resurrection. So before the day's out, please call or go online to ptb.org and request my book, The Power of the Cross. It's yours when you include a generous gift to support the ministry of Pathway to Victory. Now, this week we're making a concerted effort to add 50 more friends to our family of monthly supporters. We call them Pathway Partners. A Pathway Partner is someone who agrees to give a generous gift each month of his or her own choosing. In doing so, you become one of our missionaries.

Who sends the light and message of Christ into communities around the world. The need has never been greater. Would you be among the 50 new Pathway Partners to join with us this week? Without belaboring the point, I can tell you that sometimes the financial burdens we carry at Pathway to Victory are heavy. But we are lifted up and encouraged by friends like you.

Friends who give generously. We couldn't do this ministry without you. David. Thanks, Dr. Jeffress. To sign up to become a Pathway Partner, simply follow the very easy steps online at ptb.org. And when you give your first gift as a Pathway Partner or when you give a one-time generous gift, we'll say thanks by sending you The Power of the Cross, a 96-page coffee table-style book filled with stunning pictures, beautiful illustrations, and Bible-based teaching from Dr. Robert Jeffress. Request The Power of the Cross when you call 866-999-2965 or go online to ptb.org. And as you give $75 or more, you'll also receive an eight-message teaching series titled Live from Israel. Dr. Jeffress preached these messages on location in Israel in the very places where biblical history unfolded.

And they come on both DVD video and MP3 format audio discs. Again, call 866-999-2965 or visit our website at ptb.org. If you'd prefer to send a letter by mail, write to P.O. Box 223609, Dallas, Texas, 75222. That's P.O.

Box 223609, Dallas, Texas, 75222. I'm David J. Mullins. As Christ claimed to be the way, the truth, and the life, no one comes to the Father except through him. But some people are now complaining that Jesus made the path to heaven too narrow. Find out what to say to those who deny there is one way. Join us Thursday for Pathway to Victory. Pathway to Victory with Dr. Robert Jeffress comes from the pulpit of the First Baptist Church of Dallas, Texas. You made it to the end of today's podcast from Pathway to Victory, and we're so glad you're here. Pathway to Victory relies on the generosity of loyal listeners like you to make this podcast possible. One of the most impactful ways you can give is by becoming a Pathway Partner. Your monthly gift will empower Pathway to Victory to share the gospel of Jesus Christ and help others become rooted more firmly in his word. To become a Pathway Partner, go to ptv.org slash donate or follow the link in our show notes. We hope you've been blessed by today's podcast, From Pathway to Victory.
Whisper: medium.en / 2025-04-23 05:19:36 / 2025-04-23 05:29:36 / 10

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime