Share This Episode
Truth for Life Alistair Begg Logo

“Never See Death” (Part 2 of 3)

Truth for Life / Alistair Begg
The Truth Network Radio
May 25, 2026 3:00 am

“Never See Death” (Part 2 of 3)

Truth for Life / Alistair Begg

00:00 / 00:00
On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 1810 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

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


May 25, 2026 3:00 am

The Bible teaches that death is not terminal, but rather a transition to eternity. Jesus' death and resurrection offer salvation from sin and eternal life, but unbelief in Christ leads to death in one's sins. The consequences of unbelief are eternal, and the Bible warns of the importance of faith in Christ for eternal life.

COVERED TOPICS / TAGS (Click to Search)
death Jesus salvation sin eternal life resurrection faith
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:
Running to Win Podcast Logo
Running to Win
Erwin Lutzer
Grace To You Podcast Logo
Grace To You
John MacArthur
Running to Win Podcast Logo
Running to Win
Erwin Lutzer
Running to Win Podcast Logo
Running to Win
Erwin Lutzer

Do you find death an uncomfortable topic? I think most of us do. Even if we have confidence about our destination after we die, there aren't a lot of details about the process.

So when Jesus says there is a way to never see death, Well, he has my attention. What did he mean? Alastair Begg walks us through Jesus' promise today on Truth for Life. Jesus says, John chapter 8 and verse 51. Truly, truly I say to you, If anyone keeps my word, He will never see death.

Father, the reason we are here tonight is because. of your love towards us. that has created in our hearts a love for you and a love for your word. And it is because we want to keep your word that we want to learn what your word says and what it means. why it matters how it applies.

how it impacts the living of our lives day by day. And so we ask again for your help that beyond the voice of a mere man, we might Have a great sense of the abiding presence of God the Holy Spirit bringing home to our lives. all these various things that You know, we need to hear. Not the same thing for everyone necessarily, but Lord. uh close the gaps in some of our thinking.

So that as we end in song it might be with a deep sense of conviction and a gladness of heart. And we ask all of this in Jesus' name. Amen. We are studying the truly truly in John's Gospel. And we set out to Be tackled by the 51st verse of John chapter 8, which I've just read.

Acknowledging the fact that there is another truly, truly, to which we're coming at the end of this. And I did not set out in my study, not even when I was finally writing things up. to do what we're doing today. And um it's really a measure of incompetence, I suppose. I mean, if you've got something, you should be able to get through it, and you've you've got a plan, you should execute it.

But uh I I didn't do it, but uh so so so here we are. And we set out on a long preamble, I admit. Um And going through the beginning of John's Gospel, trying to get the big picture and get the drama before we arrived at this, and before we've even arrived at it, then we had a discourse on death itself. acknowledging the fact that death is unavoidable and uh That it is not natural, as contemporary society wants to suggest to us, and so on. That was our first point.

Our second point to which we come now was then to consider the difference that Jesus makes in relationship to. to all of life and particularly to death itself. And so we can essentially go back to Romans chapter 6 and verse 23, which if you, like me, were taught the Roman road through the Bible to try and teach people the way of salvation, you know that you stopped at chapter 3. And uh verse uh twenty-three there, uh that all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God. And then you moved on from there to chapter six and to verse twenty-three.

to make sure that people understood that the wages of sin is death. But the gift of God is eternal life. Through Jesus Christ our Lord.

So sin pays wages, the wages are remitted to us in death. A death which is a physical death that comes to us all. By our native sphere, it is a spiritual death. And if we were to die as those who are spiritually dead, then we would face death in terms of eternity, which the Bible refers to as hell.

So it is a very, very, very important subject and we need to come to terms with it. How is it? How is it that a man or woman can be justified from sin? How is it that the wages of sin are going to be paid?

Well, they're going to be paid one way or another. Because there is no way to escape the penalty of sin. Which is death. That's why we say that sin is not natural, sin is actually penal. That sin has crept in, as it were, into humanity.

by dint of the evil one. And as a result of that, we are confronted by it and in an unavoidable way. But at the same time, we do know that there is one who has defeated death. Because he has come in order that he might bear sin's penalty.

Now, the picture is used by Paul often in his letters, and we can consider it very simply. We used to have a prison ministry in Scotland. We went up regularly on a Friday evening to a jail that was about 15 miles away from our church. And so we often had prisoners, once they were discharged, coming to worship with us. And what a difference it was to see them on the outside from where they'd been on the inside.

Because consider a person commits a crime and is sentenced to prison. How then can they be justified? Only by serving The sentence only by paying. Yeah. Once they have served their time, once they have paid the penalty, they are free to go.

And the demands of the law have been satisfied And they no longer need to be Terrified or tyrannized in any way as a result of what was their previous experience. because the term has been satisfied. And the principle holds true actually in terms of death itself. And that's how it is applied in the writings of Paul. Jesus was sinless.

Jesus had no sin. Therefore, Jesus did not need to die. And so anybody that's reading the Gospel accounts, and someone says to their friend, why don't you read the Gospel of John? I've got a copy for you here. Why don't you take it?

And we could have some conversation about it. It's a wonderful thing to do. And the person will come back if they're thinking at all and they say, but I just can't understand this, why it is that Jesus ends up on a cross. Why did Jesus have to die? If he was the sinless one, why does he die?

And of course It is because he came deliberately. And he came freely. in order to die in the place of the sinner. I was thinking just an hour or so before we came here. I thought I remembered and I thought I could find it, but I couldn't find it, but I still think I remember it.

What?

Well, Derek Prime Um I remember him using an illustration that came out of a real court case uh in the Edinburgh uh Sheriff Court. And it went something along these lines: that the person was brought before the sheriff. The judge. And the crime was admitted to. And the sentence of a of a substantial fine was passed.

The person had no resources in themselves. And so they were escorted then down into the cells. When the morning's business was completed, The sheriff went down into the cells. and paid The penalty the fine that was due to that individual. thereby allowing them to go free.

It was an act of gratuitous generosity. And Derek was helping me and helping us as a congregation to understand that that is exactly what Jesus has done. Because we or a debt that we cannot pay, He comes. to pay a debt. That he doesn't all.

That's why we sang Jesus paid it all. And that's why the hymn writer puts it so perfectly, gives us a picture of it. What is happening up on the cross? And he writes, bearing shame. And scoffing rude, In my place, Condemned he stood.

and sealed my pardon With his blood, Hallelujah. What a Saviour. You see, that is why Jesus is the only one qualified to do this. When people stumble over the exclusive claims of Jesus, We have to be prepared to stand firm on these things. Jesus is the only Savior because He is the only one qualified to save.

He is the only sinless one who is both God and man. He is the only one who walked through the valley of the shadow of death and came out as a resurrected Lord and King. And so we have to make sure we get that. Only Jesus is able to say what he says here to these people in his audience. Truly, truly.

I say to you, if anyone keeps my word, he will never see death. But What does that mean? What does it mean he will never see death? They reply, remember, and they change it up a little bit. They say, I don't see why it is that you say if anyone believes your word, they will never taste death.

I don't think there's any real significance in the transfer in that way. Because the fact is, Jesus is making a very clear statement. But he is clearly not suggesting That his followers will never experience physical dissolution. He's not saying that those who are his disciples, that those who hold to his word, that those who believe in him, will not ever face the reality that we spoke about this morning: conception, birth, growth, decline, decay, death, disillusion. He's not saying that.

He's not saying that you will escape death. As a reality. But rather that in Christ you will never have to confront death. In the power In its power, the power of death. to condemn as the occasion of final separation from God.

Okay, so physical death is a reality. But the wages of sin is death. And Christ comes and bears that penalty for us.

So that as Augustus Toblady puts it, and I think he wrote Rock of Ages. In the hymn by Top Lady, which I can't remember the first line of it for the moment, but this is what he says. The terrors of law and of God. The terrors of law and of God. The terror of standing before a sinless, almighty, pure God.

The terrors of law and of God, which is a realistic terror. With me, he writes, shall have nothing to do. My Saviour's obedience and blood Hide all my transgressions. From view. That's the difference you see.

Because the fearful thing is the terror of standing before God with nothing to say by way of our defence. Jesus is the only shelter. He's the only shelter that God has provided for sinners. And so when Jesus is speaking in this way, there is, if you like, in his heart and in his tone, there is an appeal to the people that he's speaking to. If you reject the shelter that is found in me, He says to them essentially, There's no other shelter.

If you reject the shelter that is provided by my. work on the on the cross, which is prospective as he speaks to them then. It will mean The ruin. of your soul.

So the question, what difference does Jesus make to death? He makes every difference in the world. Every difference in the world. That's why, by the time you get to chapter 11, which I don't think is truly, truly in it, Jesus says in the context of the death of Lazarus and in the listening of the girls, the sisters. I am the resurrection and the life.

And whoever believes in me, even though he die, If the earthly tent we live in is destroyed, even though he die, yet shall he live? How will he live?

Well, he lives in me. That's the great significance of baptism. Buried with him in baptism and raised with him to newness of life. Not that baptism provides that reality, but that it pictures that reality.

So that's why when people are baptized, they go down under the water as a symbol of them being buried in Christ. and being raised to a new life. And it is that new life. which is completely unassailable. I mentioned my mother's death this morning.

I don't mention it very often, but it's a recurring thought. I'm sure it is for many of you with loved ones you have lost. But I and people ask me, you know, when did you finally get a very strong conviction about theology and biblical things and all that kind of stuff? I said, well, I'll tell you what. I believed it.

until I stood at my mother's open grave. And then I decided I better ask myself, do I really believe it? Because we sang unaccompanied Death cannot keep its prey. Jesus, my Savior. He tore the bars away.

Jesus is my Lord. Uh From the grave he arose With a mighty triumph o'er his foes. He rose a victor from the dark domain. and he lives forever with the saints to reign. He arose.

He arose, Some of you have perhaps sung that at a loved one's grave. You find your voice breaks. You find yourself saying I really want to believe this deep, deep, deep inside of myself. Do you? That's why Jesus, after he does that great statement in John 11, he asks the question: Do you believe this?

Do you believe it? Are you prepared to fly the instruments all the way through life and into death solely on the basis of the promise of Christ Himself? John Pictures it. In Revelation, then I saw a new heaven. and a new earth.

Because the old heaven and the old earth had passed away. And so on. And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, Behold the dwelling place of God. is with man. And then listen to this.

He will dwell with them. And they will be his people. Which is of course what he Plan from the very beginning to choose a people that are his very own. Abraham, come here. You're going to have A son, through your lineage, all the nations of the earth will be blessed.

Where are all these nations? Where will they all finally end up? They'll end up right here. And they wipe away every tear from their eyes. And death shall be no more, Neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain any more, for the former things have passed away.

There's nothing like this in all of the world. There's nothing like this in all of comparative religion. There is nobody else who says this, because no one else can. Don't put RIP on your tombstone. Rest in peace.

Put C A D. Christ abolished Death. Don't look in there. for that person. Because as we're about to see, They've moved on.

We can say more, but we won't. The third point that I was going to make this morning is that there are only two ways. to die. Only two ways to die. Or probably the proper English would be, there are only two ways in which to die.

Because in Jesus' death, the last enemy is destroyed. That's not 2 Corinthians 5, but it's 1 Corinthians 15. Fifteen and uh twenty 6. For Jesus must reign until he has put all his enemies under his feet, and the last enemy to be destroyed is death.

So Death is a defeated enemy.

However, without a Saviour, Men and women will die in their sins.

Now You can Turn back to John 8. In the previous discussion, or in the earlier part of the discussion. Jesus Jesus says to the group that are pushing in on him. Verse 21 of John 8.

So he said to them again, I am going away and you will seek me. And you will die in your sin. Where I'm going, you cannot come.

So the Jews said, Will he kill himself? Since he says, Where I am going, you cannot come. He said to them, you're from below, I am from above. You are of this world. I am not of this world.

I told you that you would die in your sins. For unless you believe that I am He, you will die. in your sins. Death. is not terminal.

Death is not terminal. This afternoon I was uh reading the the The the times. Um And I came on an article about a Scottish politician. Who had been diagnosed with a brain tumor, but the headline was essentially. Um I'm not afraid to die.

Now, I read the article carefully because I thought he was going to say, Because I know that Jesus is the answer to death, he has triumphed over death. He didn't say that at all. Apparently the man believes that when you're dead it's all over.

Now that's all death is. You just come to a crushing halt. He'll never know anything more about it. You don't need to worry about it at all.

Now, if you're a Christian and if you're a Bible-believing Christian.

Somehow or another, if you end up in conversation with somebody like that discussing these immense matters, you have to say, well, you know, Jesus actually doesn't speak in those terms. You ought to be afraid. The great consequence, says Jesus. See, people don't understand the consequences of their unbelief. They think, well, I can believe or not believe.

I mean, it's I know you're very excited about it, a church and so on, and you make a, you know, you do all this stuff, but I don't really care. It doesn't really matter.

Well then we have to press on them and said it matters. It matters now, not only for now, but it matters for eternity. Because unless You believe? Unless you trust in Christ, You will die. in your sins.

The separation of the soul and the body. In death. It's temporary, it is not eternal. Because there will be a reunion of our body and our soul. That will be permanent.

But at this point No. The human body disintegrates. For a time. The human soul does not. The Westminster Confession in Section 32.

is very helpful in this regard, and let me just quote it to you. Chapter 32 of the Westminster Confession and Point 1. After death, The bodies of men and women, but it says men here. After death, the bodies of men decay. And return to dust.

But their souls which neither die nor sleep, having an immortal existence Return immediately to God who gave them. Yeah. You're listening to Truth for Life with Alistair Begg. We'll hear more about what the Bible has to say about death. tomorrow.

You know, it's tempting to skip over some of the difficult passages we find in Scripture, but our mission at Truth for Life is to teach God's Word, and that means all of it, even the parts that are challenging. All of the parts you hear on Truth for Life you can trust to be true, and, as the Bible says, to make you wise for salvation. It's never too early to start training the next generation along these lines, in the classroom and at home, so whether you're a parent or a grandparent, a teacher or a ministry leader, let me encourage you to check out today's recommended resource. It's called How to Teach Kids Theology. This book provides the principles and practices needed to teach Scripture in a way that's understandable for children of all ages.

Not only will this give you a framework for how to share the core beliefs of our faith, but the discussion prompts and activities are designed so that those who are going through this book will be able to embrace the deep truths of the Bible and make the Christian faith their own. This book is yours when you request it. As you make a donation to Truth for Life, you can give online at truthforlife.org slash donate. And of course, our offices are closed today in observance of Memorial Day. We are honoring those who gave the ultimate price of their lives serving in the U.S.

military and defending our freedom. On behalf of the Truth for Life staff, we want to say a heartfelt thank you to all who have courageously served. and offer our deepest sympathies to those who have lost a loved one serving our nation. I'm Bob Lepine. Thanks for listening.

Have you ever wondered what will happen to your soul after you die? Tomorrow we'll look at what the Bible tells us. The Bible teaching of Alastair Begg is furnished by Truth for Life. Where the Learning is for Living.

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