“Well, I cannot understand why a man who has tried to lead a good, moral life should not stand a better chance of getting to heaven than a wicked one,” said a lady while talking with others about the matter of salvation.
“Simply for this cause,” answered one. Suppose you and I wanted to go into a place of interest where the admission fee was one dollar. You had fifty cents and I have nothing. Which would stand the better chance of admission?”
“Neither,” was the solemn reply.
“Just so, and therefore the moral man stands no better chance than the out breaking sinner. But now suppose a kind and rich person, who saw our perplexity, presented a ticket of admission to each of us at his own expense! What then?”
“Well, then, we could both go in alike, that is clear.”
“Then, when the Savior saw our perplexity, He came, He died, and thus ‘obtained eternal redemption for us,’ (Heb. 9:1212Neither by the blood of goats and calves, but by his own blood he entered in once into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for us. (Hebrews 9:12)) and now He offers you and me a free ticket. Only take good care that your fifty cents do not make you proud enough to refuse the free ticket, and so be refused admittance at last.”
Dear young reader, there is a solemn moment coming! Have you the ticket of admission?