Sunday, March 10, 2013

What do You Post on Facebook?


If you are a thinker, read on. Especially if you are a Christian, this is for you. This came from a discussion that points out the conciseness of Twitter and the shorter attention span people in general now have. My thesis is this:

We have knowledge, but no application. People read in order to gain information, not to induce self transformation. There is something very wrong with that mentality.

Our whole society is encouraging filling of the mind and no softening of the heart. We see an encouraging verse and "like" it. But are our hearts convicted by it (1 Cor 14:24)? Are we actively trying to apply it (Prov 23:12)? Do we obey what it says (Luke 11:27-28)? Do we even remember it 5 mins later (James 1:24)? Does it pierce your soul and cut into your heart (Heb 4:12)? Or is it just another insignificant drop in the pool we call social media?

Information, especially visual information, is now a drug, and Twitter/Facebook sells it for free. Take away this drug and people go into withdrawal. Just try to see how long you can last without internet. If history is any indication, your kids will be much, much worse than you. This drug is potent and people are thinking of ways to give us more while requiring less.

We spend way too much time going through our phones and not enough time through our Bibles. Our heads are looking down more than they are looking up. We are too busy going places and don't have time to remain on our knees, silent and still at the feet of Jesus (Luke 10:39-40).

Do you think this is okay? We are unable to differentiate between truth or fiction, unable to research what scholars have established for centuries, and we swoon over easily disputable facts. We need professional apologists to defend plain doctrines because we supposedly do not have the time or ability to look it up ourselves. This is not rocket science, it's really not that complicated. I'm not promoting intellectualism, I'm pleading for less laziness and complacency.

We are so fixated at fitting everything in 140 characters that we cannot do anything extraordinary, only many instances of the ordinary. We put more value in small nuggets of wisdom and discard mountains of pure gold because "it takes too long to read". God did extraordinary things through Paul (Acts 19:11) and He wants to do the same through you too! But you must strive to live as Paul did, wholly for God.

I may be ranting now, but I am also calling for change. As a computer programmer, I do admire the technology behind social media. I do appreciate being able to post "ordinary" updates. It's a very useful thing I use to keep my family and friends closer than ever. And I encourage everyone to keep doing that. But this cannot be all we do. Strive to do more than this. Strive to change lives, save souls, and glorify God. Are you content to let this massive platform be wasted? Did God save you just so you can do nothing with your life? Impact no one? Live safely and die in your sleep?

As a Christian, if you find yourself thinking and acting like the majority, it's time to stop and reflect. You're not supposed to be like everyone else. You're not even supposed to be liked by most people (Psa 79:4). You are God's child, called for a special purpose (Eph 4:1). Be who you really are.

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Sharing the Cost in Evangelism


Amazing salvation story! Read it, share it, praise God for it!

To catch people up, I go out with a team of people to the local mall to evangelize every week. From my previous Facebook status update, you guys read about Raghulan, the guy from the mall who was agreeing with everything we said about God, sin, Hell, and the whole gospel. Two days ago he texted me "hey tony where can I get a copy of the bible?" I told him that I'd give him one and that we can meet up some time to do that. Additionally, he told me how he had a lot of questions for me.

Unbeknownst to me, God had already been working in his life prior to us meeting him at Markville. He had already been thinking about God a lot even though he came from a Hindu family. He had some pretty crazy things happen to him in the past few months. Anyway, that night we shared the gospel with him, he could not sleep well and even woke up in fear due to a terrible nightmare. Maybe we talked about judgement day (John 16:8) too much, just maybe. But that's one of the reasons he contacted me: he was afraid. But so was I when I first heard about Hell, and you should be too. When we met up, I asked what his questions were and he said, "I don't really have questions, I just want to hear more about what you were talking about." Yes! He just wants to hear more about Jesus Christ! So I told him more. I was not the one speaking that night (Matt 10:20), God kept showing me passage after passage of scripture and I just read to him, using as few of my own words as possible. We talked for a good long time as he also started asking questions and shared more of his story. When asked how he felt, he said "God is calling me." (Rom 11:29) When asked what was stopping him from being under the authority of God, he said "Nothing."

Hallelujah! I told him how he can pray right then and start that relationship. But before continuing, though the evangelist in me just wanted him to "pray the prayer" and "accept Christ," I knew he needed to be warned first. I spent much time telling him about my journey, about my grandparents' rejection of me (Matt 10:35), about the hardships (1 Pet 4:12), about how life does NOT get easier, about sanctification (Rom 6:19), about how he will have to give up stuff (Rom 12:2), about how the devil/world will hate him (1 John 3:13), about how being a Christian means being a slave of God (Rom 6:18), about the cost of following Jesus (Luke 9:58)... but lastly about how it's all so worth it (Phil 3:8) and about Heaven (Rev 22:4). I then asked again if he's still willing to give up control of his life over to God and to be His slave. He paused, thought for a bit, told me he was afraid, and then with an eagerness in his eyes, looked up and finally declared, "Yes."

And the prayer, oh the prayer. After we prayed together as he walked from darkness to light, he asked me, "Did you feel it?" I was confused for a bit but then he said, "This thing in my chest, this feeling. Ah, I can't describe it. Did you feel it too when you first prayed?" I proceeded to tell him about who the Holy Spirit is (John 14:16-17) and the concept of the trinity. He is now going to read the gospel of John and sometime next week we'll meet up to talk about it. If only you guys saw the look in his eyes, the joy he was exuding, the relief he felt, the sweet, sweet moment when he tasted the goodness of our savior for the first time. This is what I live for, the salvation of souls for God! If you've never felt this, I urge you now, win souls for Christ! God can use anyone! He used me!

Never in my evangelism have I warned someone so thoroughly and to tell them NOT to be a child of God. In fact, I told him to be a slave. Come on, who'd say yes to being a slave? It is foolishness (1 Cor 1:18)! But if you're called by God, it's the best thing ever. Never in my life have I understood irresistible grace so clearly. There was nothing I could say that would have turned him away from God. Friends, we don't have to try to make the gospel appealing, figure out a fancy way to get their attention, make sure they know God loves them, play the role of the nice friend who is always there, water down the gospel to make it simpler, or share cheap grace. This is what we must do in evangelism: we preach Christ crucified (1 Cor 1:23) and how we are to be crucified with Him (Gal 2:20). Yes, at its core it's still just faith in Christ, but never without the cost. And when we evangelize, if we are preaching this true gospel, God WILL work (Isa 55:11).

In summary, this is what happened: Christ looked at him and said, "Mine" (Phil 3:12b). All I did was go to the mall and open my Bible.

Thursday, November 22, 2012

The Trumpet's Blast


A very short sermon on Numbers 10:1-10 on trumpets that I made a few months ago but never delivered, written down now because I was asked to. Read Numbers 10 first, then prepared to be blown away. Get it? Blown away. Haha...

First, in any Bible study, we must remember what it meant for the people back then. The trumpets were very effective tools used to summon the people either to war (v9) or to move out (v2). It was a loud way to worship God (v10) and to be "a reminder...: I am the Lord your God" (v10). Even back in the day, each time the trumpets sounded, the Israelites would be reminded that God is calling them, summoning them to something. They would also be reminded that they are not alone in this desert, something much needed in their forty years of wandering. But as important as this historical usage was, there is a deeper significance. We know what that "something" God was calling them to back then, but what is the "something" God is calling us to today? We'll get to that soon.

This imagery of the trumpets continues all throughout the Bible, even to Revelation. Rev 8 talks about the seven trumpets, each bringing about judgement, death, and destruction. That's what the trumpets signified back in Numbers too: war, death, and destruction. Rev 8:7 tells us that "in the days of the trumpet call to be sounded by the seventh angel, the mystery of God would be fulfilled." What is this mystery? We know this mystery! Rom 16:25-26 says "according to the revelation of the mystery that was kept secret for long ages but has now been disclosed". Rev 11:15 tells us "Then the seventh angel blew his trumpet, and there were loud voices in heaven, saying, 'The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he shall reign forever and ever.'" It doesn't get any better than this! GOD WILL REIGN!

That is what the last blowing of the trumpet will bring about: the consummation of God's kingdom! Imagine, no more death, no more suffering, no more sin, just peace and worship of a beautiful God. The Israelites worshipped when the trumpet was blown in Num 10:10, and that is what we will be doing for all eternity too when this final trumpet is blown. Look forward to that day, that final trumpet, as you continue in your journey through this wilderness that is the fallen world. The promised land is near, don't miss that final blast of the trumpet, listen for it, wait for its sound.

And yes, in fact we are not listening or waiting for a trumpet, but for Christ himself. 1 Thess 4:16 says "The Lord himself will descend from heaven with a cry of command, with the voice of an archangel, and with the sound of the trumpet of God." Yes, Jesus has descended once and will again, "coming on the clouds of heaven" (Matt 26:64). It is the same cloud that led the Israelites through the wilderness, the same cloud that is associated with divine presence, the same cloud that would have set Jesus on the same level as God. Oh don't miss it, don't miss the imagery here, don't miss the sound of Jesus' voice. John said in Rev 1:10 that "I heard behind me a loud voice like a trumpet". Whose voice was that? Why was it like a trumpet? That voice was Jesus Christ! The trumpets calling the Israelites to war and to worship was in fact Christ!

The calling in our lives to fight sin and to battle for souls is also a call from Christ! His call IS the trumpet in Num 10. His voice IS the trumpet in Rev 1:10. His presence IS the promised land that is waiting for us! Brothers, sisters, don't miss that sound. "Be sober-minded; be watchful." (1 Pet 5:8) Furthermore, in your every day lives, "blow the trumpet and warn the people" (Eze 33:3). Tell them of the gospel of Jesus Christ or the blood will be on your hands (cf. Eze 33:6)! If you do not know Christ, don't miss his call. Can you not hear the many trumpets that have already been sounded? Can you not hear my Master beckoning you to come? Repent and join me in the worship of my God and my king.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

A Testimony about God and My Grandparents


Today, I have a testimony to share. I had shared this in many formats but am now writing this down in order to edify as many people as possible. This is a story about my unsaved family.

My grandparents hated Christians and didn't even want their kids or grandkids to have anything to do with church. They would physically look away and not listen when we were talking about God. This one time, some Christian friends came to visit and care for them, my grandpa actually looked straight up at the ceiling WHILE they were talking, talk about rudeness... Beyond this spiritual darkness, there were spiritual attacks from Satan as well. For my grandpa, every single time that he went to church, that same night he would have a nightmare about demons and evil spirits fighting him or holding him down on the ground. These dreams would get so intense that he sometimes woke up in the middle of the night and got violent with my grandma. It got so bad that he doesn't even want to be physically near a church building now. During the times we prayed, he would not listen, when we talked about Heaven and Hell, he would laugh, and at the mention of Jesus, he would scoff. My grandma on the other hand would simply laugh at me every time I talked about Jesus, saying I'm delusional for believing in the afterlife and that I'm 走火入魔 (in too deep in a demonic way). The gospel had been shared in full many times, from the showing of the law to the sinfulness of man to the desperate need of Jesus as Lord and savior.

I don't need to tell you guys that spiritual warfare is real. And this is what had been going on in my house for the past four months, with my older brother too who is not too unlike my grandpa (in his rejection). I tried preaching the full, unadulterated truth of the gospel to them and they turned away. I tried loving them unconditionally and being the best example of Christ I possibly could and they ignored it. I tried fasting and praying on my knees many times a week, crying out for God's intercession, and sometimes I felt like He wasn't answering.

What made it worse was how much I love my family. I love them so much. I love them more than any other human relationship I have. I love them with the love of Jesus Christ. If I could die so that they might be saved, I would. If I could pluck out my eyes so that they can see Jesus how I see Him, I would. They are drowning, dying, and I cannot do anything... I could only watch them die... And that's what they are doing now. God has shown me very clearly that it is He alone who has the power to save. Nothing I do, no matter how "right" they are and how "strategically sound" they might be can amount to anything if God chose not to work in that way at that time.

But praise be to God, the joy of my salvation and the uplifter of souls! When we realize that it is God alone who works (Psalm 62:1), He starts working. When we continue our responsibility in sowing the seed and then do nothing else but sleep (Mark 4:26-27), God makes it grow. When we stop thinking that somehow our efforts would "inspire" God to act and realize that any action on His part is by His grace and nothing else (Eph 2:8-9), that's when God shows up.

My grandparents live in Taiwan, and I'm in Canada. The fact that they were even here for four months was an amazing opportunity. Just a month or two ago, when they still didn't want have anything to do with God, they came to church! In fact, they were adamantly against going on the previous night. Then, through the petition of the saints on bended knees, we saw a complete change of heart within a few hours! I have so many more of these God stories in just the past four months I could share but this post would get way too long. Just know that for 81 years of their life, they had never went to church, been part of worship, prayed with people, or heard the full gospel. And this all happened this summer! Praise God! Praise God!

Last week when my brother left, as we were sitting in the car at the airport, as I shared how much he means to me and how much I wanted him to see Jesus clearly, right before we were about to pray, tears started forming at his eyes. I've only seen him like this twice in my life. God was tugging at his heart and it is so evident! Bob, if you're reading this, God is calling out to you right now! How can you deny it any longer? It's not family you miss or need, it's Jesus! Read your Bible, pray, and meet your savior! Sorry about sharing this in public, you'll be fine.

This week, not to share any details, I was devastated by my grandpa's hardness of heart. And it broke mine. I had to lay it all before the throne of God above because my heart could not take it anymore. I had to stop trying so hard and doing so much and simply trust that God's word does not go out in vain. I even had to lay my grandpa's life on the altar, saying that his salvation (or lack thereof) does not change a thing about my affection for Christ. It was one of the hardest things I've had to do.

The next day, after prayer, the same thing that happened to my brother happened to my grandpa. The thing is, during the whole prayer I was sharing about the love of Christ and how they need it so badly. The Holy Spirit led me to rebuke them! Instead of getting angry, my grandpa, who I've never seen tear up in my entire life, was doing all he could to hold back his tears. My grandpa, who had never held my hand, not even to cross the road when I was a kid, could not let go of my hand after prayer. This was God at work!

My Christian friends, you may know all these things. You may know how only God saves. But I am praying that this truth will impact you more today than it ever did. When we experience spiritual oppression of this level, we don't stop trying when we see how our methods are ineffective. We keep trying as long as we are with them, waiting for God to work, however long it may take. And when we are not with them, we pray unceasingly. And throughout it all, we trust in God not to do what we ask, but to do what is good. That is the secret to evangelism: To fully work and fully rest at the same time. The gospel is disgusting and the fragrance of death to those who are perishing. But once God flicks that switch, you can be doing and saying the exact same things, but your unsaved friend will be on his knees, begging God to forgive him, smelling life for the first time.

Is that not where you were when you met Jesus for the first time? On your knees, broken, but knowing you've finally found what you've been searching for? Do you remember the beauty of your savior when you first laid eyes on Him and the smile on His bloodied face? Can you recall more clearly what was shared at your conversion or rather the overwhelming weight of sin and the unsurpassable desire for Christ? That feeling was the Holy Spirit! The Spirit's working can and WILL overwhelm any of your efforts. It was by GRACE you have been saved! Shall we "stop working" so that grace may abound? By no means! Do you remember what you were when you were called? Can you think back on how much God has changed you since then? Do you not think that what the gospel did in you, it can do to your friend/family? Yes! Yes, God Is mighty to save.

And if you can't remember any of these things, you need to repent right now. Beg for Jesus to forgive you. Know in your heart that whatever you had before was of man and not of God. Ask for a new heart of flesh and new eyes of faith. Then open those eyes, and look! Look up, for Christ is waiting for you with open arms. Oh run to Him, run to our blessed savior! And know that then He will give you rest for your soul.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

What is the Gospel?

Forget the internet, forget the audience, forget your friends, preach to yourself Tony. What is the gospel?

The gospel is the terrifying fact that God is good, so good in fact that He cannot tolerate an ounce of evil. It is the revelation that all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God. The gospel tells you to repent, for you are disgustingly evil in the sight of a holy God. It is showing that you are a liar, adulterer, blasphemer, and murderer at heart. It is realizing the impossibility of ever being near God because of your very nature, which is one that hates Him who created you. The gospel is examining your own life and seeing how you've hurt others and how in turn you might have been hurt. It is seeing this fallen world for what it really is. The gospel is the sound of many footsteps marching into Hell.

The gospel is good news, it is the news that tells us of the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. It is the picture of people running away from God, but stopped by His loving hand. The gospel is confessing with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believing in your heart that God raised him from the dead. The gospel is turning over control of your life to Him, actually letting Him guide your every word, action, and even taking every thought captive. The gospel is saying that we cannot and we are not, but He can and He is. The gospel is being covered by the righteousness of Christ, being bought by his blood and therefore becoming slaves of Him. The gospel is substitutionary atonement, propitiation of sin, justification of the sinner, sanctification of the saint, glorification to God. The gospel is life eternal. And you are not to be ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes.

The gospel is coming to the foot of the cross every single day and never wanting to leave. It is forgetting everything else in the world, desiring nothing else except the presence of our Lord and saviour. The gospel is a love relationship with the one who will never leave you nor forsake you. It is the ultimate picture of a husband and a wife. The gospel is perfect love, driving out fear, fear of how others might look at you or feel about you. The gospel is living a different life from the people around you, so different in fact that you must live always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you. The gospel is grace, the gospel is law, the gospel is peace, the gospel is war. The gospel is real, the gospel is love, the gospel is Him coming down from above. The gospel is everything that points to God.

O why do you sin? Why do you lead this defeated life? Why do you anger? Why do you seek approval from men and to fit in with your friends? Look to Him, look AT Him. Look at Jesus' face as he took on the stripes by which we are healed. Look at the torment that caused him to sweat drops of blood. Look at the man who bore the terrible and complete wrath of God. Look at the Christ who came back three days later and pronounced final victory. What is whispered in your ear, proclaim from the housetops! Preach, preach to the nations! How can you hold it in?

The gospel is not being right or treated fairly, it is being in awe of the unfairness of the great transaction. The gospel is not reading your Bible every day, it is clinging to the cross every moment. The gospel is not running from sin, it is running to Him. The gospel is not wondering whether you have done enough, it is wondering if it can ever be enough. The gospel is not easy for it costs a man his life, but it is simple for even a child can understand it. The gospel is Jesus Christ. Please, I beg of you, receive the gospel of Jesus Christ! Love Him with everything that you are, love the gospel, be reconciled to your Master! And taste the sweetness of the joy set before you. And for the first time, live. For the sake of your own soul, live! Through the power of the Holy Spirit, live! In the name of Jesus Christ, live!

Yes God, I shall.

Monday, May 28, 2012

Clinging to the Cross


I am clinging to the cross because right now, that is the only thing I know how.
I am a lazy excuse of a man, having my parents take care of so much around the house. I am an impatient teacher, letting my anger flare up in the tiniest of mistakes. I am a horrible lover, unable to guard my own heart and unwilling to let go. I am a habitual sinner, daily unworthy of God's love as I continue to do the things that bring him no glory. I am a powerless evangelist, hardly preaching the word and never preaching the word hard. I am a nobody.

Here I lie, broken, unworthy, scared, angry, sad, and finally seeing a small glimpse of what I truly am. So I will cling to the cross. I will cling to the cursed tree that brought life (Deut 21:23). I will cling to that which is foolishness to most people (1 Cor 1:18). I will cling to the fulfilment of all the law and the prophets (Matt 5:17). I will cling to the impossible love demonstrated on the cross (Rom 5:8). I will cling to Jesus Christ, the hope of glory (Col 1:27).

What does it mean to cling to the cross? It means to hold fast and embrace the cross. Embrace the sacrifice that brought us peace. It means to hold on for dear life, never letting go, not for a job, not for a family, and not for anything in this world. It means to remain close to the cross and resist anything that would distance yourself from it. Resist those things because when the storm comes- and it is coming- the cross is the only thing that will save you. We cling to something when we are desperate, when we have nothing else around us, and when we believe that without it, we will die. Cling to the cross.

That is where I am, not by choice, but because God has painfully opened my eyes. I asked him, "Why God why?" "Look at the cross" he says, "Look at the cross!" It's not about me and my tiny problems, it's about God having solved it already. It's not about trying to be more humble, it's about obeying Jesus in every action. It's not about feeling depressed and hopeless, it's realizing the full magnitude of what was accomplished up there. It's not about whether I am this or I am that, it's about the great I AM.

The gospel is not something you try to share with unbelievers. The gospel is something that you preach to yourself day in and day out. The natural overflow of that is what reaches those around you. The gospel is not cheap grace that focuses on how God has changed you or how great your relationship with him is. The gospel is that God is unchangeable and that he has always been a self-sustaining and glorious triune God. The gospel is not Jer 29:11, the gospel is Phil 1:21 "For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain".

Clinging to the cross isn't about how hard you can cling, it's about what the cross actually is. It's not about your petty sins. Look at the cross... It's not about your daily devotions. Look at the cross... It's not about Christian living, there's too much "me" in the bookstore, in worship music, in everything. LOOK at the cross! It is HIS life, HIS son, HIS blood, HIS wrath, HIS justice, HIS mercy, HIS grace, HIS goodness, HIS love, HIS plan, and HIS glory. Oh the beauty of our saviour, the majesty of our king!

I am everything I wrote in the first paragraph, but more than that I am a saint, so much so that the first paragraph doesn't even matter anymore. And I am part of a holy priesthood. I am a new creation (2 Cor 5:17). And I WILL bring glory to the one who died on that rugged cross. I will look at the cross, not myself, neither my strengths nor my weaknesses.

I am clinging to the cross because right now, that is the only thing I know how.

Friday, March 23, 2012

A Study on Hell


I can never hope to aspire to the same level of literary eloquence as the great theologians of the past. After much painstaking research, followed by awe-inspiring learnings and intellectually stimulating worship, I shall relay their thoughts on the matter.

The nature of Hell: 

"When we use the imagery of the Old Testament in an attempt to understand the forsakenness of the lost, we are not speaking of the idea of the departure of God or the absence of God in the sense that He ceases to be omnipresent. Rather, it’s a way of describing the withdrawal of God in terms of His redemptive blessing. It is the absence of the light of His countenance. It is the presence of the frown of His countenance. It is the absence of the blessedness of His unveiled glory that is a delight to the souls of those who love Him, but it is the presence of the darkness of judgment. Hell reflects the presence of God in His mode of judgment, in His exercise of wrath, and that’s what everyone would like to escape."
- R.C. Sproul (The Truth of the Cross)

The justice of Hell:

A crime is more or less heinous, according as we are under greater or less obligations to the contrary. ... The fault of disobeying another, is greater or less, as any one is under greater or less obligations to obey him. And therefore if there be any being that we are under infinite obligations to love, and honour, and obey, the contrary towards him must be infinitely faulty... Our obligation to love, honour, and obey any being, is in proportion to his loveliness, honourableness, and authority; for that is the very meaning of the words. ... But God is a being infinitely lovely, because he hath infinite excellency and beauty. ... His authority over us is infinite; and the ground of his right to our obedience is infinitely strong; for he is infinitely worthy to be obeyed himself, and we have an absolute, universal, and infinite dependence upon him. So that sin against God, being a violation of infinite obligations, must be a crime infinitely heinous, and so deserving of infinite punishment.
 - Jonathan Edwards (The Work of Jonathan Edwards)

The inhabitants of Hell:

On the other hand, hell is certainly the world of disobedience. ... Jesus said there are fire and worms in hell, but that is not the reason it is hell. You might endure worms and fire, but for a moral creature to know and realize that he is where he is because he a rebel - that is the essence of hell and judgment. It is the eternal world of all the disobedient rebels who have said, "I owe God nothing!" ... We have no basis to believe that we can come casually and sprightly to the Lord Jesus and say, "I have come for some help, Lord Jesus. I understand that you are the Savior so I am going to believe and be saved and then I am going to turn away and think about the other matters of lordship and allegiance and obedience at some time in the future." ... We have owed Him obedience ever since the second we cried out to Him for salvation, and if we do not give Him that obedience, I have reason to wonder if we are really converted!
- A.W. Tozer (I Call it Heresy!)

Our reaction to Hell:

Etiquette nowadays often demands of a Christian that he should not 'intrude' his religion on company. Out with such etiquette! It is the etiquette of hell! True courtesy to my fellow's soul makes me speak to him, if I believe that his soul is in danger. How many, my dear friend, were you ever the means of bringing to Jesus? You believe that they must eternally perish unless they have faith in Christ. How many have you prayed for? How many did you ever break your heart about? You believe that they must love Christ or be damned. How many have you ever talked to concerning him who is the only Savior? Are you satisfied to remain silent? Are you content to let those around you sink to hell? What! Never tell of Christ's love? What! Never tell of salvation? Can this be right? In God's name wake up! Oh my brothers and sisters in Christ, if sinners will be damned, at least let them leap to hell over our bodies and if they will perish, let them perish with our arms about their knees, imploring them to stay, and not madly to destroy themselves. If hell must be filled, at least let it be filled in the teeth of our exertions, and let not one go there unwarned and unprayed for.
- Charles Spurgeon (Various sermons put together)

No one expects to go to Hell, no one.