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A book challenging the gospel response

Eternal Stakes

The Response Grace Demands
Joe Tenga
This book is for those who responded to the gospel sincerely — and never thought to ask whether they did it right.

One gospel, four voices, five centuries of tension.

You've heard the gospel: "Believe in Jesus and you'll be saved. Faith alone. Grace alone."

John says whoever believes has eternal life. Paul says we're justified by faith apart from works. James says faith without works is dead. Peter says baptism saves you. Jesus himself calls belief a work.

They can't all be right. Or can they?

For five centuries, theologians have managed these tensions by softening one voice, redefining another, explaining why the plain words don't mean what they say.

What if they all mean exactly what they say?

Peter, Paul, John, and James speak with one voice because they describe one response. No apostle gets demoted. No text gets softened. No voice gets silenced. Yet Paul and Peter both warn of eternal consequences for those who do not obey the gospel.

The commands are clear. The question is whether you will obey them.

One Gospel Response

John
"Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life."
John 3:36
Paul
"Justified by faith apart from works of the law."
Romans 3:28
James
"A person is justified by works and not by faith alone."
James 2:24
Peter
"Baptism now saves you."
1 Peter 3:21
When belief is defined as obedient trust rather than mental agreement, the apostles stop disagreeing and start saying the same thing. This is not harmony forced by reinterpretation. It is harmony revealed by clarity.

Twelve interlocking arguments. Three fronts. One conclusion.

The Positive Framework

The Four Levels of Belief · The Analytic Connection · Obedience of Faith & Obedience of the Gospel · Law Commands vs. Gospel Commands

The Logical and Textual Evidence

The Unbelief Test · The Mark 16:16 Contrapositive · The Grammar of Grace · The Synecdoche Reading

The Historical Close

The Perspicuity Self-Contradiction · The Timeline Problem · The Chain of Witness · Apostolic Harmony

See the Full Argument

The hard questions you've been asked.

Isn't baptism a work? What about the thief on the cross? What about Ephesians 2:8–9? Didn't the Reformers settle this? If baptism is required, what about every Christian who wasn't baptized the way you describe?

Eternal Stakes answers every one. The arguments address the standard objections at their structural foundations. Each stands on its own. Together they form a cumulative case that does not depend on any single proof-text or historical claim.

Pressure-test the argument.

Trained on the full text of Eternal Stakes and the 170+ objection catalog. Ask the hardest question a skeptical friend has asked you, or that you have yourself.

Eternal Stakes Study Bot
Online
Ask about any objection, passage, or argument in the book. Or try one of these
What about the thief on the cross?
Isn't baptism a work?
What about Ephesians 2:8–9?
What is the Analytic Connection?
Mark 16:16 only condemns unbelief, not lack of baptism
Cornelius received the Spirit before baptism
Acts 2:38 means "because of the forgiveness of sins"
The Sinner's Prayer saved me
How can I be sure I am saved?
Detail:
Complexity:

The commands are clear. The question is whether you will obey them.

Eternal Stakes is available in paperback, standard hardcover, and color hardcover.

Group Study Workbook available in Teacher's and Student Editions for small groups, campus ministries, and congregational use.

Contact sales@eternalstakes.com for volume pricing.