Introduction
The message of salvation is often presented today as if God is still preparing to pour out wrath on the world. But Scripture shows that the wrath Jesus and John the Baptist warned about was tied to a specific people, place, and time — the first‑century generation of Israel.This study explores:
- What the first-century believers were saved from
- What believers today are saved to
- Why the wrath of God was for that generation
- How salvation today is about entering the Kingdom of God, not escaping divine anger
1. The First-Century Expectation of Wrath
A. John the Baptist’s Warning
When John appeared, his message was urgent and specific:John wasn’t speaking about a distant future. He was warning the religious leaders of his own day.“Who warned you to flee from the wrath to come?” — Matthew 3:7
Why?
Because:- Israel had broken covenant
- The Messiah had come
- Judgment was imminent
- The Old Covenant age was ending
B. Jesus Repeated the Same Warning
Jesus told the same leaders:And again:“All these things will come upon this generation.” — Matthew 23:36
The wrath Jesus spoke of was:“This generation shall not pass till all these things be fulfilled.” — Matthew 24:34
- Near
- Imminent
- For them
- Not for us
C. The Apostles Confirmed the Timing
Paul wrote:- “The wrath is coming” (Colossians 3:6)
- “The day is at hand” (Romans 13:12)
- “Jesus delivers us from the wrath about to come” (1 Thessalonians 1:10)
- “The end of all things is at hand” (1 Peter 4:7)
- The Old Covenant was “ready to vanish away” (Hebrews 8:13)
D. Fulfillment in AD 70
The destruction of Jerusalem:- Ended the Old Covenant world
- Fulfilled Jesus’ warnings
- Brought the “day of the Lord” upon that generation
- Vindicated the faithful remnant
It is not a future event for us.
2. What the First-Century Believers Were Saved From
A. Saved From the Wrath of God (Covenantal Judgment)
Romans 5:9 — “saved from wrath through Him.” 1 Thessalonians 1:10 — “delivers us from the wrath about to come.”They were saved from:
- The destruction of Jerusalem
- The end of the temple system
- The covenantal judgment on Israel
- The tribulation of that age
B. Saved From the Curse of the Law
Galatians 3:13 — “redeemed us from the curse of the Law.”The Law’s curse fell on that generation. Jesus freed His people from it.
C. Saved From Sin, Death, and Satan as Covenant Powers
Jesus broke:- The power of sin
- The reign of death
- The dominion of Satan
D. Saved From Condemnation
Romans 8:1 — “no condemnation.”The Law could no longer condemn them.
3. What Believers Today Are Saved To
Since the wrath of God was poured out in the first century, salvation today is not about escaping judgment — it is about entering the Kingdom of God.A. Saved to the Kingdom of God
Jesus said:- “The Kingdom of God is within you.” (Luke 17:21)
- “My Kingdom is not of this world.” (John 18:36)
- A spiritual Kingdom
- A new creation life
- A relationship with God
- Freedom from fear
B. Saved to Relationship, Not Religion
We are saved to:- Direct access to God
- Peace with God
- Life in the Spirit
- Freedom from religious systems
C. Saved to Transformation
We are saved to:- A renewed mind
- A new identity
- A life shaped by love
- Spiritual maturity
D. Saved to Hope, Not Fear
Because the wrath is past:- We do not fear judgment
- We do not fear condemnation
- We do not fear God’s anger
- Grace
- Peace
- Confidence
- Sonship
4. Summary Table
| First-Century Believers Were Saved From | Believers Today Are Saved To |
|---|---|
| Wrath of God on that generation | Kingdom of God |
| Curse of the Law | Grace and freedom |
| Destruction of Jerusalem | New creation life |
| Condemnation | Peace with God |
| Satan’s covenantal dominion | Spiritual authority |
| Fear of judgment | Confidence and love |
5. Conclusion
The message of salvation becomes clearer when we see it through the lens of Scripture:- The first century faced the wrath of God
- John the Baptist warned them
- Jesus warned them
- The apostles warned them
- That wrath came in their generation