-
Who You Gonna Call?
Contributed by David Dunn on Sep 26, 2025 (message contributor)
Summary: Today is God’s appointed moment to surrender to Christ, because sin’s essence is self and no second chance awaits after death.
A Familiar Question with Eternal Weight
We all know the line from pop culture: Who you gonna call?
It was written for a movie that made people laugh, but the question itself is deadly serious.
When a crisis hits, when the next breath is uncertain, when eternity draws close—who you call on determines your future.
Let me take you to a moment when that question was no longer playful for me.
---
The Leap
I’ll never forget standing on that tiny metal platform, more than a hundred feet in the air, looking down at a parking lot in Orlando, Florida.
It was a tourist bungee-jump setup—cars below glinting like toys, the pavement hard and unforgiving.
Just the operator and me.
He crouched down and tightened the heavy straps around my ankles.
This wasn’t a gentle drop into water; this was headfirst.
Every instinct in me shouted Wait!
Check the cords again. The parking lot looks too close. Maybe later.
The man looked me in the eye and said quietly, “It’s time to jump.”
In that moment my heart was pounding so loudly I could hear it echo inside my ears.
Every rational part of me wanted to hold back—find one more excuse, demand one more check, tell myself there would always be another chance.
But the truth was now or never.
The opportunity was here.
If I didn’t leap, I would climb back down and never know what it was like.
That moment on the platform taught me something about life:
some choices can be revisited, but some cannot.
Some doors stay open for a season, and then they close forever.
---
A Cosmic Choice
The Bible tells us that every human being stands on a similar platform.
Joshua’s ancient challenge still rings:
> “Choose you this day whom you will serve … but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” (Joshua 24:15)
God has given each of us a lifetime—a single, unrepeatable opportunity—to respond to His offer of salvation.
The plan of salvation isn’t a revolving door of second chances.
There’s no purgatory, no reincarnation, no endless retries.
Why?
Because the plan of salvation isn’t just about getting people to heaven; it’s about healing the universe itself.
---
God’s Goal: Eradicate the Cancer of Sin
The purpose of the whole plan of salvation is to rid the universe of the cancer of sin.
God longs to end every tear, every tragedy, every grave.
He wants to end the suffering and the carnage and the rebellious character flaw that fuels the rebellion.
The prophet Nahum declared:
> “Affliction shall not rise up the second time.” (Nahum 1:9)
Revelation promises:
> “He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and there will be no more death or sorrow or crying or pain. All these things are gone forever.” (Revelation 21:4)
This is the heart of the gospel.
God isn’t merely cleaning up symptoms.
He is removing the disease.
Sin is not just a bad habit; it is terminal spiritual cancer.
---
The Bible’s Clear Timeline
Because the cure is decisive, the Bible presents a decisive timeline for every soul.
Hebrews 9:27 – “It is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment.”
2 Corinthians 6:2 – “Now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation.”
John 5:28-29 – “The hour is coming when all who are in the graves will hear His voice and come forth—those who have done good to the resurrection of life, those who have done evil to the resurrection of condemnation.”
Notice what is missing in all these passages:
no mention of a holding tank for slow learners, no hint of reincarnation, no extra probationary period.
One life. One choice. One eternity.
---
Why This Is Hard for Us to Accept
But if that’s so clear, why do people resist it?
Why is a single lifetime to decide so hard to believe?
Let’s be honest.
Part of us wants the comfort of more time.
We sense eternity in our hearts (Ecclesiastes 3:11), and we feel life should last forever.
So we invent ideas that sound merciful—purgatory, reincarnation, “I’ll make it right later.”
They soothe our longing for another chance.
But deeper issues lie beneath.
We underestimate sin.
We think of sin as a series of mistakes we can eventually correct.
Scripture calls it slavery (John 8:34) and a hardening force (Hebrews 3:13).
Every delay makes turning back less likely, not more.
We overestimate tomorrow.
James 4:14 says life is “a vapor that appears for a little time and then vanishes away.”
We plan as if we own the next decade when we don’t even own the next heartbeat.
We misread God’s patience.
Peter says God delays judgment because He is “not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance” (2 Peter 3:9).