12 Feb 2026

Can the Church Be Faithful Without Proclaiming Christ Alone?

Acts 4:12—“Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.”

This truth stands as one of the most authoritative and uncompromising declarations of the gospel. This confession, delivered by Peter before the Jewish authorities, is forged in the crucible of opposition rather than the shelter of ease. Having been arrested for proclaiming Christ, Peter does not soften his message to preserve peace. Instead, filled with the Holy Ghost (Acts 4:8), he proclaims the exclusive sufficiency of Jesus Christ for salvation.

The verse begins with a firm negation: “Neither is there salvation in any other.” Salvation is not distributed among many paths, nor is it achieved through human effort, religious tradition, or moral sincerity. Scripture presents salvation as a divine act, accomplished by God and revealed in one Person alone. Peter then grounds this claim in God’s sovereign provision: “for there is none other name under heaven given among men.” Salvation is not discovered by human wisdom; it is given by God in grace.

The absolute necessity of Christ Himself as the only God-appointed means by which sinners are saved is unmistakably declared: “whereby we must be saved.” This is not one option among many, but the sole divine necessity. Humanity’s condition is such that only Christ, crucified and risen, can reconcile sinners to God. To reject Him is to remain without hope.

These words of Peter call the church to clarity, confidence, and compassion. In a pluralistic age that resists exclusivity, the church must lovingly yet firmly confess that Christ alone saves. A church that abandons the exclusivity of the Gospel does not broaden the way of salvation; it obscures it, leaving sinners comforted in error and unprepared to meet God. To deny or dilute the sole sufficiency of Christ for salvation is not theological generosity but spiritual betrayal, for it robs sinners of the only saving hope God has given in Christ.

Our hope rests not in a system or a sentiment, but in a living Saviour whose name alone brings salvation.

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