nobdysfool
The original! Accept no substitutes!
- Feb 23, 2003
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Originally Posted by BenCan a Christian HAVE sin, but still ENTER Heaven? You seem to be saying "yes"; of course from Scripture I find an emphatic "no"...
Posted by NBF:All sins --- past, AND FUTURE?
Then you deny that their sins have been forgiven, unless they do something more in addition to what Christ did in bearing the penalty for them.
Question: Are all the sins of a Believer forgiven?
Man: "God, forgive me for the man I killed yesterday, and the man I'm gonna kill tomorrow."
God: "Get lost." (Depart from Me, you who practice wickedness; I never knew you.")
Notice how he did not answer the question. What we can deduce from Ben's "non-answer" is that he does not believe that all of a Believer's sins are forgiven, unless they add to Christ's work. Notice also that he tried to twist my question around, to make it appear that I was advocating knowingly planning sins in the future. That is not what I was saying, or implying. He's trying to set things up for the specious "anti-nomian" charge against Calvinism.
Every Christian has to deal with sin every day. Now Ben would have us believe that those sins are unforgiven, even though he has believed on Christ, and received the forgiveness of his sins, which Christ bought with His Own Blood. Ben would have us believe that unless one consciously asks forgiveness (repents) of every sin he commits, after being saved, those sins will be held against him, and he will not be covered, and will be held accountable for those sins, even though Christ already died for them.
What this shows is that Ben does not understand what it means to be "in Christ', and does not understand Justification. A christian doesn't "have" sin any longer. Christ dealt with ALL of the Believer's sins. They are ALL under the Blood. If they weren't, the Believer would still be lost.
Ben's non-answer to my question should be ignored because it does not addres the question. It is an avoidance tactic.
Posted by NBF:
Judicially, the Christian is freed from sin. Their sins are not counted against them. So in that sense a Christian has no sin that God will judge him for. Or do you not understand what Christ did, and how it is applied to the Believer? Have you forgotten, in your haste to oppose Calvinists at every point, no matter what, in direct contradiction to your stated desire that we all deal respectfully and graciously with each other?
Judicially, the Christian is freed from sin. Their sins are not counted against them. So in that sense a Christian has no sin that God will judge him for. Or do you not understand what Christ did, and how it is applied to the Believer? Have you forgotten, in your haste to oppose Calvinists at every point, no matter what, in direct contradiction to your stated desire that we all deal respectfully and graciously with each other?
Ben said:Have you forgotten Heb10:26? If WE continue sinning willfully (no repentance!), Jesus' sacrifice no longer covers us! WE can expect judgment and fire!
So we must add to Christ's work or we won't be saved? Is that it?
Posted by NBF:
It's pretty clear that it's you who isn't listening, and avoiding the tough questions.
It's pretty clear that it's you who isn't listening, and avoiding the tough questions.
Ben said:These last posts are filled with tough questions; you cannot answer them. Though I'd like you to at least try...
Sure, just as soon as you answer this one:
Seems Ben can't decide whether faith is simultaneous with the various parts of salvation, or the cause of them. Hence, his confusion about regeneration.
Here is what Ben has not, and will not answer: If Belief is simultaneous with repentance, justification, sanctification, regeneration, and adoption, as he claims, then faith cannot be "causal" to those things, because the effect cannot be simultaneous with its cause, nor can the cause be its own effect. If faith is equivalent to repentance, justification, sanctification, regeneration, and adoption, then it is the effect, along with those other things, and cannot be the cause. The cause can only be something or Someone other than the effect, i.e. God.
If, however, faith is the cause of repentance, justification, sanctification, regeneration and adoption, then it logically follows that faith precedes repentance, justification, sanctification, regeneration, and adoption, and there is a period of time where the following are true, no matter how short that time may be:
- There is a time when men believe but are not justified
- There is a time when men believe but are still children of the devil
- There is a time when men believe but are not born again
- There is a time when men believe but are not adopted sons of God
- There is a time when men believe but are not in Christ
- There is a time when men believe but are not elect
- There is a time when men believe but are not saved
As can clearly be seen, Ben has a problem in his theology. If faith is causal to salvation, then the above list applies, and he must explain how these things can be, because they flow logically from his contention that faith is "causal" to one's salvation. This presents a problem, because he cannot demonstrate how the unregenerate can believe savingly without the prior working of the Holy Spirit to convict them, which implies a regenerated heart.
If, however, faith is simultaneous to the other components of salvation, and equivalent and interchangeable, as Ben has said on occasion, then Monergism is logically upheld, seeing that the cause is not the effect (salvation), and no effect can exist without a cause. Ben's theology stands in contradiction to that fact.
This shows a fatal flaw at the heart of Responsible Grace. All of the attacks and bluff and bluster against Predestination, and "Sovereign Regeneration" (which begs the question, if God does not Sovereignly regenerate, then who does?) are a huge smokescreen to hide the fact that Responsible Grace has this huge, fatal flaw, which I have detailed above. The question is, will Ben address this?
Ben said:The direction is this --- is "regeneration" resistible, or not?
Posted by NBF:
False question. Regeneration is a sovereign act of God, and is therefore not resistible. It's absurd to think otherwise. You certainly cannot regenerate your self, nor did you, so your declarations that "sovereign regeneration is wrong" are themselves wrong.
False question. Regeneration is a sovereign act of God, and is therefore not resistible. It's absurd to think otherwise. You certainly cannot regenerate your self, nor did you, so your declarations that "sovereign regeneration is wrong" are themselves wrong.
Ben said:We cannot "save ourselves" either, yet Paul says that in 1Tim4:16.
If regeneration is not resistible, how can we sin? Is God not sovereign enough in His regeneration of us?
Why are you so intent on resisting God? That's a cardinal point with you. Resisting God is rebellion, which scripture says is "as the sin of witchcraft." You are promoting rebellion against God, Ben.
The Truth is, if God regenerates you, He doesn't ask your permission, or try to convince you beforehand. He regenerates you, and your life is changed. That's His prerogative, His choice, and His Right.
Regeneration is not unto perfection. Jesus said "no teacher is greater than his master". Jesus, our Master, learned obedience by the things He suffered. So must we. Regeneration does not make us perfect, it makes us able to walk with Christ, and to learn obedience to God, just as He did. He didn't have a sin nature to deal with, but we do.
Ben said:The answer is that regeneration is BY faith, and therefore faith can become unbelief --- the word "fall" in 1Cor10:12, also means "fall from regeneration".
No, Regeneration is by the Sovereign Will of God, UNTO faith in Him. You cannot 'fall from regeneration", any more than you can "unbirth" yourself.
Posted by NBF:
If God did not, by an act of His Sovereign Will, regenerate you, then who did?
If God did not, by an act of His Sovereign Will, regenerate you, then who did?
Ben said:What if regeneration is accomplished in response to my faith; does that conflict Scripture? No. Does that conflict God's sovereignty? No.
Regeneration is never accomplished that way. I have explained this many times, as have others. The heart must be regenerated to be able to believe savingly on Christ. Faith is a response to regeneration, not its cause. Both of you questions do conflict scripture, rightly divided.
Posted by NBF:
You're trying to frame the entire argument as either/or, black/white, anything but what scripture actually says.
2 Peter 2:9 is the answer, and it clearly shows that it is God who preserves us, and not our own efforts exclusively, like you falsely teach.
2Pe 2:9 then the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from trials, and to keep the unrighteous under punishment until the day of judgment,
You're trying to frame the entire argument as either/or, black/white, anything but what scripture actually says.
2 Peter 2:9 is the answer, and it clearly shows that it is God who preserves us, and not our own efforts exclusively, like you falsely teach.
2Pe 2:9 then the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from trials, and to keep the unrighteous under punishment until the day of judgment,
Ben said:Nice! A Scripture citation! Let's discuss it.
"God is ABLE to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in the presence of His glory blameless with great joy.
Building YOURSELVES in holy faith, KEEP YOURSELVES in the love of God." Jude24, 20-21
As usual, you gloss right over God's promise, and focus on our response. The only reason we are able to keep ourselves in the faith, is because God rescues us from trials, and keeps us from stumbling, and leads us by His Spirit, even when we don't think He's doing so. He says nothing can separate us from the Love of God, and your reply is "not really", we can separate ourselves, because we can resist God. Do you have any idea of how foolish that sounds, to "resist God" as though your resistance could actually separate you from Him....Didn't work too good for Saul on the road to Damascus, did it?
Ben said:Is the letter of Jude RIGHT, or WRONG? This is an "either/or" question, if you do not answer then I accept that you concede the point.
Jude is right, but not the way you try to twist what Jude said. And, if you don't answer the questions I put in this post, then you will have conceded that Responsible grace has a fatal flaw. Turnabout is fair play, Ben. You have left other posts unanswered, so I am taking it that you have conceded them.
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