I am beginning to think either you are not reading my posts, or just skimming over them, or not taking the time to understand what I am proposing to you. I said that we both agree that no one is saved without God's Grace, are you in agreement with this? But it's the how, that Grace saves. You keep going around and around, instead of facing this head on. In your paradigm Grace is not effectual, because Grace does not violate the human will. So, then what causes people to be saved, if Grace is not effectual? To say it another way, since Grace cannot violate human will, then it cannot be Grace but something intrinsic that lies within the person apart from Grace that saves. This is the dilemma you face.
So, please, once again I ask, what is the cause of a person being saved?
Grace and our cooperation with it.
Again, you're drowning and someone throws you a life preserver. You don't throw yourself the life preserver, you don't generate the life preserver, the life preserver is not intrinsic to you. But without it you will drown. God gives you sufficient grace to say, "yes", but you can still say "no". And that's where justice/righteousness enters the scene. Because faith, hope, and love are all gifts, but gifts that we can
reject. To the extent that we accept and express and act upon them, our justice/righteousness takes root and begins to blossom. Abraham was declared righteous because faith in God really
is the
first right thing a man can do. That faith, itself, was a gift of grace-so it's all a work of God's, but a
patient work. He's still
creating, something
noble and grand, something like Himself, something greater than He began with as we participate in that creating. Jesus is the first-born of creation. He's the true way to godliness, without which we have no life. Take the time to re-read Colossians. It's both encouragement-and a warning-to continue to remain in Him and follow Him in His ways.
Adam
could've said "yes" in Eden. Otherwise, God, Himself, is directly blameworthy for all sin/evil,
gratuitous evil I might add in that case. But the world that Adam found himself in as a result of his disobedience is a place of
training, for the will of man; that's why it’s taken so much time-so many centuries. God allowed man to touch the hot stove for a
reason, ultimately for our highest good, presumably a greater good than all the evil that this world has experienced due to the Fall of man.
Again, like a good parent God is drawing the best out of us which begins with the acknowledgment of a simple truth that Adam denied: that man is creature, and God is the Creator. Until then there's no distinction in our minds; man is his own "god", IOW.
So there’s a
reason that God didn’t simply prevent Adam from sinning and falling. There’s a
reason why God cast us, or allowed us to cast ourselves, into a world autonomous from Him and from the abundant life and love that only He can supply. There’s a reason God wanted man to experience the law, and experience failure at fulfilling it. There’s a reason that Jesus would come when He did, in the “fulness of time”. This world,
itself, is grace, an aspect of it. God never abandoned man here but began His work of cultivating humankind, of gracing us, forming us,
informing us, both by our personal experience in this messy schoolhouse of a world and by His direct revelation, revealing Himself and His will to us as we we’re able to receive it. Only when Jesus came was man just barely becoming ready to receive the full light, while many still preferred darkness instead: darkness, and the pride it stems from, rather than light, and the humility it takes to receive it. And it works!
This world developed in me a hunger and thirst for truth, for justice, for righteousness, for hope in a dark and hopeless world. Have you been a victim here, an addict, a victimizer, a sinner? This world is tailor-made to help drive you to experience and to choose good over evil, life over death, light over darkness when the light is shown to you. Or not: some will, some won’t. Anyway, consider that the following passage and its requirements has not changed one iota under the new covenant:
“
He has shown you, O mortal, what is good.
And what does the Lord require of you?
To act justly and to love mercy
and to walk humbly[a] with your God.” Micha 6:8
Your position is all placed on randomness of a chaotic world that you hope will come to it senses and save itself. But I truly understand why you think this way. Because you have a weak view of the gravity of sin. You must then agree with Semi-Pelagianism, correct? Where fallen man is not sinful or evil, but that mankind is intrinsically good and able to achieve their own salvation, because God will not dare violate their wills, even though their wills are bound to their sinful desires. Like telling a heroin or fentanyl addict to stop right now and say no to drugs. What desire do they possess right now? Something first must happen for them to change their minds and lives.
God wouldn’t have given man the freedom to disobey Him if He didn’t want that faculty to be used
correctly, rather than abused. Have you ever
walked with a drug addict on their path to recovery? It doesn’t happen by magic, overnight, even though much prayer is part of the struggle to overcome that slavery in my experience. What “happens” to them is they get sick of their lives, like a prodigal who becomes jaded by the pigsty that he’s in. Now, when they begin to
want a better life, they become more malleable clay. Grace
is magic in a sense, but God does not wish to overwhelm and heal this world all at once. We
struggle in order to come to see clearer and clearer His wisdom and our need for it, for
Him, even though He obviously
could change things all at once-and even though that would immediately end all of the human misery experienced in this life. And the more we
do struggle, and the more we accept and act upon His magic, His grace, then the more convicted we become and the surer our calling and election will be- as we draw nearer to Him and grow in His likeness, IOW. God wants us to
experience sin and death- for a
reason. It’s to help elicit that “yes”, that agreement with Him, that faith while understanding
why it's so important, so crucial. That’s how it works in real life.