Is Faith a gift from God or not? Can you define your answer to this question in detail, please, thank you. How does God call sinners? Can you define this for me, in detail? BTW, where is the preaching of the Law to sinners, here? The Law must be preached prior to the Gospel. The Law strips the sinner of any hope or life. The Law exposes the sinful concupiscence; the fallen nature of mankind; of the individual sinner before a Holy God. You miss two very crucial biblical truths here. In the other post you only point to the inward activity of man; instead of pointing the sinner outward to Christ and his finished works. Instead you goat and boast about man's godly acts. And here in this post the void of the Law that condemns sinners because of their concupiscence under the Law.
This is why fhansen you have a convoluted piece-meal theology. A mosh posh Frankenstein monster of the Law/Gospel (Gos-law-pel). That is no Gospel at all. No good news for the ungodly.
The reason you’re confused is because it’s not a matter of either/or, but both/and, with God initiating and man responding, or
not responding. So, both God’s calling and the faith to respond are gifts of grace, as I’ve maintained. But
GRACE IS RESISTBLE; gifts can be rejected. He gives everything we need to believe, with even creation, itself, testifying to His existence, so that
no one has excuse for unbelief. Everything Jesus said and did reveals the true God and is a call to faith while the Holy Spirit works within to move and draw us to it. The cross emphatically testifies to His unfathomable love, calling men to love in return. Some will respond and some won’t. And even when we
do assent, we may turn back away later, which the bible speaks of and warns us about. We may be like the Jewish leaders in John 12:42 who believed but wouldn’t profess it because they loved the praise of men more than the praise of God. We may be rocky soil, we may not come when He beckons all who are weary to come, or we may look back after putting our hand to the plow. We may reject the heavenly gift after tasting it, we may reject Christ after coming to know Him and escaping the pollution of the world, returning to the flesh. Will we remain in Him, apart from Whom we can do nothing? These are all biblical instances of grace given and grace resisted, or warnings against resisting.
Faith is a turning away from sin and the world and turning
to God. I apologize if you’ve answered this already but I’m not sure if you’ve given a direct answer. Since you believe-I think- that justification consists of a declared righteousness rather than righteousness given, can a believer sin wantonly, persistently and expect to enter heaven?
Or is sin simply, automatically overcome in a believer?
Christ’s gospel isn’t convoluted; it’s simple. You shall love the Lord your God with your whole heart, soul, mind, and strength and your neighbor as yourself. That hasn’t changed one bit with the new covenant. To the extent that you achieve this, you have become who you were created to be. That love, not the law, can make you right IOW, and God is the only way to that love. “Apart from Me you can do nothing.” Apart from love you
are nothing (1Cor 13:2).
That’s the heart of the gospel. Turn to Him in faith and you begin that journey. It’s all about who you fellowship with. Reconciliation with God is not merely some forensic or legalistic matter; it’s to
enter union with Him. That connection to the Vine is the basis of man’s righteousness, as opposed to the unjust state of alienation from Him that Adam realized for humanity. That’s how faith justifies, by restored relationship with our Creator as we finally acknowledge His existence and our dependence on Him, not on ourselves.
And, again, God didn’t suddenly decide to create little Christian automatons with the advent of His Son who could only choose and respond rightly after regenerating them. He could’ve done
that at the very beginning of creation. Grace is resistible, but you keep obstinately resisting that fact.
Nor did He remove the obligation from man to be personally righteous and live accordingly. We just need
Him in order to do it. Adam was wrong.
What does this mean? Are you saying that our righteousness is because of Christ's righteousness? If so, I agree, if not, then you do not understand the righteousness given in the Gospel promise. And rely on, to establish your own righteousness, instead of submitting to the righteousness of God given freely in Christ through Faith Alone!
The righteousness of Christ is the righteousness given to us-
that we are to follow Him in!!!
How on earth are you cooperating with His Work? Do you not see that you are trying to find glory and boasting in your deeds???? Either Christ finished it all for God's people or not. There's no in between here.
Why/how can anyone boast in simply doing the right thing, that which they're supposed to do and are now enabled to do by the Spirit as a result of
humbly turning to God in faith???
It's in our fallen state, sir, that God Justifies the ungodly (
Rom. 4:5).
Yes-that's what i said-and have been constantly saying...sir. You really need to perform some due diligence in studying the history of the Christian faith. Otherwise you'll continue to myopically hang onto a few isolated concepts gleaned from Scripture centuries after the fact and fail to receive the full understanding of the faith. I know the gospel- and don't wish to keep repeating the same things.