Hello everyone!
I just wanted to know what being saved and what being born again means?
Thanks
I just wanted to know what being saved and what being born again means?
Thanks
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Hello everyone!
I just wanted to know what being saved and what being born again means?
Thanks![]()
Hello everyone!
I just wanted to know what being saved and what being born again means?
Thanks![]()
Do you mean like let's say someone does one good action once, they get saved and are allowed to go to Heaven and they don't need to prove they "deserve" to goSalvation is something God does to help us. Everyone agrees with that. But for some people the focus of salvation is avoiding hell. For others (including Jesus, in my view) it's a broader concept. Salvation describes God's whole activity to renew us, and all of creation. The first group will tend to see someone being saved as a one-time event, when they do something that qualifies them to go to heaven. The others will see it as a process that takes our whole lives.
Do you mean like let's say someone does one good action once, they get saved and are allowed to go to Heaven and they don't need to prove they "deserve" to go
to Heaven anymore? And does it mean the others never feel sure to be saved?
In your opinion, are you saved and how do you know it?
Be aware that different Christians understand these terms in somewhat different ways.
Salvation is something God does to help us. Everyone agrees with that. But for some people the focus of salvation is avoiding hell. For others (including Jesus, in my view) it's a broader concept. Salvation describes God's whole activity to renew us, and all of creation. The first group will tend to see someone being saved as a one-time event, when they do something that qualifies them to go to heaven. The others will see it as a process that takes our whole lives.
Reformed theology uses salvation in the broader sense. It uses "justification" to refer to our status as one of God's people, and salvation to the whole work of renewing us. While being one of God's people does mean that we will be with God eternally, that's not all it means, and focusing on just that one thing can lead to a lop-sided Christianity.
Similarly, being born again is seen by different people in different ways. Everyone agrees that becoming a follower of Jesus means that we have a new life, not just physical life but spiritual life, from the Holy Spirit. But the term is sometimes used by folks who think everyone follows the same path to being a Christian, and that that always involves a moment when we experience a change from unsaved to saved, i.e. that we are born again. I think this is misleading. Plenty of Christians grow up as part of the Church and never really experience life without Christ. Those people still need to take responsibility for their own faith, but they may well come to do so gradually as they mature, and not have a single moment in which they are born again. Such people can still experience the second, spiritual, life. Just not at a single moment.
This seems like it might be a response to me. If so, no that's not what I mean.
First, I disagree with this once-only concept of "saved." Salvation, as I noted above, it much broader than that.
As for justification, which recognizes our status before God, the classic Reformed position is that this is not a consequence of "one good action," at least not by us. Being right with God is a result of Christ dying, and us being grafted into him. Paul sees this as part of a faithful life. Both he and Jesus seem to see faithful Christians as people who have "repented", or reoriented their lives towards God. It is this basic faithful orientation that show us as justified.
There are differences among Protestants whether this change is unilaterally due to the action of the Holy Spirit in us, or whether we have some responsibility for it. But none of us think that we're justified because of a "good action."
Dear Alexandra Chris TD. I know hat I am saved, and to love all others, ( my neighbour) is becoming easier and easier, in fact, I am gradually changing into a different, more loving and caring person. Jesus is always ready to help and guide, and when I do forget and stumble, God always forgives me and I carry on trying to be the person, which God wants me to be. People around me notice and are very kind and loving, too. I say this with love, Alexandra. Greetings from Emmy, your sister in Christ. May I wish you and your loved ones: Merry Christmas and a blessed New Year.
From how I see it, salvation is an on going thing, something I strive for day in and day out, working to be more and more in communion with God. As for being born again. I believe and have been taught that is at baptism. You are born again in water, your old life is washed away and a new life comes out. When Jesus was baptized, he was "born again" the the Holy Spirit ascended upon him.
Thanks your answers!
I went to church the other day and took some flyers. One was about the Holy Spirit. Here's what it said:
"The Holy Spirit was there since the Creation:
"And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters." (Genesis 1,2).
Therefore the Holy Spirit is in every man. The presence of the Holy Spirit in us is what constitutes us in our human nature (what makes us human beings/men), no man is excluded from it but each man has his own way to respond to it. God's ways are various like the situations in our lives. There aren't two similar lives and God's love adapt itself to every one of them."
I've tried translating it the best way I could.
What do you think about this?
It seems quite in contraction with a lot of your statements.