- Jul 22, 2014
- 41,685
- 7,908
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Non-Denom
- Marital Status
- Married
What you have done is to try and overwhelm Bible factual teachings with the volume of words.
The Bible is filled with many words, that does not mean it is invalid because it has many words within it. So your argument here is flawed.
You said:I will say however that not one single Bible verse you posted say that we as humans can loose our salvation. Every single one of those verses given the proper context say something entirely different than what YOU want them to say.
Well, if the roles were reversed, I would attempt to deal with explaining a handful of these verses and not just one of them. Anyways, technically speaking, Eternal Security is taught in the Scriptures.
For the devil said to Eve in regards to her breaking God’s command,
“Yea, ye shall not surely die.” (Genesis 3:4).
Strange, how this same kind of thinking or belief (i.e. Eternal Security) is being taught today in the churches.
In addition, Eternal Security violates basic morality, as well. This is why you cannot make a parable or real world example out of Eternal Security. Yet, the Canaanite woman was able to expound upon Jesus’s parable with a continued parable of her own and Jesus commended her for faith by doing so.
What is basic morality? Basic morality is thinking and doing what is right. God cannot agree with Eternal Security because that would mean God would have to agree with a believer thinking that it is okay to sin and still be saved on some level. However, God cannot do that because He is holy, righteous, and good.
You said:But just for YOUR sake...
Don’t defend your position for me alone. Do it for others (who will later come across this thread and read it later on).
You said:I will speak to you on Hebrews 6:4-8 as it is one you listed and one that people of your thinking like to use to say we can loose our salvation.
What's astonishing to me is how easy this verse actually is to understand. When reading the Bible, we always have to remember that each book is written to a specific people for a specific reason to say a specific thing.
Hebrews was written to a Jewish audience. More specifically, it was written to a Christian Jewish audience. And even more specifically, it was written to Christian Jews who were being persecuted for their faith. Many of these Jews had lost their land, their jobs, or even their families. Their persecution was great. Land was very important to Jews, it was their inheritance from God.
So the loss of land was a real blow to these Jews. In the midst of their persecution a false theology began to work its way in. The thought came up that because these Jews would have been saved under the old law before Christ, that maybe they could abandon their faith in Christ and go back to the old law.
The thought was that since they were saved under the old law and that they were not persecuted that they could go back to the old sacrificial system and the old ways and still be saved. The author of Hebrews writes against this theology. He explains to these persecuted Christian Jews that the old law does not save any longer. Now that Christ has come, Salvation is found through him. This is why Hebrews was written. These are the people that it was written to.
Now, with just that simple understanding, look at again at 6:4-6 and you'll see that this verse says absolutely nothing to us about losing our Salvation and absolutely absolutely absolutely nothing about the idea that if we slip up and "fall away" from our faith that Christ will refuse to forgive us. Let's look closer:
Verse 6: ...................
"if they fall away, to be brought back to repentance, because to their loss they are crucifying the Son of God all over again and subjecting him to public disgrace."
Here, it is important to realize that when the author says "fall away" he is meaning go back to the old way. These Jews have already accepted Christ. The forgiveness for their sins is found through Christ's work on the cross. If they fall away and turn back to the old law they cannot be brought back to repentance. There is no forgiveness of sins under the old law now that Christ has been crucified. Christ paid the ultimate price, and suggesting that they don't need Christ, and thinking that they can reject what Christ did and go back to the old way would be like crucifying him all over again. This is why Christ came to give us forgiveness. Forgiveness now comes through Christ, not the old law.
As we all can see, the idea of "WE can lose our salvation" IS NOT IN THE BIBLE" but instead what we see is a lack of diligent Bible study to learn the truth of God's Word.
I do not have the time or energy to go through every verse you posted, but I can assure you that every single one of them can be properly explained when the context is applied and none of them speak to losing ones salvation.
Most of everything you said was true on Hebrews 6:4-8 (Which is taken from BIble commentators), but you are drawing the wrong conclusion so as to defend Eternal Security. Hebrews 6:4-6 is proof that once a person accepts Christ, they can fall away (apostasize) by denying Jesus and repentance. This is why they cannot renew themselves back to repentance (be saved again) if they were to go back to the old sacrificial system and deny the sacrifice of Christ. Paul says, if you seek to be justified by the Law, you have fallen from grace.
One cannto fall from grace if they never had grace to begin with.
A man cannot fall from the top of a building unless he was on the top of the building.
In other words, you cannot depart from something you never had.
Last edited:
Upvote
0