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IOW, salvation contains a certain amount of ambiguity and uncertainty. The ancient churches have always held that salvation is something thats worked out-and that a degree of fear and trembling is healthy. We can have a level of assurance, a strong level even, based on Gods trustworthiness, the observance of fruit in our lives, and even the relationship that we experience personally with Him-but not perfect certainty. As weak, limited, sin-prone humans that would border on arrogance or rash confidence. He’s trustworthy and true, while we’re the wildcard.In other words your theology contains a certain amount of ambiguity and uncertainty.
IOW, salvation contains a certain amount of ambiguity and uncertainty. The ancient churches have always held that salvation is something thats worked out-and that a degree of fear and trembling is healthy. We can have a level of assurance, a strong level even, based on Gods trustworthiness, the observance of fruit in our lives, and even the relationship that we experience personally with Him-but not perfect certainty. As weak, limited, sin-prone humans that would border on arrogance or rash confidence. He’s trustworthy and true, while we’re the wildcard.
Jesus said that He wouldn't lose any that the Father has given Him.
The OP is expressing a particular slant on the doctrine of Sola Fide, held by some at least since the time of the Reformation, in which one is forgiven/justified in Gods eyes/saved as long as they believe that they’re forgiven/justified in Gods eyes/saved. It’s to believe in ones belief, as if simply resolving to believe a certain thing makes it true in this case. Some even conceive of it is as, unless one believes that they’re forgiven/justified in Gods eyes/saved, then they are not.
Sidon addressed it here: #24
How you feel, has no effect on the BLood Atonement.
how you act or behave, has no effect on God's Grace, once you have "the Gift of salvation”
Not at all.
You are reading the verse, as if its a dictionary, but its not.
So, look at this...
"if we die with him"
So, when a person has a theology that is "im saving myself", "im keeping myself saved",, then they read this, "if we die with Him" and they see it in the natural mind and think.....>"oh, that means i have to die as a MARYTR"....
See it?
That is how you misunderstand the verse, and the rest of them you quote, as you are reading them LITERALLY, and not discerning them spiritually.
See, if all the born again have to DIE as MARTYRS, as that verse suggests, if you dont discern it, but only read it like its a phone book, then you better get busy playing the martyr for REAL, as that is what happens when you do not rightly divide the word, and instead read it as if its a NOVEL.
And the same goes for how you are only READING the rest of the verses, not discerning them, but only seeming them as literal.
See, this is why there are 40,000 denominations that all DISAGREE.
Its because people read the bible, but do not discern the verses, and then they run off and create another CULT.
The problem with teaching a symbolic verse, as LITERAL, as you are doing is that this proves that the teacher does not discern that you don't do this.... ever.
And when this person can't distinguish or understand that in the NT, you have literal verses that you teach as face value, but then you have allegory, proverbial, and symbolic, that you DONT teach as "doctrine", as you are trying to do....... what you do is mark this person, noting that they see the NT verses as all the same. ... Just words in a book.
But God does not see them as all the same, BNR32Fan.
And this is why He told the born again to "study to show yourself approved", and that means to come to the LEVEL of mastering the distinctions, between what is literal and what is not doctrine.
This is how you "rightly divide", and you do that by "spiritually discerning".
No the problem is you disregard every verse that refutes your beliefs.
I seem to recall him addressing John 15:2 or 6 a few pages back.
The analogy is close but not quite right, to the concept I mentioned at least. It's like believing that as long as one believes that their parachute won't fail, then it won't. But our trust in our parachute has nothing to do with whether or not it fails. And some have believed this way, however.I'd say rather than it being called belief in ones belief, it's more like having true faith or not. One ananolgy being that one should have the same faith in their salvation through Christ, as a skydiver has in his parachute.
Saying a verse is “symbolic” and “can’t be taken literally” is not addressing it, it’s actually just disregarding it.
Absolutely there are people who have addressed them and the most typical response is that these people were never in Christ to begin with which is a direct contradiction to what Jesus said in these verses.I didn't remember what was said. I would imagine though there are those who teach the same thing as the OP have addressed those kinds of verses. Which would be easy enough to look up to use.
I don't know much about Lordship Salvation, only enough to know that it appears to be a recognition of something often missing or wrongly understood or emphasized in parts of Protestant theology and an attempt to get back to historic Christianity-without necessarily realizing it I assume.I'm not unfamiliar with this theology. But up until now I've mostly heard it from Protestants who ironically are anti-Catholic. Their version being known as "Lordship Salvation". Which I could never quite pin down, along with what you've laid out. And I think that's because maybe it's not grounded.
Yes, one telling sign that we have eternal life is by the way we act.1 John is all about how to know that you have eternal life.
These things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God; that ye may know that ye have eternal life, and that ye may believe on the name of the Son of God." 1 John 5:13
The analogy is close but not quite right, to the concept I mentioned at least. It's like believing that as long as one believes that their parachute won't fail, then it won't. But our trust in our parachute has nothing to do with whether or not it fails. And some have believed this way, however.
I relate this to the OPs position because he tells us that to walk in the Spirit means to see oneself as free from sin, justified by God. This raises two problems. One is that Christianity deals with truth, not imagination. We aren't free from sin because we see ourselves that way regardless of the truth of the matter-as if we're failing to follow God if we see ourselves any other way. That's New Age Christianity. We're free from sin when we're free from sin.
"If you know that He is righteous, you know that everyone who does what is right has been born of Him." 1 John 2:29
The other problem involves the way in which we're made righteous. We're not righteous by merely believing that God's made me righteous, but also we're not even made righteous because God declares me to be righteous. We're righteous-and act righteously as per the quote from 1 John above-because God has actually given me righteousness, a righteousness that I can now act on and express-or not. So we're speaking of real, personal change here, that we must cooperate in. That's what walking in the Spirit means, so, again, as a true example of that walk,
“Therefore, brothers and sisters, we have an obligation—but it is not to the flesh, to live according to it. For if you live according to the flesh, you will die; but if by the Spirit you put to death the misdeeds of the body, you will live.” Rom 8:12-13
I don't know much about Lordship Salvation, only enough to know that it appears to be a recognition of something often missing or wrongly understood or emphasized in parts of Protestant theology and an attempt to get back to historic Christianity-without necessarily realizing it I assume.
Yes, one telling sign that we have eternal life is by the way we act.
“Dear children, do not let anyone lead you astray. The one who does what is right is righteous, just as He is righteous. The one who does what is sinful is of the devil, because the devil has been sinning from the beginning. The reason the Son of God appeared was to destroy the devil’s work.” 1 John 3:7-8
Properly understood this is no different in kind than Jesus words to the young man in Matt 9:17-19
If you want to enter life, keep the commandments.”
“Which ones?” he inquired.
Jesus replied, “‘You shall not murder, you shall not commit adultery, you shall not steal, you shall not give false testimony, 1honor your father and mother,’ and ‘love your neighbor as yourself.’
All of this and more are summed up by-are accomplished by-the fulfillment of the greatest commandments, to love God with our whole heart, soul, mind, and strength and our neighbor as ourselves. That's to walk by the Spirit, who, alone, can cause or work that love in us.
"And hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us." Rom 5:5
That's the true definition of righteousness and in any case demonstrates that righteousness is a gift, that we must embrace and act on, not merely an imputation.
"...not having my own righteousness from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God on the basis of faith" (Phil 3:9).
"And so he condemned sin in the flesh, in order that the righteous requirement of the law might be fully met in us, who do not live according to the flesh but according to the Spirit." Rom 8:4
Again, as the church of Christ can so wisely teach:
"At the evening of life we shall be judged on our love."
And that proceeds from a life of walking in the Spirit.
There might be a difference between your understanding and that of the OP.I gave the parachute analogy to counter the notion of "belief in belief" because I don't think that's what it is. I think what it is about is having complete pure faith in Christ as one's only hope of salvation. Calling it "belief in belief" sounds like inaccurate mockery to me.
Scripture is quite clear that grave sin keeps us from entering heaven. That's the problem. But, of course, he doesn't see himself as a sinner regardless of whether or not he is one. And that's the problem with that theology.I don't think you're getting it right. It's not that one sees oneself as free of sin. Most I know of who believe what the OP believes are acutely aware of their sin, especially those who live righteously. It's that God sees us free of sin through the blood of Jesus. Otherwise we wouldn't make it into heaven.
As verse after verse attests-we're pure only to the extent that we are pure, made pure, yet with our continuing participation.I believe what the OP is saying is that in the eyes of God, the blood, only the blood, and nothing but the blood, makes us appear pure.
Do that. Sometimes I'd like to shout that we should take off any Reformation lenses that we might filter our reading through-just for a moment-and read Romans and other writings in light of the concept that God not only forgives sin but also gives or imparts real personal righteousness, even if only in a relatively nascent and untested form at first, at justification, as we turn to Him in faith and become new creations in Christ.I'm not sure that Romans 8:12-13 is referring to obtaining everlasting life through fulfilling an obligation. I'll have to examine that along with the whole chapter.
No, Jesus never said that. He said, "if you want to be perfect..." And that's the point I've been making: God prefers perfection, of course, but doesn't demand it. He nonetheless requires change and progress in that change-an orientation on the path towards righteousness, towards love, towards perfection, towards Himself, at least sufficient to exclude such serious and anti-love sin as outlined in Galatians 5, for example, or Rev 22. The problem is that the young man couldn't stand being regarded as less than perfect-and probably wanted that perfection, an ultimate perfection that can only come from God we become His children via faith- to be attributed to himself.So in Matthew 9 when the man told Jesus that he had kept all those commandments since childhood, Jesus said "that's great, you're in!" Right? No, what Jesus said in the end that it was basically impossible for that law keeper to enter the Kingdom of Heaven. Which freaked out those who were listening. So they asked "who then can be saved?!". And Jesus said "with man it is impossible". IOW even with a man keeping all the commandments it is impossible. Only though God is it possible. That's my take anyways.
No, Jesus never said that. He said, "if you want to be perfect..." And that's the point I've been making: God prefers perfection, of course, but doesn't demand it. He nonetheless requires change and progress in that change-an orientation on the path towards righteousness, towards love, towards perfection, towards Himself, at least sufficient to exclude such serious and anti-love sin as outlined in Galatians 5, for example, or Rev 22. The problem is that the young man couldn't stand being regarded as less than perfect-and probably wanted that perfection, an ultimate perfection that can only come from God we become His children via faith- to be attributed to himself.
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