@TribulationSigns @DavidPT @jgr @grafted branch @Douggg
I've been thinking about this expression "Professed followers of Christ" that came up in this thread, and I don't actually agree with its basic premise with regards to what sort of believers are in the
naos, and that those in the outer court of the Gentiles can be defined as "professed Christians", for the following reasons:
1. No one is a Christian because of anything they did. People are Christians
* Because of what Jesus did; and
* Because they believe it (John 3:18)
2. Very few people have the ability to keep up the facade for a prolonged period of time if they are
pretending to believe something they don't actually believe, and people who do this will always have a motive: Maybe a bloke who does not believe in Jesus, but desires a lady who he learns is a Christian, then starts going to church (to her church, of course) to get to meet her. He pretends to be a Christian and manages to keep up the facade for a while, in order to impress her (or, maybe someone for whom church is a better sort of "social club" for them to belong to than the pub or some other
club where there's a lot of drinking and swearing and adultery taking place).
But it takes a person with a special ability to keep up the facade for a prolonged period of time.
3. There are many
who believe in Jesus, believe that He died for them on the cross and rose again from the dead, and who are saved by grace, but this does not of necessity mean that they are
all lovers of truth.
Look around you: How many Christians who believe in Jesus do you think have a (truly) deep desire to:
(a) understand
the Bible; and
(b) be sure that they
correctly understand what
the Bible teaches; and hence
( c ) do not follow fads or one wind of doctrine after another, or do not believe
what their human imaginations prefer the Bible to be saying; and
(d) do not continuously and without conscience loosely compromise with sinful behaviors wherever and whenever they please, as often as they please (because, after all, you know, OSAS)?
(Please note: I'm not saying that anyone who believes in OSAS is therefore given to lawlessness).
Everyone fails at some point
at times. No Christian is perfect and perfectly sinless. But are they
not Christians
if they fail continuously on an almost permanent basis in any or all of the above?
Truly, we can't actually say that, because if they actually
do believe the gospel, and actually
do believe in Jesus, we would ourselves be denying that our salvation was paid for by the blood of Christ, and that we cannot add to it, and that
believing on Him is what saves us.
But now think of the teaching in some mega churches and the practices that have taken place over the last few decades alone (hysterical laughing, fake healing, adultery of Pastors, etc etc etc) and consider the teaching of the latter rain movement and the "manifest sons of God" etc.
Do
none of these people in these churches and movements believe in Jesus? Are they all
pretending that they (actually do believe) in Jesus, and that He died for our sin and rose again from the dead?
I believe very, very few of them (if any)
do not believe in Jesus, and they know and understand that no one is a Christian because of anything
they did. People are Christians:
* Because of what
Jesus did for us; and
* Because we believe it (John 3:18)
So why are some Christians being so easy with:
(a) following all sorts of false doctrines, and
refusing to hear when the biblical truth regarding prosperity doctrines, name it a claim it etc etc etc is pointed out to them (2 Timothy 4:3; Titus 1:9);
(b) sin?
Aside from the fact that (quite probably) underpinning all the above is a belief in OSAS, if a person actually does believe in Jesus, does believe the gospel, and does believe the basic tenets of the faith of Jesus and of His apostles, then they
are in Christ,
i.e in the "naos".
The man of sin will seat himself in the naos.
2 Thessalonians 2
7 For
the mystery of lawlessness is already working, only he is now holding back until it comes out of the midst.
8 And then
the lawless one will be revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the breath of His mouth and shall destroy with the brightness of His coming,
9 whose coming is according to the working of Satan with all power and signs and
lying wonders,
10 and with all deceit of unrighteousness in those who perish, because
they did not receive the love of the truth, so that they might be saved.
11 And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie,
12 so that all those
who do not believe the truth, but delight in unrighteousness, might be condemned.
Believing in Jesus (even if we
do believe in Jesus)
is not enough for any of us to claim we love the truth:
Matthew 7
22 Many will say to Me in that day, Lord! Lord!
Did we not prophesy in Your name, and through Your name throw out demons, and through Your name do many wonderful works?
23 And then I will say to them I never knew you!
Depart from Me, those working lawlessness!
lawlessness is the opposite of
legalism, and it's akin to
antinomianism.
1.
Legalism is believing that
that law which is the shadow of things to come (Christ)
must or
ought to be obeyed, or the belief that salvation
can be somehow earned, or the belief that obeying the law or the letter of the law (or doing good works) somehow
contributes to the cost Christ paid for our salvation.
2.
Lawlessness is carelessness with sin, and also
believing what we please "because Jesus paid for our salvation and we cannot add to it, so we are safe" (i.e underpinning lawlessness is a belief in OSAS). I think it can be almost 100% guaranteed that
lawlessness, when practiced by those who
actually do believe in Jesus, will always have OSAS underpinning it. It helps Christians to not have a healthy fear of God (2 Corinthians 5:11), and it also helps to sear the conscience (2 Timothy 4:2).
Please note: By no means does this mean that everyone who believes in OSAS is given to lawlessness.
"Professed Christians" outside?
I don't believe that those who are in the naos are the "real" Christians and that there are "professed Christians" outside, in the court of the Gentiles.
Rather, I believe that
there has always been a part of God's elect, in the days of the Old Testament as well as in the days of the New Testament,
that is a harlot. In the days of the New Testament there is a harlot group who is
in the naos through their faith in Christ.
The man of sin, the
lawless one, will seat himself in the
naos (not in the outer court).
2 Thessalonians 2
9 whose coming is according to the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders,
10 and with all deceit of unrighteousness in those who perish,
because they did not receive the love of the truth, so that they might be saved.
11 And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie,
12 so that all those
who do not believe the truth, but delight in unrighteousness, might be condemned.