That is exactly the verse I was referring to. Thanks for your wonderful post. I have a Baptist background and that perspective sounds a lot like "Once Saved Always Saved". If this is the case, do we lose our free will upon becoming Christians?
Yes this does teach "eternal and secured salvation" the old "once saved always saved" doctrine. Before I go further I would like to point out that the idea of eternal security is not a license to sin. Paul saw something like this reasoning in Romans when he was teaching about the grace of God abounding where sin abounds and he the question he anticipates is; "Are we to continue to sin that grace may abound?". The mind set is the same in the misuse of eternal security, if I am secure in my salvation does that mean I can go on sinning. Paul says "God forbid" and then goes on in chapt. 6 of Romans to explain. The sin he is referencing, by the way is habitual or a lifestyle of sin and not the individual acts of weakness we all succumb to from time to time.
In my early years as a serving Christian, I ran into situations from time to time that made me question whether or not some people who claimed to be saved and professed the name of Christ were "really saved" since the things the did were not compatible with Christian living. In later years after studying God's word and different classes in college, I am convinced that one can not turn to God unless He chooses you: (Romans 8:28-30). Once he chooses and we accept, He will not loose us (Romans 5:7-10). Also, the verse I gave in my previous post say nothing can take us out of Christ's hand.
Now, the issue of will. When referring to the will of God, will is defined as an "active choice". And I think the will of man would be the same definition. There seems to be a difference in the act of choosing which does not necessarily include an action and the exercising of our will which does always include action of some sort. To will something involves desire and planning and action and is much more personal. For instance some one can ask me a question on a survey and offer me the choice of a. or b., and I can say "I choose a". I have not acted on the choice, I have simply made a selection known. However, when I exercise my will, it must involve action.
So, when I desire to respond to God's call it is more than a sterile choice, it is a desire that must be satisfied. I did not turn to God because of my own desire first; I could not have sought Him first because I was spiritually dead and when something is dead it cannot respond to any stimulus. The only way then for me to respond was by His regenerating me back to spiritual life:
The word regeneration (Gk. paliggenesia) appears only twice in the New Testament. Once is used eschatologically, of the renewing of the world in the time of the Messiah (Matt. 19:28), the second usage is of the rebirth of a redeemed person (Titus 3:5). Regeneration should be distinguished from conversion.
Conversion refers to the response of the human being to Gods offer of salvation and approach to man. Regeneration is the other side of conversion. It is Gods doing. In regeneration the soul is passive; in conversion, it is active. Regeneration may be defined as the communication of divine life to the soul
as the impartation of a new nature
or heart
and the production of a new creation.
Succinctly stated, to regenerate means to impart life. Regeneration is the act whereby God imparts life to the one who believes.
The Moody Handbook of Theology.
As far as I can see, once the free will is exercised, there is no danger of what the Arminians teach and that is; we can will to receive salvation and we can forfeit salvation as an act of our will or through specific sins.
You could not have responded to God in any positive fashion on your own volition, it was because He chose you. He marked you our from eternity past (Eph. 1:4).
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