heymikey80
Quidquid Latine dictum sit, altum viditur
ContraMundum said:We get back to the old "two pictures of salvation" analogy, don't we?
Picture one says there is a boat, and you have fallen over the side, drowning. Someone on the boat throws you a life-ring, and you swim to get it, hold on and don't let go until you're safe. Without the life-ring being thrown to you, you were most certainly going to drown.
Picture two says that there is a cliff, and you have fallen to the bottom, lying dead as a plank. God must bring you to life, but it is up to you to climb back up. He will help. (There could be a modified Calvinist version of this one two, for example, you don't need to climb or something. I don't know.)
Either picture, one more synergistic than the other, still relies on God to do the saving.
Yes, but that wasn't the point. The point was grace alone; faith alone. But picture #1 has two parties involved: the one throwing, and the one working to reach the ring, hang onto it, and not let go.
It's not grace alone. It's simple as that: it's not. It's grace plus work. The grace didn't save them; it haned out an opportunity for rescue, half a path to salvation once you worked at it.
As you suspected Picture #2 has a second, basic flaw in it. As Scripture uses the illustration:
Eph 2:5-7 "... even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved), and raised us up with Him, and seated us with Him in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, so that in the ages to come He might show the surpassing riches of His grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus."
If we're doing anything, we're simply acting like we're back up there with Christ Jesus. It has nothing to do with trying to climb back up. We are sons; so we act like sons.
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