- Dec 17, 2004
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So like, would you consider this person to be a biblically vertified 'believer'? I.e. not necessarily one that believes in all biblical truths, but one the bible would consider a believer hence one we are allowed to associate with. For we are told to be wary of those that call themselves believers yet are not. I will give some examples here;
[bible]1 Corinthians 5:9-10[/bible]
[bible]2 Corinthians 6:14[/bible]
[bible]Ephesians 5:6-11[/bible]
This person, they believe in Christ. They believe that he came to earth to die for the sake of our sins. That he is alive and he helps us lead a sinless nice. The individual accepts they are a sinful creature and asks God for forgiveness every day.
Heres the catch: they do not believe in an afterlife. As such, they believe that Jesus is our saviour, not because he saved us from the penalty we all think of- either death or eternal torture, depending on how you fly. But rather, he saved us from a sadder existence on this earth. Through living a life on earth sinless to show us and help us all then ending up dying for this on the cross, he was a sacrifice. However, his sacrifice didn't result in eternal life. Rather, it just opened an avenue for us to get closer to God.
The reason they are unsure on the afterlife issue, is because they are unsure on the bibles full credibility. They believe that some of it will be true but some of it won't be true. They are still nutting out their belief, but this is how it stands. They are however, extremely dedicated to Christ. When they feel convicted on a sin (e.g. taking his name in vain and lying particularly) they immediately stop doing that. They read the bible too, just are unsure on everything being correct in it. They love God, and put him first in their life. If anything interferes with God, they will put an end to it.
Would this count?
I personally believe that people from all denominations will be counted as saved and true believers at the end of time. If they believe in Christ Jesus, and make themselves new people through him through repenting their sin and relying on him to help them not sin as Christ was a sacrifice for our sins so that we may be saved from the penalty of sin.
They may get theology wrong, but if their heart is right and they would accept correct theology if it was shown to be right to them, I think they would count as saved. Do you? God works with us at our different situations. This person is new to the faith. They are growing. But their heart is in the right place. They are putting Christ first in their life, in all they do. They do not believe in baptism, though, not because they wouldn't do it, but it doesn't to them feel like God is convicting them on that point. Would they still be saved?
I am looking for scriptural evidence here
This person- their morals are good (bar of course, things like the Sabbath) yet I have trouble saying that not believing in the blessed hope of the afterlife would stop them from being considered a true believer- even saved.
[bible]Romans 10:9[/bible]
It is believing that Christ came to die for our sins and believing in his existence and wanting to live our lives for him and giving ourselves for him- letting him take control of our lives- being repentant of sin and wishing to stop with his help- it is this that makes one a Christian and saved, NOT aspects of theology. For we will all probably be ignorant of some of Gods laws or even know them yet not feel convicted and break them anyway- but if we would truly obey them then THIS is what makes us a Christian.
[bible]1 Corinthians 5:9-10[/bible]
[bible]2 Corinthians 6:14[/bible]
[bible]Ephesians 5:6-11[/bible]
This person, they believe in Christ. They believe that he came to earth to die for the sake of our sins. That he is alive and he helps us lead a sinless nice. The individual accepts they are a sinful creature and asks God for forgiveness every day.
Heres the catch: they do not believe in an afterlife. As such, they believe that Jesus is our saviour, not because he saved us from the penalty we all think of- either death or eternal torture, depending on how you fly. But rather, he saved us from a sadder existence on this earth. Through living a life on earth sinless to show us and help us all then ending up dying for this on the cross, he was a sacrifice. However, his sacrifice didn't result in eternal life. Rather, it just opened an avenue for us to get closer to God.
The reason they are unsure on the afterlife issue, is because they are unsure on the bibles full credibility. They believe that some of it will be true but some of it won't be true. They are still nutting out their belief, but this is how it stands. They are however, extremely dedicated to Christ. When they feel convicted on a sin (e.g. taking his name in vain and lying particularly) they immediately stop doing that. They read the bible too, just are unsure on everything being correct in it. They love God, and put him first in their life. If anything interferes with God, they will put an end to it.
Would this count?
I personally believe that people from all denominations will be counted as saved and true believers at the end of time. If they believe in Christ Jesus, and make themselves new people through him through repenting their sin and relying on him to help them not sin as Christ was a sacrifice for our sins so that we may be saved from the penalty of sin.
They may get theology wrong, but if their heart is right and they would accept correct theology if it was shown to be right to them, I think they would count as saved. Do you? God works with us at our different situations. This person is new to the faith. They are growing. But their heart is in the right place. They are putting Christ first in their life, in all they do. They do not believe in baptism, though, not because they wouldn't do it, but it doesn't to them feel like God is convicting them on that point. Would they still be saved?
I am looking for scriptural evidence here
This person- their morals are good (bar of course, things like the Sabbath) yet I have trouble saying that not believing in the blessed hope of the afterlife would stop them from being considered a true believer- even saved.
[bible]Romans 10:9[/bible]
It is believing that Christ came to die for our sins and believing in his existence and wanting to live our lives for him and giving ourselves for him- letting him take control of our lives- being repentant of sin and wishing to stop with his help- it is this that makes one a Christian and saved, NOT aspects of theology. For we will all probably be ignorant of some of Gods laws or even know them yet not feel convicted and break them anyway- but if we would truly obey them then THIS is what makes us a Christian.