- Feb 8, 2015
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Greetings! I am a Southern Baptist and attend a Southern Baptist church. Where I live, 90% of the churches are Baptists and all of the churches my parents took me to were Baptist., so growing up, I had a very narrow taste of what Christianity was like and was unaware that there were other kinds of Christians. I was familiar with Mormonism, but never considered them Christian.
I first became aware of denominations when I attended a Seventh Day Adventists private school in the sixth and seventh grade. This is where I started learning about other groups like Adventists, Methodists, Lutherans, Catholics, etc.
The SDA taught that you could lose your salvation and eating non-kosher foods would send you to hell. I did make good friends there, though.
I had discussed the differences between Baptists and Adventists with my family and they told me that Baptists believe that you cannot lose your salvation. I was told that if you are saved, you will go to heaven no matter what, and that if you were saved in the past but go on later to commit murder, you would still go to heaven, but God would be upset but keep His promise, or that you were never saved to begin with.
I took this the wrong way and thought it meant that I could sin and it would not really matter, so I started experimenting with other religions such as Buddhism and Deism. Of course, I repented and started to study the Bible more.
To me, it seems that perseverance of saints is biblical as I believe God saves you and it is not of any works you do, and that the true believers hold on until the very end. Eternal security seems to teach that when you are saved, even if you fall away or give up your faith, you will still be saved and still go to heaven.
Southern Baptists believe salvation is through faith alone, but they do believe good works are important. They are a result of salvation, and a true believer will have a changed lifestyle as evidence that his repentance is sincere. They also teach that if you sin willingly or show no change after claiming to be saved, you were never really saved. This sounds like perseverance of saints to me.
In Southern Baptist churches, I think eternal security and perseverance of saints are used synonymously, and "Once saved, always saved, is just an oversimplified definition of it. I am sure most of them would say that true believers are eternally secure and will remain believers until the end, but still believe that avoiding sin is important. My church talks about "fake Christians" all the time. They are referring to those who claim to be saved but do nothing with their faith or live worldly lives.
What do you think? Do Southern Baptists really teach eternal security as in no matter what you do, you will never lose your salvation?
I first became aware of denominations when I attended a Seventh Day Adventists private school in the sixth and seventh grade. This is where I started learning about other groups like Adventists, Methodists, Lutherans, Catholics, etc.
The SDA taught that you could lose your salvation and eating non-kosher foods would send you to hell. I did make good friends there, though.
I had discussed the differences between Baptists and Adventists with my family and they told me that Baptists believe that you cannot lose your salvation. I was told that if you are saved, you will go to heaven no matter what, and that if you were saved in the past but go on later to commit murder, you would still go to heaven, but God would be upset but keep His promise, or that you were never saved to begin with.
I took this the wrong way and thought it meant that I could sin and it would not really matter, so I started experimenting with other religions such as Buddhism and Deism. Of course, I repented and started to study the Bible more.
To me, it seems that perseverance of saints is biblical as I believe God saves you and it is not of any works you do, and that the true believers hold on until the very end. Eternal security seems to teach that when you are saved, even if you fall away or give up your faith, you will still be saved and still go to heaven.
Southern Baptists believe salvation is through faith alone, but they do believe good works are important. They are a result of salvation, and a true believer will have a changed lifestyle as evidence that his repentance is sincere. They also teach that if you sin willingly or show no change after claiming to be saved, you were never really saved. This sounds like perseverance of saints to me.
In Southern Baptist churches, I think eternal security and perseverance of saints are used synonymously, and "Once saved, always saved, is just an oversimplified definition of it. I am sure most of them would say that true believers are eternally secure and will remain believers until the end, but still believe that avoiding sin is important. My church talks about "fake Christians" all the time. They are referring to those who claim to be saved but do nothing with their faith or live worldly lives.
What do you think? Do Southern Baptists really teach eternal security as in no matter what you do, you will never lose your salvation?