No assurance? Sure. No salvation? Not our call.Pastor Tim, would it be appropriate to counsel this woman that as long as she lives practicing sin that she can have no real assurance of Salvation ?
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No assurance? Sure. No salvation? Not our call.Pastor Tim, would it be appropriate to counsel this woman that as long as she lives practicing sin that she can have no real assurance of Salvation ?
Knowing For Certain
How can a person know for certain that he's saved, and therefore one of God's elect?
[1 Jn. 5:13] "I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God so that you may know that you have eternal life."
The Bible tells us that a person can know for sure that he has eternal life. The things of which John wrote pertain to the gospel. Therefore, intrinsic to the gospel message is an assurance of genuine rebirth. While no one can know if his neighbor is of the elect, we can certainly gain confidence in our own eternal destinies. Here are some thoughts that might be helpful in measuring your own spiritual status:
1. Repent and believe on the Lord Jesus Christ [Mk. 1:15]. An authentic Christian lives a life characterized by continuous repentance and faith.
2. Test yourself to see if your life shows evidence of transformation in Christ [2 Cor. 13:5]. While all Christians sin sometimes, the truly saved person loves Christ and hates his own wickedness [Ro. 7:24-25].
3. Examine your lifestyle for ever increasing spiritual fruit [Gal. 5:22; Eph. 2:10].
4. Observe the ways in which God is using you to minister to others, even if they don't acknowledge it [Ac. 7:25].
5. Meditate on your attitude toward the Scriptures [Ps. 119:11]. A genuinely saved person labors to consume the Word of God daily.
AMR said:The Greek proegnō appears in two places in the NT. Romans 8:29 and Romans 11:2. In both verses the implication is that God knows beforehand.
Foreknowledge proegno The word is used of...
Rom 8:26-29 What is foreseen? People or faith?
• Word meaning: When used of people, ginosko always emphasizes relationship and intimacy.
• Tense: Aorist Active Indicative An Act of God
• Object of the verb? “Whom”
It is Not: coming to know something about a person, but knowing the person.
Foreknowledge proegno The word is used of...
• 1 Pet 1:2 Clearly, foreknowledge as mere perception is not the basis of election because foreknowledge includes decision on God’s part. Election is in harmo (kata) with foreknowledge, and that foreknowledge included the procedure used in working out the choice. Therefore there is some relationship and/or decision inherent in the meaning foreknow. cf Verse 20
• Acts 2:23; Rom 11:2 Decisiveness and certainty is involved.
Foreknowledge proegno The word is used of...
• Acts 2:23 - Granville Sharp’s Rule
Conclusion: Foreknowledge means “whom He set regard upon” - Whom He knew from eternity with distinguishing affection and delight.” It is virtually equivalent to “whom He foreloved; came into intimate relationship with.”
Predestination prohoridzo. To mark off beforehand. To preplan a destiny.
• Acts 4:28; 1 Cor 2:7 The Death of Christ and its
meaning predestined by God.
• Eph 1:5 God’s elect are predestined to adoption.
• Eph 1:11 God’s elect are predestined to an inheritance.
• Rom 8:28-29 God’s elect predestined to ultimate conformity to Christ.
What is clearly taught:
• Rom 9:18-23 A Clear Distinction:
(22) “prepared” katertismena Perf. Pass. Ptc.
(23) “prepared beforehand” proetoimasen Aor Act Ind
• 1 Pet 2:8
• Rev 20:15
Election was not based on foreseen faith. To foreknow is not a neutral concept but involves some sort of relationship.
Nothing about my salvation was passive. My experience, though slightly different, was much like Pastor Tim's. I felt like a bolt of lightning had struck my very soul, and brought it to life. I too had been in church for years and years and studied the Bible many times with many commentaries. I can't speak to theology, but I can speak to experience, and my salvation was overwhelming, dynamic, active, thrilling, bewildering, astonishing, humbling, revealing, and about any other explamatory thing I could say. Passive? NOT.
I also used those same words to describe how words in the Bible now fly off the page at me. It's almost like the difference between hearing the football game over an AM radio to now being on the field with the team. You realize, I've heard this all before, but the meaning is now really there and it strikes a cord deep within you that never resonated before.
Tim, getting back to you original question, the doctrine that grace is irresistible was invented by Calvinist theologians, and is not taught in the Scriptures.
Hi Vince,Tim, getting back to your original question, the doctrine that grace is irresistible was invented by Calvinist theologians, and is not taught in the Scriptures.
On what biblical basis do you make these assertions? I hear your opinions, but see no exegesis.In answer to my friend Hammster's question, God did not predestine anyone to salvation. Nor did He predestine anyone to Heaven, or to Hell, or to faith, or to belief, or to repentance.
God knew in advance who would accept Christ, and He chose (elected) to save them. He also predestined them to be conformed to the image of His Son. But the doctrine that God chose or predestined people to repentance or faith is a man-made invention.
In answer to my friend Hammster's question, God did not predestine anyone to salvation. Nor did He predestine anyone to Heaven, or to Hell, or to faith, or to belief, or to repentance.
God knew in advance who would accept Christ, and He chose (elected) to save them. He also predestined them to be conformed to the image of His Son. But the doctrine that God chose or predestined people to repentance or faith is a man-made invention.
On what biblical basis do you make these assertions? I hear your opinions, but see no exegesis.
Again, I hear the assertion, but see no biblical evidence presented. Where's the exegesis brother?Salvation is a free GIFT from God to all who will accept it. If I force you to take something then it is no longer a gift. God makes the call time and time again to salvation and then we can either refuse it or accept it. If this wasnt the case then their would be no point in scripture to warn people that "today IF you hear his voice harden not your heart."TimRout said:On what biblical basis do you make these assertions? I hear your opinions, but see no exegesis.
Every time God makes the gracious offer and the sinner walks away unconverted the harder his heart gets each time until eventually God will have no choice but to give that individual over to his sins.
In answer to my friend Hammster's question, God did not predestine anyone to salvation. Nor did He predestine anyone to Heaven, or to Hell, or to faith, or to belief, or to repentance.
God knew in advance who would accept Christ, and He chose (elected) to save them. He also predestined them to be conformed to the image of His Son. But the doctrine that God chose or predestined people to repentance or faith is a man-made invention.