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TaylorSexton

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Again, who has argued that God requires perfect, flawless, sinlessness for one to be saved?

Ummm, Scripture...

"Your eyes are too pure to look on evil; you cannot tolerate wrongdoing." —Hab. 1:13
"You are not a God who is pleased with wickedness; with you, evil people are not welcome. The arrogant cannot stand in your presence. You hate all who do wrong." —Ps. 5:4

Notice it doesn't say, "You cannot tolerate the 'worst' wrongdoing," or, "You hate only those who are 'mostly' evil."

Good luck with being justified by your works!
 
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TheSeabass

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One is required to believe repent confess and be baptized to be saved, John 8:24; Luke 13:3, Mt 10:32-33 Mark 16;16. And one is not saved until he does all that God has required of him and no 'hard circumstance' changes God's requirements. Salvation is today (Hebrews 3:13) for no one has the promise of tomorrow.


The DOING (Mt 7:21) that is required to be saved is doing the will of the Father. What is sad is people who think they do not have to do the Father's will to be saved but be saved in thier rebellioin, disobedience to the Father's will.



1) believing is obedience...John 3:36 ASV "He that believeth on the Son hath eternal life; but he that obeyeth not the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him."

Note how "believeth" is contrasted from "obeyeth not" hence believing is obedience.



2) Jesus never said one must believe only to be saved but also required obedience repentance confession and baptism.



1) The man asked "what shall I "DO" Note that Jesus did NOT say "DO NOTHING but have faith only and thou shalt be saved".

2) Jesus asked the man about his OBEDIENCE to the law " but if thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments." and Jesus names commands to be kept in vs 18,19. So obedience to the law was necessary for the man to be saved yet Jesus knew the hearts of men and Jesus knew this man would allow his wealth keep him from being "perfect". The man would have to OBEY Jesus in selling his possessions and obey Jesus when Jesus said "come and follow me".

So obedience is all over the context and that obedience was necessary for the man to be saved: obedience to the law.
obedience to Christ to sell his possessions.
obedience to come and follow Christ.



Jesus said "when ye shall have done all those things which are commanded you"???

So obedience is required to be a servant of Christ. The problem is no one will be perfectly flawless in doing all things



WHAT??? So if salvation is not dependent upon one's obedience then is it dependent upon one's rebellion, disobedience, unrighteousness? Where does the bible teach God will save the disobedient?
 
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TheSeabass

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But where does the bible say God requires sinless, flawless perfection for man to be saved?

He does not.

What God does require of man is faithful obedience. Faithful obedience is what puts one and keeps one "in Christ" thereby clothed in Christ's perfect righteousness/obedience. Hence God sees Christians that are in Christ as perfect though Christ's perfection.
 
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TaylorSexton

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Faithful obedience to that system is why they could receive forgiveness.

Yes, because to be obedient to that system is to use it rightly; when used rightly, it pointed forward to faith in the Messiah.

He does not.

If you ignore passages like the two I quoted, sure.
 
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twin1954

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Proof texting is not a legitimate manner by which to interpret Scripture. You take the passages completely out of their context in order to prove your point. That is neither dealing honestly with men or the Scriptures. You obviously make verses say what you want them to say without regard for context or the teaching of the Scriptures as a whole.

There is no point in debating with you because you are not willing to be honest with the Scriptures. All heresy is founded in such practice.
 
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twin1954

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I want to answer your last statement because the rest of your post is just the same nonsense as the last statement.

The one thing that qualifies someone to be saved is being a sinner. If you are obedient then you don't need to be saved.
 
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DeaconDean

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Amen!

I have sufficiently given correct answers, and shown where his personal interpretation of scriptures are wrong.

Lets follow their example and take text out of context.

If any person who ever called themselves a "Christian" and has committed one sin, one single solitary sin, then they are not a Christian, were never saved to begin with.

"Whosoever abideth in him sinneth not: whosoever sinneth hath not seen him, neither known him...He that committeth sin is of the devil;..Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for his seed remaineth in him: and he cannot sin, because he is born of God." -1 Jn. 3:6, 8, 9 (KJV)

Peter, even though he one of the original 12 disciples, sinned in disobeying God (cf. Acts 9), then, was also guilty of being a hypocrite. (cf. Gal. 2)

If we pull scripture out of context to mean what we want it to mean, ergo: Peter sinned, and according to the scriptures above, he was never saved, was of the devil, does not know God, because he sinned, and those born again cannot sin.

Lets go another step in that direction.

The Apostle Paul was guilty of nearly the same things. Paul knowing the law, rebuked a high priest which is a sin in the Torah. (cf. Acts 23) Disobeyed God when he was told not to go to Jerusalem, not one, but twice. (cf. Acts 21)

Following the example set before us, and the example given by another member, using 1 Jn. 3:6, 8, 9, as our proof texts, ergo: Paul was not saved, did not know God, was of the devil, he sinned and because he sinned it proved he wasn't saved because those saved cannot sin.



I'm done with this member. It does no good to proceed any further. A person is so intent on proving Reformed theology wrong, that they would resort to tactics like you have shown shows not only are they willing to have an honest conversation/debate, that they will totally ignore everything said to the point of proving Reformed theology wrong.

This happened so many years ago in the Soteriology section. It got to the point that the Anti-Calvinist crowd was so bad...I just hardly go there any more.

This thread has run its course.

All we are doing now is .

I'm done, and outta here.

I guess another person just made my ignore list.

God Bless

Till all are one.
 
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TheSeabass

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I want to answer your last statement because the rest of your post is just the same nonsense as the last statement.

The one thing that qualifies someone to be saved is being a sinner. If you are obedient then you don't need to be saved.

Men are disobedient to God until they are obedient. Therefore disobedient men must first be obedient to God's will in believing repenting confession and being baptized then they can be saved. Then as long as he remains faithful unto death Rev 2:10 he will be saved.

Nowhere EVER does the bible teach that disobedient, rebellious, unrighteous men are saved while remaining is such a state.

It does NOT work where God arbitrarily unconditionally picks a few disobedient rebellious men to save THEN those men obey.

No verse in Christ's NT puts salvation BEFORE obedience.

1 John 3:10 the present tense of the verbs of this verse has it saying: whosoever continues to not do righteousness continues to not be of God. Peter says those that work righteousness are accepted with God Acts 10:35. So man must FIRST work God's righteousness THEN man will be accepted with God. Again, no verse says God arbitrarily picks disobedient, rebellious men, save them in their disobedient rebellious state, then those men obey God's righteousness.
 
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TheSeabass

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You did not prove I took any verse out of context but just made the claim I did and then made a personal attack against me. If you are against "proof texting" then you must be for the idea that people can make up any thing they want to and add it to the bible with no proof to back up that idea.

God requires that man FIRST believes, repents confesses and submits to being baptized THEN one is saved.

So one FIRST obeys by dong these things THEN he is saved.

Not doing these things is disobedience rebellion to the will of God.

So can you show me from Christ's NT gospel an example of God FIRST saving one who was disobedient, that is, God FIRST saved one who has NOT believed repented confessed and been baptized, THEN after that person was saved he believed repented confessed and was baptized?
 
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TaylorSexton

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It does NOT work where God arbitrarily unconditionally picks a few...

When are you going to stop caricaturing Reformed theology? How many times do we have to tell you that you are misrepresenting us? Are you interested at all in fairness?
 
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DeaconDean

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When are you going to stop caricaturing Reformed theology? How many times do we have to tell you that you are misrepresenting us? Are you interested at all in fairness?

Some people are so caught up in trying to prove Calvinism to be so wrong, that it blinds them.

We had several members like that in both the Baptist area, and Soteriology.

One would get frustrated and leave, two would take their place.

It got so bad at one time, that quite a few of us from Soteriology left. It was always the same thing, over-and-over.

When it gets to that point again, (taking scripture out of context, not listening, misrepresenting) its time to do what scriptures says about people and groups like that.

"And whosoever will not receive you, when ye go out of that city, shake off the very dust from your feet for a testimony against them." -Lk. 9:5 (KJV)

God Bless

Till all are one.
 
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twin1954

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All o
ne need do is look at the passages you use as proof texts in their context and it is clear what you are doing. The passage are themselves proof enough that you are ripping them out of their context as though they stand alone.

Not that you will accept it but the Lord said very clearly that you must be born again before you can even see the kingdom of God. Moreover He told Nicodemus that it is the Spitit that gives life to whom He will. I am sure you know the verses.

Again John clearly tells us in 1John 5:1 that those who believe have been, past tense, born of God. You must be born from above in order to have life and believe.
 
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TheSeabass

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We see that it is actually you that is taking verses/words out of context:

1 John 5:1 "Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God: and every one that loveth him that begat loveth him also that is begotten of him."

Did Jesus say "whosoever believeth only...is born of God"? No, yet people take the word 'believeth"out of context and ADD the word "only' to it changing the meaning of the verse. It causes a contradiction among the words spoken by Christ when Christ equally required repentance confession and baptism to being saved. So does John get rid of the necessity of repentance confession and baptism thereby contradicting Christ?
 
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TheSeabass

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When are you going to stop caricaturing Reformed theology? How many times do we have to tell you that you are misrepresenting us? Are you interested at all in fairness?

Not misrepresenting, maybe you are unable to defend it.

Point out what I supposedly misrepresented.

You were given MULTIPLE chances to give a basis as to why God has mercy upon some and not others, but you never gave a basis but skated around it time and again. Your argument fails you when you say God's choices were not random but then you cannot give a basis.

Reformed theology may not have a basis but the bible does give a basis.
 
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TaylorSexton

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Not misrepresenting, maybe you are unable to defend it.

Why would I endeavor to defend what I do not believe? That is the whole problem of misrepresentation. It is a convenient weapon for you, because you know that if you tear down a position which we do not affirm, you make it seem as if you are tearing our theology down, when in reality you are only tearing down a straw man. Furthermore, when we do not defend what you present (not because we can't, but because we won't defend a position contrary to our actual belief), you have more ammo.

Of course, all of this is merely a smokescreen for the ignorant and unlearned, which is the majority of the Christian population. Legitimate debate does not involve these tactics.

Point out what I supposedly misrepresented.

I quoted for you one out of many statements where you misrepresent our view:

"It does NOT work where God arbitrarily unconditionally picks a few..."

I would challenge you to find even one statement in Reformed writings that makes such a claim. If you cannot, then you have sinned against us by misrepresenting (i.e., bearing false witness against) us. Arbitrary and unconditionally are entirely exclusive matters. Reformed theology teaches that election is unconditional, but it at no point teaches that it is arbitrary.


Reformed theology only speaks where and as far as Scripture speaks, no more and no further. Scripture declares plainly that election is according to the pleasure and will of God (Eph. 1; Rom. 9). Again, if this is not a good enough reason for you (or not a reason at all), then your complaint is with God, not with us. Take it up with him.
 
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TheSeabass

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Logically, if there is no basis then God must be choosing at random. Reformed theology--yourself have not given a basis. No basis = randomness.

You can keep saying that God chooses according to His pleasure but that continues to fail to give a basis. Does God's pleasure have a basis or does it operate on pure randomness?

Above you posted "Reformed theology teaches that election is unconditional, but it at no point teaches that it is arbitrary."

Unconditional means not having any basis, unqualified, unlimited. If a person does not have to meet any condition/qualifications then what is the difference between one person and the next that God would chose one over the other?
 
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TaylorSexton

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Logically, if there is no basis then God must be choosing at random. Reformed theology--yourself have not given a basis. No basis = randomness.

No, as I will argue below, even randomness has a basis, which is the pure whim (not purpose) of the one choosing. When a will is involved, there is no such thing as pure randomness, because a will is involved, and wills choose, and choice always has an impetus.

You are illegitimately equating unconditionality with baselessness which, as I will argue below, has no basis (no pun intended) in word or in logic.

You can keep saying that God chooses according to His pleasure but that continues to fail to give a basis. Does God's pleasure have a basis or does it operate on pure randomness?

Again, if Scriptures teaching that God's purpose, pleasure, and will are not sufficient for you, then please take it up with God, not me. Your quarrel is with him. Good luck.

Unconditional means not having any basis, unqualified, unlimited. If a person does not have to meet any condition/qualifications then what is the difference between one person and the next that God would chose one over the other?

You are badly confused on the definitions of several words. In saying that election is unconditional, this means that it is unconditional on our end. Of course election is conditional ultimately, because without the condition of God's electing, then the result of person's election is nonexistent. However, when referring to the human end, then salvation is absolutely unconditional, otherwise it is by works.

In terms of "arbitrary," even arbitrariness has a basis, and that basis is a person's whim or decision to choose at random. That is it's basis. For some reason you have equated "unconditional" and "baseless," and even equated "arbitrary" with "baseless," each without any lexical or philosophical warrant whatsoever.

I really wish you would read my posts and word choices (which are quite deliberate) more carefully, and at least try to be fair and thoughtful when responding. Having to constantly correct you and point out ways in which you refuse to deal with the terminology correctly is tiresome and absolutely inhibits profitable discussion.
 
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TheSeabass

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Randomness would not have a basis.


TaylorSexton said:
Again, if Scriptures teaching that God's purpose, pleasure, and will are not sufficient for you, then please take it up with God, not me. Your quarrel is with him. Good luck.

The bible says God basis His choices upon obedience to His will, shows mercy unto them that obey Him.

Why is it Reformed Theology does not have answer for this when the bible does?



If a basis is used to make the choice then it is not arbitrary.

So God has a "whim" to choose at random?
And a "whim" is a basis?
This is your argument. Really?

It's a mutually exclusive proposition:

Either a light is off or it is on, cannot be both at the same time
Either a line is straight or crooked, cannot be both at the same time,
Either a choice is made randomly or made on a basis, cannot be both at the same time.
 
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