lol 1 cor 2 doesn't say that .No one can even see the kingdom of God unless he is born again (John 3:3-8).
God draws by regeneration of the Holy Spirit, and man believes. (1 Corinthians 2:14)
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lol 1 cor 2 doesn't say that .No one can even see the kingdom of God unless he is born again (John 3:3-8).
God draws by regeneration of the Holy Spirit, and man believes. (1 Corinthians 2:14)
All that list is ONE ACT of the Holy Spirit and not subject to man's time. It could all be simultaneous.
nothing in 1 Corinthians 2:14 that says regeneration precedes faith. you made that up. I understand the verse you are adding your ideas into it which is eisegesis.If you understand the NT, it does.
I'm thinking the rebirth required in John 3:3-8 to even see the kingdom of God does not exclude the rebirth being necessary in 1 Corinthians 2:14.nothing in 1 Corinthians 2:14 that says regeneration precedes faith.
yes after they believe.I'm thinking the rebirth required in John 3:3-8 does not exclude 1 Corinthians 2:14.
Only those who are born again have the Holy Spirit.
I'm thinking the rebirth required in John 3:3-8 to see (know, be acquainted with) the kingdom of God does not exclude the rebirth being necessary in 1 Corinthians 2:14.yes after they believe.
There is research into genetics, the causes of aging, which appear to be the degeneration of some genetic codes. That could lead, through genetic manipulation, splicing, insertion to the regeneration of the physical body.Science is not much to hold on to when you are laying on the deathbed. Maybe you should tell your friend that?
I use 1 Timothy 2:4 to counter arguments that God predestines many for the Great White Throne.If I erred in that I apologize the passage you quoted is a common proof text for the UR group.
As for "long canned anti-UR scree" 3 decades ago when I joined this forum I soon realized that the same out-of-context verses and arguments are endlessly repeated so I decided that I didn't have to reinvent the wheel on every post so I started saving my responses. So same arguments, same post get same response.
The Holy Spirit convicts the world of sin, righteousness, and judgement per John 16:8 - this generally occurs during the preaching of the Gospel (Romans 1:16-17). Some listen and receive faith (Romans 10:17). Some resist the Holy Spirit (Acts 7:51), push His conviction out of their minds, and remain unconverted.So the Holy Spirit has nothing to do with Faith?
A person decides being convinced of his own reason and free will to believe and then what?
The person reads the Word, decides he is a sinner and repents?
The the person confesses or is baptized in public.?
Then the Holy Spirit descends to regenerate him?
This may be what some denominations believe are the steps to salvation.
Would someone please list the denominations that believe the Holy Spirit is not present and man is not regenerate until after repentance and formal baptism?
What Denominations believe that the Holy Spirit has nothing to do with salvation, except during preaching the Gospel until after a man is baptized? Everything up until the act of confession or baptism is a willful act by man separate from any interference from God or the Holy Spirit?The Holy Spirit convicts the world of sin, righteousness, and judgement per John 16:8 - this generally occurs during the preaching of the Gospel (Romans 1:16-17).
I'm thinking the rebirth required in John 3:3-8 to even see the kingdom of God does not exclude the rebirth being necessary in 1 Corinthians 2:14.
Only those who are born again have the Holy Spirit necessary to understand and accept the things of God in 1 Corinthians 2:14.
Scripture couldn't be more clear on the matter. . .to those who have eyes that can see.
I agree with that. The Gospel is not Calvinistic. I'll catch a lot of flak for this but Calvinism contradicts the words of Jesus.I use 1 Timothy 2:4 to counter arguments that God predestines many for the Great White Throne.
The Holy Spirit convicts the world of sin, righteousness, and judgement per John 16:8 - this generally occurs during the preaching of the Gospel (Romans 1:16-17). Some listen and receive faith (Romans 10:17). Some resist the Holy Spirit (Acts 7:51), push His conviction out of their minds, and remain unconverted.
Paul writes the Ephesian letter to the "Faithful in Christ Jesus" per Ephesians 1:1.So you do not believe in Grace?
You believe it is a man's work of hearing, believing, repenting, confessing then being baptized after which time a man receives the gift of regeneration through the Holy Spirit?
Ephesians 2:8 For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God,
"Ephesians 2:1-9 makes it very clear that while we are still dead in our trespasses and sin God makes us alive. The Bible is also clear that the act of being born again or regenerated is a sovereign act of God. It is something He does which enables us to believe the gospel message, not something that comes as a result of our belief."
My belief is that Faith is Salvation as it is a gift of the Holy Spirit.Faith leads to salvation.
Jesus paid the ransom for our justification. The Holy Spirit performs the necessary work of convicting the sinner during the peaching of the Gospel per John 16:8.What Denominations believe that the Holy Spirit has nothing to do with salvation, except during preaching the Gospel until after a man is baptized? Everything up until the act of confession or baptism is a willful act by man separate from any interference from God or the Holy Spirit?
What denominations do I think agree with what I am saying: most Baptist, Charismatics, Pentecostal, most Lutheran, Calvary Chapel, most non-Denominational, Anabaptists, WOF, NAR.Which denominations believe that?
I said faith results in salvation - so we are close there. And I said faith is a given by God to those who listen to the Word of God (Acts 10:17). We differ because you believe God gives faith to the pre-destined elect.My belief is that Faith is Salvation as it is a gift of the Holy Spirit.
I explained how I saw Ephesians 2:8-9 with its reference to grace, faith, and salvation being fulfilled and contrasted that with how Calvinist see it fulfilled.The question was, is a person regenerated before or during hearing the Word or does a person have to do that entire list, then receive regeneration of the Holy Ghost.
I stated it was One Act of God, the Word, Faith, Repentance and Confession.
Clare has stated the Holy Spirit has to regenerate a person before a person can assent to the Word, to receive Faith,
The question is:
Do you believe in Grace as stated in Ephesians 2:8 ?
The stories of Paul and Jonah provide some very strong cases of persuasion and those will tend to a quick and strong reaction, maybe yours was like that. For some the message of the Gospel is remembered but no action is taken until a later life-changing event causes them to get serious, forsake their pleasure seeking, and run to God in repentance.That answer to your statement is Saul was converted in One Act on the road to Damascus. He heard the Word. He immediately repented and confessed his faith.
Saul did not sit down on the side of the road after hearing the Word and decide whether or not he was going to "maybe" believe. From that moment, Paul was guided by the Holy Spirit. From the moment he heard the Word.
Calvinists believe that God choses to regenerate the pre-selected elect, who like everyone never have sought God, and yet pass all others (leaving them to be damned) - which is definitely favoritism.And you are absolutely right, God does not play favorites so as He has done unto Paul is a way a man was actually, demonstrably converted. One Act.
"I was saved completely by the working of the Holy Spirit" sounds profound, but it is not biblical.