- May 28, 2018
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The Pharisees made the Laws more specific, so they wouldn't fail to keep them. Repentance was not among them. How do I know? (Could I be wrong? I don't think so, but possibly) Because it's not in the Mosaic Law, so the Pharisees would have no reason to pretend it was in there to make it more specific. Also when Paul says works of the Law, I'm pretty sure he means the Mosaic Law (could even say it's obvious, since that is what he is referring to all through the letter), not some made up law by the Pharisees.
Hm, haven't you made up on your own authority that repentance is a work? Can you biblically demonstrate it is? I haven't made it up, it's not in the Law, so how could it be a work of the Law? I have yet to see the Bible refer to repentance as a work.
An act of the will is a work. But, being a work does not make it faithless, anymore than the act of the will in 'accepting Christ' makes it faithless. What it does is make neither accepting Christ, nor repentance, the deciding factor in "salvation by grace through faith, not of works", and the cause of regeneration. Agreed, that repentance will occur —in fact, it must! But true repentance, while a work of the will, is also the work of the Spirit of God in us —the same Spirit that regenerated us.
I didn't say repentance was among works of the law, nor even among the works the Pharisees added to the law. My point in bringing up what the Pharisees did, is that it does not need to be law to be works. I did not say repentance is a work of the law. It seems to me more than obvious that what is done by the will of man is works. Thus, repentance, even if done through faith and through Christ and through the Holy Spirit, is still a work. And repentance, so called, done not by faith and not through Christ and not through the Spirit of God, is a work, too. And no, in case someone gets the notion that I am saying that Salvation is by works, since repentance is a work, that is not at all what I am saying.
Because you seem to say it shows we have to be regenerated before we can have faith. Even if you look at the whole chapter of Ephesians 2 (or Romans 3), there is nowhere where it says we are regenerated first. What it says is that we are saved by grace and grace doesn't mean we have no free will (libertarian) part in our salvation. Ephesians 2 doesn't say whether repentance comes before or after regeneration. We have to look at other passages.
Sure you can refer to "dead in sins". It's just that you will have a hard time to show it means what you say it means.
Those references talk about God making us alive, who were once dead. The dead cannot do anything.
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