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LoveGodsWord

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Actually, if memory serves me right, you & I have discussed this before.

Since you've brought up Romans 10:17, let's start there and go back one verse. I recall you liking the KJV, so I'll use it for now:

KJV Romans 10:16 But they have not all obeyed the gospel. For Esaias saith, Lord, who hath believed our report?

Doesn't Paul use obedience and faith interchangeably here?

Perhaps it was a conversation you had with someone else? I do not recall having this discussion with you to be honest. I use multiple bible sources. My general reading bible is KJV though. Genuine faith, of course as I have already posted in this thread elsewhere, and I think in one other post to you is not separate from obedience to what God's word says *Matthew 7:21, just like love is not separate from obedience to Gods' law. Love is demonstrated in obedience to Gods' law from a new heart given by faith, just like faith is not separate from doing what Gods' Word says according to James 2:17-26. Gods Word comes first, followed by genuine faith and believing what God's Word says that leads us to action. Genuine faith and obedience to God's Word in my view are not separate from each other *Romans 10:17; James 2:17-26. Anything else according to James is the dead faith of devils. Do you view the above differently?

Take Care.
 
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LoveGodsWord

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We obey the gospel by choosing to believe the gospel (Romans 10:16) by trusting in the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ as the ALL-sufficient means our salvation. (Romans 1:16; 1 Corinthians 15:1-4) That is the act of obedience which saves. Not to be confused with multiple acts of obedience/works which “follow.”
The central theme of the gospel is trusting in the death and resurrection of Jesus. Is that all there is to the gospel? What is gospel according to scripture and do you know the difference between justification and sanctification Dan?

Take Care.
 
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LoveGodsWord

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Faith comes first and without faith it’s impossible to please God. (Hebrews 11:6)

1 Corinthians 15:1-4 is the foundation of the gospel. The apostle Paul clearly states that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures. The gospel is a message of grace which is to be received through faith. The gospel is not a set of rituals to perform, a code of laws to be obeyed or a check list of good works to accomplish as a prerequisite for salvation.

Obey the gospel by choosing to believe the gospel is what I believe Paul is clearly teaching in Romans 10:16. Now if we accomplish an act of obedience to God is that not a good work? To simply state that obedience in general is the very essence of faith leads us to salvation by works. Now good works are produced “out of” faith but there is a distinction between faith “and” works.

In John 6:40 we read - For my Father’s will is that everyone who looks to the Son and believes in him shall have eternal life, and I will raise them up at the last day. Would you consider that a command or a suggestion?

In 1 John 3:23 we read - Now this is His command: that we believe in the name of His Son Jesus Christ, and love one another as He commanded us.

While Christ and Him crucified is the central theme and the main part of the gospel what is the gospel according to the scriptures?
 
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LoveGodsWord

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Hearing the gospel and then trusting in the gospel. Which is putting your trust alone in the work of Christ alone for salvationn.
Can we put our trust in God while not doing what God asks us to do? How do you read James 2:17-26 and Matthew 7:21-23
No one is saved by "following what God's Word says". Where is the OT Law found? In God's Word. And the Jews found that no one can keep the Law.
Do you know the difference between justification and sanctification (see also James 2:17-26 and Matthew 7:21-23)
So, how is that "following what God's Word says"? It isn't. The Law was to prove to man that he can't save himself and to lead us to Christ.
If God's Word says we must repent of our sins (e.g Acts of the Apostles 2:38) and confess them to God (e.g. 1 John 1:9) and believe in Christ death and blood atonement as Gods' true sacrifice our sins (John 1:29; Hebrews 10:10) then if we say no I will believe in Christ but continue in known unrepentant sin are we showing our faith or denying the faith (see James 2:17-26)?

Take Care.
 
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GDL

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#1:
Faith comes first and without faith it’s impossible to please God. (Hebrews 11:6)

- So, faith comes before obedience in your view.
- See the next section re: 1 John 3:23

#4:
In 1 John 3:23 we read - Now this is His command: that we believe in the name of His Son Jesus Christ, and love one another as He commanded us.

The 2 verses you quoted at the end of your post look like they answer my 4th question re: the existence of any commands by God to believe in His Son. I'll use this one you identify to begin:

- I would have used this verse also.
- It clearly deals with faith in the context of [obeying] a command of God to believe and is thus not different than Paul using faith and obedience interchangeably in Romans 10.

- So, a question: Since we are commanded [by God] to believe in the name of His Son Jesus Christ, then:
  • Does our belief happen first, or does our obedience to God's command to believe happen first, or does our belief and our obedience happen simultaneously (interchangeably)?
#2:
1 Corinthians 15:1-4 is the foundation of the gospel. The apostle Paul clearly states that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures. The gospel is a message of grace which is to be received through faith. The gospel is not a set of rituals to perform, a code of laws to be obeyed or a check list of good works to accomplish as a prerequisite for salvation.

- Does 1 Corinthians 15:1-4 say it is the foundation of the Gospel, or do we (I don't) just teach that it is?
- In context in the verses that follow, isn't Paul just using this part of the Gospel (see Acts 13 below) to teach the vital importance of belief in the resurrection of Jesus?

Re: foundation: NKJ 1 Cor. 3:10-11 According to the grace of God which was given to me, as a wise master builder I have laid the foundation, and another builds on it. But let each one take heed how he builds on it. 11 For no other foundation can anyone lay than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ.
  • So, The Foundation is Jesus Christ
  • We know that Jesus' last name is not Christ. This always means Jesus is The Christ - Jesus = The Christ (Christ being a title, not a name).
Acts 18:1-4 Paul is in Corinth speaking to the Corinthian Jews and Greeks
Acts 18:5 When Silas and Timothy had come from Macedonia, Paul was compelled by the Spirit, and testified to the Jews that Jesus is the Christ.
  • The manuscript this is translated from is more emphatic than this translation. It literally says something like "...solemnly testifying to the Jews The Christ - Jesus. So, Paul was being compelled by the Spirit making an emphatic declaration that The Christ = Jesus.
Acts 13:16-41:
  • Paul is in Antioch speaking to Jews and God-Fearers (Gentiles who fear God):
  • 17-22 Paul takes a trip through Jewish history to reach and speak of King David
  • 23 Pursuant to the Davidic Covenant, Paul identifies Jesus as David's descendant and Israel's Savior. So, in essence, Paul's initial presentation is that this Jesus is the King of the Eternal Kingdom God promised to King David, and Jesus is the Savior promised to Israel. This is taking us into Jesus being the Messiah.
  • I see the importance of how Jesus is being identified as Davidic King and Savior - Christ/Messiah - as all of this focused message by Paul. We're dealing with the One to whom all knees shall bow. We're hit immediately with a submission/obedience to Him issue.
  • 24-25 John the Baptist's ministry for repentance and his presentation of the One who exceeds him
  • 26 After establishing who and what Jesus is - King - Savior - [Messiah] (having laid the foundation of the Christ = Jesus), Paul mentions Salvation (Savior earlier)
  • 27-31 Jesus' condemnation, death, burial, and resurrection (which he excerpts for his discussion re: the vital importance of belief in the resurrection in 1 Corinthians 15)
  • 32 The Good News - the promise God made to the Jewish Fathers
  • 33 This Jesus = the Eternal King of the Davidic line / Savior / [Messiah] is resurrected [thus eternal & thus eternal King and Messiah]. Paul uses Psalm 2 to show Jesus is YHWH's Annointed/Messiah/Christ. IMO this is one of the best places to go to understand the position the Christ has. It elaborates His authority, as if His eternal Kingship is not enough to bring in the obedience He is to receive from even the kings of the earth, which is His inheritance. Faith is mentioned at the end of Psalm 2 after a lot of information that should tell the reader that we're dealing with one to whom we must obey.
  • 34-37 elaboration on resurrection (just like Paul is doing in 1 Corinthians 15)
  • 38 Forgiveness of sins
  • 39 Justification
  • 40-41 Warnings
My point: When Paul was truly evangelizing this is what he was presenting. The Christ = Jesus is foundational. The death, burial, and then resurrection brings in His eternality and was a sign per John's Gospel that Jesus is The Christ. To the ears of that time, Christ denoted ultimate authority and thus submission and obedience to Him. We assume people know what Christ means. His death, burial, resurrection does not tell people about His authority. I've tested many Christians to explain what Christ means and more often than not they couldn't. The 1 Corinthians 15 excerpt - part of the Gospel - bypasses the obedience issue that "Christ" automatically suggests to one who knows what it means. This meaning and submission to the name is foundational to a correct understanding of who and what we're dealing with.

#3
Now if we accomplish an act of obedience to God is that not a good work?

- Obviously, a good question to which, in light of more Scripture, I'd have to say:
  • It might seem like it, but "good work" seems to be only done in Christ.
  • Is an act of obedience a work, or works? I'd say I'd have to let God determine where works are applicable. I'd also have to say that you drew a distinction between faith and works, which I would agree with, and in this light, I'd also draw a distinction between obedience and works, that I would not draw between faith & obedience. Paul & Hebrews at minimum make the faith/obedience correlation. James makes the faith + works distinction. So, I'd see it as faith/obedience + works, and not faith + obedience/works. Question: Do I pay you for your obedience, or do I pay you for your [completed] work(s) done in obedience? I think it's the latter and I carry this distinction back into Ephesians 2 and ask who did all the work to come up with and complete and institute for us God's Salvation (which is really what Paul is addressing there)? I know it wasn't any of us, so what are we owed? I think it's this concept that Paul is discussing there and that it's crucial that we pay very close attention to precisely what Paul is speaking about when he speaks about salvation. It's a broader topic than what many narrow it down to be.
  • If our work in responding cannot be distinguished from our obedience, then Ephesians 2 remains the battleground and Jesus made a huge mistake in John 6:27 where He commands unbelievers to work to receive the food (teaching) He gives (gifts) that lasts into eternal life. That teaching was to be heard & learned and obeyed for faith and Jesus has no problem commanding those unbelievers to work to receive it (hear and learn then believe/obey). In the background of all this is our Father working to bring about belief (6:44-45) and a statement that their belief is God's work (6:29 - again take this to Ephesians 2). So, it's God's work that is primary, just as it is in Ephesians 2.

To simply state that obedience in general is the very essence of faith leads us to salvation by works
  • It leads some or many of us to that conclusion, but it no longer leads me there. As shown above, I see the faith/obedience + works distinction in Scripture. When Paul speaks about "works of Law" and "works" in that context, he's being very technical and speaking in the context of circumcision, for example, and thus in the context of temple-oriented Judaism, which was pre-Christ, said to be a tutoring period that had ended in Christ, and a period of being under subjection to Law instead of under subjection to Grace. He's also dealing within all such discussions with various facets of salvation - both initial & experiential sanctification.
Now good works are produced “out of” faith but there is a distinction between faith “and” works.
  • Agree, but would modify and say as have said, that there is a distinction between faith/obedience and works. With this tweak, which I see to align with the Word, you and I could end up much more closely aligned.
#4
In John 6:40 we read - For my Father’s will is that everyone who looks to the Son and believes in him shall have eternal life, and I will raise them up at the last day. Would you consider that a command or a suggestion?
  • It's really just a statement of fact.
  • To answer your question, to suggest we do the Father's will shouldn't be seen as optional if we want what comes from doing His will. The same goes if His will is expressed in a command. His will is that we all be saved (1 Timothy 2:4) and we know if we don't do His will and truly believe, which is for me to believe/obey, then no Salvation. John 6:40 is expressed as His will and 1 John 3:23 is expressed as His command, but they both apply to the same outcome. I'd do His will and obey His command, but that's because I want what He gives. I'd go for command over suggestion, but it's a statement of fact, so neither a command here, nor a suggestion. The command made by God pursuant to God's will in this context is in 6:27, which clearly has Jesus commanding to work to receive His gift (kind of a tough one if we don't see Ephesians 2 and others more precisely).
Apologies for writing a booklet.
 
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GDL

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Perhaps it was a conversation you had with someone else? I do not recall having this discussion with you to be honest.

Could well be one other.

Do you view the above differently?

A few nuances already discussed, but I see nothing major at this point.

Genuine faith and works are not separate *Romans 10:17; James 2:17-26.

This is something I'd have to figure out how to say to make the matter of faith & works more clear. In #905 I said there is a distinction between faith/obedience & works (faith + works). You say they're not separate. I agree with you. They are linked, vitally, so not separate, but distinct in a way faith & obedience are not. They're different words but used interchangeably at times. That's one reason why I can say faith/obedience, but I cannot say obedience/works, which is the difference between my interpretation and that of Danielthemailman to date. I can say obedient works, but this is different than obedience/works. Separate and distinction seem too close to make the point clear.
 
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pasifika

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At @GDL and @pasifika please go ahead, no problem as I see what GDL is discussing as being on topic to the OP. According to the scriptures our salvation is conditional on believing and following what Gods' Word says.

Take Care.
Thank you @LoveGodsWord, yes our salvation is conditional based on believing the Word of God which is Christ.
 
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GDL

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While Christ and Him crucified is the central theme and the main part of the gospel

As long as we know what "Christ" means and the subordination to The Christ that is automatically included when we believe in Jesus who is The Christ. Central and main theme causes me to ask questions. I know you understand the vital importance of the subordination issue. I also know many do not and I've had it proven to me many times in asking those founded on 1 Corinthians 15 who and what The Christ is and what this title YHWH's Anointed/Messiah/Christ means & signifies.

We've already addressed the absurdity of saying we believe in God apart from obeying Him.

The same applies to saying we believe in Jesus the Christ apart from obeying Him.

1 Corinthians 15:1-4 does not establish this apart from some teaching being given. It says nothing about who and what The Christ is, which Paul says and proves in his evangelizing is foundational. He most certainly does link vitally Jesus the Resurrected Christ and I acknowledge this freely and strongly.
 
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pasifika

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As long as we know what "Christ" means and the subordination to The Christ that is automatically included when we believe in Jesus who is The Christ. Central and main theme causes me to ask questions. I know you understand the vital importance of the subordination issue. I also know many do not and I've had it proven to me many times in asking those founded on 1 Corinthians 15 who and what The Christ is and what this title YHWH's Anointed/Messiah/Christ means & signifies.

We've already addressed the absurdity of saying we believe in God apart from obeying Him.

The same applies to saying we believe Jesus is the Christ apart from obeying Him.

1 Corinthians 15:1-4 does not establish this apart from some teaching being given. It says nothing about who and what The Christ is, which Paul says and proves in his evangelizing is foundational. He most certainly does link vitally Jesus the Resurrected Christ and I acknowledge this freely and strongly.
Hello @GDL, there is obedience to God based on following the Law (letter) vs obedience to God based on Faith (believing in Gospel)...Paul clearly separate the two obedience to God based on (Law of works vs Faith) Romans 3..
 
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LoveGodsWord

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This is something I'd have to figure out how to say to make the matter of faith & works more clear. In #905 I said there is a distinction between faith/obedience & works (faith + works). You say they're not separate. I agree with you. They are linked, vitally, so not separate, but distinct in a way faith & obedience are not. They're different words but used interchangeably at times. That's one reason why I can say faith/obedience, but I cannot say obedience/works, which is the difference between my interpretation and that of Danielthemailman to date. I can say obedient works, but this is different than obedience/works. Separate and distinction seem too close to make the point clear.
Yes of course there is a distinction between faith and obedience just like there is a distinction between love and obedience to Gods' law yet both are connected to each other. In fact I believe if you study it through faith is not separate from obedience either just as love is not separate from obedience as it is faith that leads us to obey what Gods' Word says as we walk in His Spirit *Romans 3:31; Galatians 5:16.

Take Care.
 
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GDL

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Yes of course there is a distinction between faith and obedience just like there is a distinction between love and obedience to Gods' law yet both are connected to each other. In fact if you think it through faith is not separate from obedience either just as love is not separate from obedience as it is faith that leads us to obey Gods' Word *Romans 3:31.

Thanks. I have and continue to think it through. I agree with you, but works are connected to faith and thus obedience but are expressed as a "plus." Maybe not much of a difference at the end of the pondering. The issue is that God does separate importantly our faith and works in a way that He does not seem to separate our faith & obedience. It's not a big deal for me, but it ends up being one for those who are [over]protective of the works salvation concern.

For me at this point I think faith can be expressed interchangeably and the plus works must be attached to them for there to be true outworking of faith/obedience. If God detaches the works, which He does in parts of the process, He's typically just telling us He does or has done the work, not us.

Since these are all distinct words as you point out, they obviously can all be dealt with separately where He chooses to make His points. I think Jesus actually deals with the faith & obedience issue in somewhat of a disconnecting way in Luke 17 where in essence He responds to a request to increase His apostles' faith by basically telling them it's not an increase in faith issue, so just do what I say. He doesn't detach obedience from faith, but He does say you have enough faith, so just obey, do your duty. In a way He both deals with the distinction, but also with the vital connection of the two.

I have also thought it through and agree with you completely regarding Love. I have a bit of a pause in the "leads us to obey" terminology, but not such that I would argue with you. I just, again, see the f/o so strongly that we establish the law because it is faith/obedience. It's not just that we believe, but that we believe/obey. When we believe, we are doing what He says so the law is caused to stand. This reality grows in us as we learn more of His will and in faith/obedience do what we've learned. This is sometimes expressed by Paul as an increase in love (Philippians 1:9 for example), so once again tying the faith/obedience also to love.
 
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FreeGrace2

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The central theme of the gospel is trusting in the death and resurrection of Jesus. Is that all there is to the gospel? What is gospel according to scripture and do you know the difference between justification and sanctification Dan?
Here's the problem. Justification IS salvation, sanctification is spiritual growth.

Very different things. You have conflated them into one idea.
 
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FreeGrace2

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While Christ and Him crucified is the central theme and the main part of the gospel what is the gospel according to the scriptures?
John 3:15,16, John 5:24, John 6:47, John 20:31, Acts 16:31, etc.
 
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FreeGrace2

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Can we put our trust in God while not doing what God asks us to do? How do you read James 2:17-26 and Matthew 7:21-23

Do you know the difference between justification and sanctification (see also James 2:17-26 and Matthew 7:21-23)

If God's Word says we must repent of our sins (e.g Acts of the Apostles 2:38) and confess them to God (e.g. 1 John 1:9) and believe in Christ death and blood atonement as Gods' true sacrifice our sins (John 1:29; Hebrews 10:10) then if we say no I will believe in Christ but continue in known unrepentant sin are we showing our faith or denying the faith (see James 2:17-26)?

Take Care.
From your previous post, it is clear that you have erroneously conflated justification and sanctification. They are not the same.

With that kind of error, your posts become irrelevant, since they are based on error.
 
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LoveGodsWord

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LoveGodsWord said: Yes of course there is a distinction between faith and obedience just like there is a distinction between love and obedience to Gods' law yet both are connected to each other. In fact if you think it through faith is not separate from obedience either just as love is not separate from obedience as it is faith that leads us to obey Gods' Word *Romans 3:31.
Your response here...
Thanks. I have and continue to think it through. I agree with you, but works are connected to faith and thus obedience but are expressed as a "plus." Maybe not much of a difference at the end of the pondering. The issue is that God does separate importantly our faith and works in a way that He does not seem to separate our faith & obedience. It's not a big deal for me, but it ends up being one for those who are [over]protective of the works salvation concern.

For me at this point I think faith can be expressed interchangeably and the plus works must be attached to them for there to be true outworking of faith/obedience. If God detaches the works, which He does in parts of the process, He's typically just telling us He does or has done the work, not us.

Since these are all distinct words as you point out, they obviously can all be dealt with separately where He chooses to make His points. I think Jesus actually deals with the faith & obedience issue in somewhat of a disconnecting way in Luke 17 where in essence He responds to a request to increase His apostles' faith by basically telling them it's not an increase in faith issue, so just do what I say. He doesn't detach obedience from faith, but He does say you have enough faith, so just obey, do your duty. In a way He both deals with the distinction, but also with the vital connection of the two.

I have also thought it through and agree with you completely regarding Love. I have a bit of a pause in the "leads us to obey" terminology, but not such that I would argue with you. I just, again, see the f/o so strongly that we establish the law because it is faith/obedience. It's not just that we believe, but that we believe/obey. When we believe, we are doing what He says so the law is caused to stand. This reality grows in us as we learn more of His will and in faith/obedience do what we've learned. This is sometimes expressed by Paul as an increase in love (Philippians 1:9 for example), so once again tying the faith/obedience also to love.

I do not think I could explain my view any clearer or simply than the post you are quoting from. I do not see genuine faith as separate from obedience to what Gods' Word says (Matthew 7:21; Romans 3:31). Which I believe James is also demonstrating in James 2:17-26. The one leads to the other as shown in Romans 3:31. That is if we genuinely believe or have faith in what God's Word says we will do what God asks us to do. Just the same as our earlier discussion showing that love is not separate from obedience to God's law. I do not seem to see the complexity in this subject as you are seeing it. Although that said the process can be viewed slightly differently depending if we are talking justification versus sanctification and how much of Gods' Word is revealed to us at any particular point in time as God only holds us accountable to what we know not what we do not know according to James 4:17 and Acts of the Apostles 17:30-31.

God bless.
 
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GDL

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I do not seem to see the complexity in this subject as you are seeing it.

The complexity is likely allowed in mainly to continue trying to better explain it in a way that others may come around. But, sometimes there's just nothing we can do. At least one recent post is an example of the charge that ensues no matter what.
 
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LoveGodsWord

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The complexity is likely allowed in mainly to continue trying to better explain it in a way that others may come around. But, sometimes there's just nothing we can do. At least one recent post is an example of the charge that ensues no matter what.
Sometimes simple is better but I like to talk about the detail as well. At the end of the day Jesus says by their fruits you shall know them. That is who is from God and who is not. That is a good test for all of us as shown in Matthew 7:13-23 and 1 John 2:3-4.

God bless
 
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LoveGodsWord

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LoveGodsWord said: Can we put our trust in God while not doing what God asks us to do? How do you read James 2:17-26 and Matthew 7:21-23. Do you know the difference between justification and sanctification (see also James 2:17-26 and Matthew 7:21-23)? If God's Word says we must repent of our sins (e.g Acts of the Apostles 2:38) and confess them to God (e.g. 1 John 1:9) and believe in Christ death and blood atonement as Gods' true sacrifice our sins (John 1:29; Hebrews 10:10) then if we say no I will believe in Christ but continue in known unrepentant sin are we showing our faith or denying the faith (see James 2:17-26)?
Your response here...
From your previous post, it is clear that you have erroneously conflated justification and sanctification. They are not the same.
With that kind of error, your posts become irrelevant, since they are based on error.
Your post here is simply non-responsive to the post you are quoting from. If I was conflating justification and sanctification I would not be separating them out and asking you what the difference is. So that one is not true.

Take Care.
 
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LoveGodsWord

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John 3:15,16, John 5:24, John 6:47, John 20:31, Acts 16:31, etc.
For me the gospel (good news) is every words of God *Matthew 4:4 (the bible)
 
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Here's the problem. Justification IS salvation, sanctification is spiritual growth. Very different things. You have conflated them into one idea.
I have not conflated anything. I believe that the scriptures teach that the gospel is every word of God not some of it. Therefore the bible is the gospel meaning "good news" because all of God's Word outlines God's plan of salvation for all mankind from sin. The problem with your view is that you do not consider that every time we sin we are no longer justified but in need of repentance, confession and forgiveness of sins (justification). Then there are all the scriptures already provided in this thread to you that show that our salvation is conditional to believing and following what Gods Word says and we are warned that we can depart the faith and lose eternal life if we continue in known unrepentant sin after God gives us a knowledge of the truth of His Word and we choose to reject it in order to continue in sin. I personally see justification continues with us every time we sin because we are not sinless and have a sinful nature. Sanctification is indeed growing in Gods' grace and the knowledge of Gods' Word so we can be more and more like Jesus which is a work of a lifetime.

Take Care.
 
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