If saved…always saved.
Agilaw said:
Those say there is a " general call" that is apparently a useless call since it can't be acted upon, and there is an "effective call" that can't be acted upon either since it has already happened to a person against their will?
nope. Don't buy it and I don't see how my assertion that one does not lose their free will after "accepting Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior" would only be possible with double predestination.dermdoc said:Dad-O-Lot said:I don't follow you.dermdoc said:Dad-O-Lot said:
When one becomes "born again", they do not lose their free will. Their conversion and acceptance of Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior can be genuine in their youth but still be rejected later in life.
If at the end of a person's life on earth, they have freely chosen to be separated from God, then that is where they will spend eternity regardless of how many salvation prayers they have prayed.
ETA: by "rejected", I am referring to the individual rejecting their own previous conversion. Just as we have the freedom to embrace Jesus, we also still have the freedom to later reject him.
Agree. But that is not possible with double predestination. I guess it does absolve parents of their child's faith walk and eternal destination.
They can not make their child elect.
I don't see how being able to "change your mind" about salvation is "double predestination". As for parents' "absolution" of their child's faith walk and eternal destination, a parent can do everything "right" and still lose their child to the world.
No, a parent cannot guarantee their child's choice regarding their eternal salvation.
I'm not even sure what you mean by "double predestination".
Double predestination means God irrevocably chooses the elect and pre ordains that the other folks are damned to hell.
Check out Calvin's institute #21
I think you are misunderstanding what I am saying. I am not an advocate of double predestination and am a believer in free will.Dad-O-Lot said:nope. Don't buy it and I don't see how my assertion that one does not lose their free will after "accepting Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior" would only be possible with double predestination.dermdoc said:Dad-O-Lot said:I don't follow you.dermdoc said:Dad-O-Lot said:
When one becomes "born again", they do not lose their free will. Their conversion and acceptance of Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior can be genuine in their youth but still be rejected later in life.
If at the end of a person's life on earth, they have freely chosen to be separated from God, then that is where they will spend eternity regardless of how many salvation prayers they have prayed.
ETA: by "rejected", I am referring to the individual rejecting their own previous conversion. Just as we have the freedom to embrace Jesus, we also still have the freedom to later reject him.
Agree. But that is not possible with double predestination. I guess it does absolve parents of their child's faith walk and eternal destination.
They can not make their child elect.
I don't see how being able to "change your mind" about salvation is "double predestination". As for parents' "absolution" of their child's faith walk and eternal destination, a parent can do everything "right" and still lose their child to the world.
No, a parent cannot guarantee their child's choice regarding their eternal salvation.
I'm not even sure what you mean by "double predestination".
Double predestination means God irrevocably chooses the elect and pre ordains that the other folks are damned to hell.
Check out Calvin's institute #21
I believe God knows what we will choose, because he is outside of time and space. I do not believe that this has any impact on our free will. He may know who is "saved" and who is not, but that is only because we are living the movie he has already seen.
First if all, Saul disobeyed God which shows free will.Wakesurfer817 said:
Doc - how do you feel about the deposition of Saul (when Samuel confronts him in 1 Sam 15)? Not a trick question - just curious about how you would interpret that event with respect to God's character and/or sovereignty.
First - for the record - this is just a fun discussion - we're all on the same team, of that I have no doubt. And I agree - idols are idols, even if they're couched in fancy theological terms (like Calvinism).dermdoc said:First if all, Saul disobeyed God which shows free will.Wakesurfer817 said:
Doc - how do you feel about the deposition of Saul (when Samuel confronts him in 1 Sam 15)? Not a trick question - just curious about how you would interpret that event with respect to God's character and/or sovereignty.
Secondly as agilaw states the Amalekites were basically the OT equivalent of ISIS.
Thirdly, I do not think it is a question of God's sovereignty. God is sovereign.
It is a question of God's character which He revealed through Christ.
Again, I think you have to look at the message of the Bible as a whole.
I did a little research and it is fascinating that basically Augustine was the first to hint at the theology of double pre destination and Calvin doubled down on it.
Why did it take all those years to develop new theology?
And I find that a lot of my Calvinist friends almost worship Calvinism theology more than anything else.
The Banned said:
Can you expand on loss of future reward in Heaven? Is that the loss of heaven? Or we'll have less rewards but we're still making it to heaven?
I think the term 'faith' is being used often in this thread as 'belief' and not as an encompassing term meaning that our faith is expressed through our obedience to Gods Word. We cannot persevere without the Holy Spirit helping us and thought it may not be likely if our faith is strong, but it is possible to turn away and be disobedient.TheGreatEscape said:
2 Corinthians 1:22 (ESV)
22 "and who has also put his seal on us and given us his Spirit in our hearts as a guarantee."
BluHorseShu said:I think the term 'faith' is being used often in this thread as 'belief' and not as an encompassing term meaning that our faith is expressed through our obedience to Gods Word. We cannot persevere without the Holy Spirit helping us and thought it may not be likely if our faith is strong, but it is possible to turn away and be disobedient.TheGreatEscape said:
2 Corinthians 1:22 (ESV)
22 "and who has also put his seal on us and given us his Spirit in our hearts as a guarantee."
OSAS shouldn't be seen as a one and done thing, otherwise Christ wouldn't have told us the importance of persevering. If our faith is persevering, we are being saved. If we persevered for a while but somehow turned to focus only on the things of this world with unrepentence....I don't believe you can say we never had true salvific faith but rather our faith was not persevering.
Strongly disagree. That's sort of the whole point of the parable of the sower. Only those that take goodness, internalize it, and produce good works until the end are saved. So no one's salvation is assured until they are dead. Thus the high value placed on martyrs by Christianity. Dying for your faith is as good a guarantee about someone's salvation status as you are ever going to get.Quote:
OSAS is a one and done thing that occurs at the moment of faith in Jesus
ramblin_ag02 said:Strongly disagree. That's sort of the whole point of the parable of the sower. Only those that take goodness, internalize it, and produce good works until the end are saved. So no one's salvation is assured until they are dead. Thus the high value placed on martyrs by Christianity. Dying for your faith is as good a guarantee about someone's salvation status as you are ever going to get.Quote:
OSAS is a one and done thing that occurs at the moment of faith in Jesus
I believe those are always in tension and problems occur when someone tries to be too dogmatic one way or another.Grimey said:
Since this is basically a predestination thread, I wanted to bring up a question/conundrum that I've thought about on and off for years.
0) God has certain unalterable attributes.
1) God is love
2) Perfect love cannot be forced upon another
3) Free will must exist to receive perfect love
4) Likewise, free will must exist to accept salvation (which is perfect love expressed through the Blood etc. )
5) God has perfect knowledge (omniscient)
6) God exists beyond time because he created it
7) God exists in all time simultaneously and experiences all time simultaneously
8) Therefore God has all knowledge of eternity before creation
9) If God has knowledge of all eternity before creation, he knows the eternal fate of each individual (as chosen through free will)
10) This means that God created people he knew would not choose to accept salvation
This logical progression of attributes of God lead to two seemingly disparate outcomes: free will and predestination. Any input or discussion would be appreciated.
Interesting. So it seems like it's all up to us? I need to take goodness (what does this mean exactly?), I need to internalize it, and I need to produce good works or else. Forgive me - but this sounds hard and scary. Impossible even.ramblin_ag02 said:Strongly disagree. That's sort of the whole point of the parable of the sower. Only those that take goodness, internalize it, and produce good works until the end are saved. So no one's salvation is assured until they are dead. Thus the high value placed on martyrs by Christianity. Dying for your faith is as good a guarantee about someone's salvation status as you are ever going to get.Quote:
OSAS is a one and done thing that occurs at the moment of faith in Jesus
What do you think prompts "OSAS" believing Protestants to repent and do good works? Why would they? Have a look at this from Catholic Answers:Zobel said:
By recognizing that everyone is given sufficient grace for salvation, and sufficient opportunities for repentance.
LOL. That's outstanding. Made my day.Zobel said:
Honestly? I think there's a disconnect between what people say is their theology and what they actually believe.
Zobel said:
Honestly? I think there's a disconnect between what people say is their theology and what they actually believe.