Howdy, it is me! said:
The Banned said:
Howdy, it is me! said:
The Banned said:
Howdy, it is me! said:
The Banned said:
FTACo88-FDT24dad said:
The Banned said:
This word "initially" is the key to me when faith alone is held in conjunction with once saved always saved
Can you elaborate?
That's what I'm trying to ascertain myself in this thread. I'm flow charting it now to make it quick and easy to read and critique. Right now i get very long winded in my arguments.
To try and one line it: how can I choose something that I'm not capable of rejecting, should my opinion later change?
I may regret taking a stab at this, but I'm going to try because I feel your sincerity…
Regeneration is monergistic. The Lord gifts us faith, freely, with no merit. However, our continuing sanctification and preservation following justification is synergistic. However, that's not to say that we may fail at that point, because it's the Lord working and willing in us as the effective agent. Jesus is our guarantor and everyone who the Lord has chosen to save WILL BE saved.
How can it be both synergistic and guaranteed? I can't find a way to make this logic. He is working in us as the effective agent, but we sin. So He has to desire this sin in some way or another or He, as the effective agent, would have stopped it. And we only don't sin to such a degree that we lose our faith because He alone holds us in the faith.
This is the whole reason Arminius and later Wesley moved away from monergism. There's really no room for both to work together.
I'm not sure why you use the term "desire". He permits us to sin and He uses our sin to bring about good. Joseph makes that very clear in Genesis 50.
Jesus' work on the cross is either fully effectual or it's not. Saying we can lose our salvation makes His work the latter.
Philippians 2 calls us to work out our salvation but also says God is at work as well - that's synergism.
Your last line - is that what you believe or that's the conclusion to my beliefs? Because I agree, we can never sin so deeply that we are no longer saved. We have eternal security. Jesus said we would have eternal life; if we can lose our salvation, then it was never eternal. The Holy Spirit seals us and is our guarantee we will receive our inheritance.
The idea that we can be sealed and then unsealed and then sealed again and so on and so forth just doesn't make any sense to me. The idea that one could become lost again while the Holy Spirit resides within them seems unfathomable. It makes a lot of scripture sound like lies.
I want to lay it all out in another post when I can make it clear, concise and easy to tear apart by those who disagree with me, so I'll keep this response short by asking: what do you mean by Him being the "active agent" in our synergistic sanctification. Just how heavy of a role does He play?
He is God. He will play whatever role necessary to fulfill His promises.
Romans 8: 38 For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, 39 nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.
It doesn't say: nothing except your own self.
That's true. It doesn't say that. But this is yet another example of very different understandings of free will. It's interesting that nine of the ten things listed are explicitly referring to something external to the believer that the believer has no control over. A believer cannot control, for example, whether he is born or will die ("death . . . life"). Nor can he control what angels and demons do ("angels, principalities"). He's definitely not in control of time ("things present . . . things to come") or the cosmos ("powers . . . height . . . depth").
Just a few verses before, in verse 35, Paul gives a similar teaching and another list of items, all of which are external to and beyond the control of the believer: "Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?"
A believer's sins are not external to and beyond his control. They're internal inasmuch as they are the product of his will. They're not beyond his control; otherwise, sin wouldn't be a free action, which is really the heart of the matter.
Then there are the other scripture passages that support the ability of a believer to freely separate himself from God. The broader context of the epistle to the Romans doesn't support the permanence of salvation. Just two chapters earlier in the same letter, Paul warns the Christians in Rome, "Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal bodies, to make you obey their passions. Do not yield your members to sin as instruments of wickedness" (6:12-13). It doesn't make sense that Paul would warn Christians about letting sin "reign" over them if he didn't think it were possible for Christians to be re-enslaved to sin and return to their former way of life when they weren't justified.
Paul gives a similar warning to the Christians in Corinth. In the beginning of chapter six of his first letter, he chastises the Corinthians for having lawsuits with fellow Christians (vv. 1-8). Immediately following this chastisement, he writes, "Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God?" (v. 9).
Paul then says, "Do not be deceived; neither the immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, nor thieves, nor the greedy, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor robbers will inherit the kingdom of God" (vv. 9-10).
That Paul says, "Do not be deceived" suggests that he is speaking directly to Christians who think their salvation is guaranteed.
Lastly, the words of Jesus himself in the Gospel of John are clear that sin can separate us from Christ's and God's love. Jesus says in John 15:9-10:
As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you; abide in my love. If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father's commandments and abide in his love.
That Christ makes keeping his commandments a condition of abiding in his love implies that sin (acts that violate the commandments) can cut us off from his love.