No, I'm not saying that at all. It is more than strong enough.
The problem is the believer still has the freedom to choose not to use that power if he wants to willingly go back to his old life of unbelief and sin. I wish we were all robots that couldn't go back but that's just not the way it is.
The problem is the believer still has the freedom to choose not to use that power if he wants to willingly go back to his old life of unbelief and sin. I wish we were all robots that couldn't go back but that's just not the way it is.
Hi Phart,
I agree a person can go back as well.
But I believe that this person is either the 2nd or 3rd soil in the sower parable ....... he never had genuine faith.
The seed was planted in his heart, but his soil was bad soil and so he can't continue in the faith. It's impossible for him to do so because his soil won't allow the fruit to come to fruition and so he backs away eventually either because of persecution he falls away or because the worries and cares of this world makes him unfruitful.
So when someone says they were once saved and then leaves the faith, I believe they represent one of the 3 soils in the sower parable. The only one who will produce and be fruitful is the one with good soil.
I use to think that a true believer could fall away and there are many passages that caused me to believe that way. But when passages seem to contradict, I always tell myself that the scriptures are true, it's my understand that's in error. So I keep at it until I find the missing piece of the puzzle.
Because if you go through the scriptures and see what God says about the saved person, they are faithful all the way through. So that caused me to rethink what I had been taught. And when I came to the sower parable that helped explain things for me.
There are 4 types of people. Three of them don't remain faithful, only the good soil. So she I see a person fall away from the faith, they must be 1 of the three bad soils. It can't be any other way.
But I don't use osas for this very reason because let's say we have people represented in our churches that have the four different soils. And let's say we begin to preach to them that once they're saved they always will be saved. Well that just isn't true. It's only the one that preservers to the end that is saved. The one with the good soil. The others do fall away.
I could say to them and be biblically accurate that we can be assured of salvation, if we remain in the vine and if we hold fast and all the others scriptures that describe the true believers in Christ. They are the ones who remain and hold fast and abide in the vine, etc.