P
You often seem to say the same things we do yet with a slightly different slant. On the one hand you say the growing pains do not cause us to lose our salvation, whereas on the other you say some do lose it. So it really seems like you are saying two different things but trying to harmonize them, when the common ground is Christ Himself, Who said He would never forsake us.So would I, lol!
Thankfully, the growing pains of growing up into Christ do not cause us to lose our salvation. Why? Because we continue to believe and trust in the blood of Christ to wipe away the guilt of those failures.
It's when we depart from Christ in a willful unbelief that we can be lost. Why? Because we no longer have Christ through our believing--the believing we no longer have--to wipe away our sins.
Huh?
(I'm dense, help me out)
God chastises/disciplines those who are His own...His word stands true even when He's generous.. The absence of punishment is no indication of behavior being OK.
You often seem to say the same things we do yet with a slightly different slant. On the one hand you say the growing pains do not cause us to lose our salvation, whereas on the other you say some do lose it. So it really seems like you are saying two different things but trying to harmonize them, when the common ground is Christ Himself, Who said He would never forsake us.
God chastises/disciplines those who are His own...
"... because the Lord disciplines the one He loves, and He
chastens everyone He accepts as His son." Hebrews 12:6
Oh no! I hope she is okayMy little dog has pain after she eats...I need to care for her. Later guys...
It's the difference between 1) sinning because you are weak, stupid, foolish, and ignorant ("meh"...<raises hand>), but all the while still believing, and trusting in, and loving God and his salvation, and 2) sinning because you do not care about or trust in the gracious gift of God's forgiveness anymore because you'd rather willfully indulge the lusts of the flesh.You often seem to say the same things we do yet with a slightly different slant. On the one hand you say the growing pains do not cause us to lose our salvation, whereas on the other you say some do lose it. So it really seems like you are saying two different things but trying to harmonize them, when the common ground is Christ Himself, Who said He would never forsake us.
....BINGO!...but you and others are trying to make it that we are talking about works...we have never said it is about works, it is about ongoing belief....
I have to disagree with Escaped to Reality
Non believers do horrible things every day and God lets them continue in and outside of the institutional church.
If you take out the words Chapter Five out, you will see in that just prior verse 32 (Chapter Four) that the passage is about believers.
It may not have been a punishment for sin but He had His reasons for what He did.
We need to break out of the mindset that God is either rewarding or punishing, maybe this act was merciful on His part we do not know the whole picture.... but what I do believe is, He is bringing His will to bear on the world and His will is perfect.
You should read the Deuteronomy 31 passage where 'I will never leave you or forsake you' comes from.So it really seems like you are saying two different things but trying to harmonize them, when the common ground is Christ Himself, Who said He would never forsake us.
If that were in the Bible like the other, I could answer. You'd probably skip over it as well
by accept I mean in totality like it actually means.Nope. This 'god' you're describing is foreign to the bible. When He said He'd never leave us or forsake us, He meant it. When Paul said NOTHING can separate us from the love of Christ, He meant it.
This losing salvation is foolish talk.
If we could lose it, we would. We are not that smart or strong to keep it by ourselves.
We are kept by the power of God, not power of self.
It's the difference between 1) sinning because you are weak, stupid, foolish, and ignorant ("meh"...<raises hand>), but all the while still believing, and trusting in, and loving God and his salvation, and 2) sinning because you do not care about or trust in the gracious gift of God's forgiveness anymore because you'd rather willfully indulge the lusts of the flesh.
Number 1 will not cause you to lose your salvation--you still believe in and rely on the forgiveness of God for your sins that you commit in your growing up into the stature of Christ.
Number 2 will cause you to lose your salvation because you, through your contemptuous unbelief, no longer have access to the forgiveness of God to cover your sins (faith is how you access the forgiveness of God--Romans 5:2 NIV).
I don't think we're very far apart on this. I suspect the only real difference of doctrine we have between us is that I believe the true believer can go back to unbelief, and you believe he can not. I TOTALLY respect that belief. It's not a dividing line between believers, IMO. Now if you believed that former believers still have eternal life......that's another story.
Lol, it's not about living in fear of losing your salvation. It's about having a healthy respect for the fact that you can indeed be broken off because of unbelief:The 2 commandments Jesus left us are to love God with all our hearts and love our neighbor as we love ourselves. Thats it. It is only once we can fully accept our true identity in Christ that we can do either of those things. I would suggest that instead of spending so much time worrying about losing your salvation you instead use that time to search the entire Word and see what Jesus says about eternal security.
From the love.. doesn't say nothing can separate you from salvation.. He loved the world and gave His son.. Those who don't accept Him will go to hell even tho He loves themby accept I mean in totality like it actually means.
The thing is, if you do not care, how can that be called faith? It seems the opposite of it. We love because He first loved us. Ours may be a fickle love at times, but His is not. He is faithful always. You are right in that I cannot conceive myself abdicating, not can I really accept that any who truly, key word there, that truly, believe, can ever be lost. God's promises speak against this. He leaves the ninety nine to seek out the one who has strayed.It's the difference between 1) sinning because you are weak, stupid, foolish, and ignorant ("meh"...<raises hand>), but all the while still believing, and trusting in, and loving God and his salvation, and 2) sinning because you do not care about or trust in the gracious gift of God's forgiveness anymore because you'd rather willfully indulge the lusts of the flesh.
Number 1 will not cause you to lose your salvation--you still believe in and rely on the forgiveness of God for your sins that you commit in your growing up into the stature of Christ.
Number 2 will cause you to lose your salvation because you, through your contemptuous unbelief, no longer have access to the forgiveness of God to cover your sins (faith is how you access the forgiveness of God--Romans 5:2 NIV).
I don't think we're very far apart on this. I suspect the only real difference of doctrine we have between us is that I believe the true believer can go back to unbelief, and you believe he can not. I TOTALLY respect that belief. It's not a dividing line between believers, IMO. Now if you believed that former believers still have eternal life......that's another story.
Make sure you don't leave out what Deuteronomy 31 also says is the condition for him to never leave or forsake us.Nope. This 'god' you're describing is foreign to the bible. When He said He'd never leave us or forsake us, He meant it.
And make sure you don't leave out what Paul also said about continued believing being the condition for not being able to be separated from Christ.When Paul said NOTHING can separate us from the love of Christ, He meant it.
Yes, we are kept by the power of God THROUGH FAITH. You have to make sure you quote all of what Peter said there in 1 Peter 1:5.If we could lose it, we would. We are not that smart or strong to keep it by ourselves.
We are kept by the power of God, not power of self.
Again, many of those who followed Moses were not true believers. They were extremely fickle, and turned on the slightest whim. They had promised to follow but did not.You should read the Deuteronomy 31 passage where 'I will never leave you or forsake you' comes from.
It doesn't mean what the church thinks it means:
"6“Be strong and courageous, do not be afraid or tremble at them, for the LORD your God is the one who goes with you. He will not fail you or forsake you.”
8“The LORD is the one who goes ahead of you; He will be with you. He will not fail you or forsake you. Do not fear or be dismayed.”
16The LORD said to Moses, “Behold, you are about to lie down with your fathers; and this people will arise and play the harlot with the strange gods of the land, into the midst of which they are going, and will forsake Me and break My covenant which I have made with them. 17“Then My anger will be kindled against them in that day, and I will forsake them" (Deuteronomy 31:6,8,16-17 NASB)
God not forsaking us is conditioned on us not forsaking Him. But the church thinks Him not forsaking us means he will never, ever, under any circumstances whatsoever, forsake us.
This is similar to how the church thinks that the perfect ministry of Christ means there's nothing we can do to forfeit the effect of that ministry for us. When it actually means the perfect ministry of Christ means we should continue to rely and trust in it. Likewise with this 'he will not forsake you' thing: It means since Christ will not fail or bolt and run when it gets tough for us we ought to be careful to keep our trust firmly in Him.