it says if you believe, you are saved. by extension if you don't believe, you aren't saved.
Yep.
But osas says Paul is saying,
'you're a true believer if you hold fast and never stop believing, because if you don't it shows you didn't really believe to begin with'.
what it says about 'unless you believed in vain' is addressing whether the resurrection is real or not
Yep.
It isn't saying
'unless you didn't really believe to begin with'.
the double-minded logical contradiction of believing the gospel and denying the raising of the dead.
I don't see any double mindedness going on.
They are being led astray to really believe that there was no bodily resurrection of Christ. A change of mind has occurred.
The point Paul is making is, what you're being told by others is not what they were originally told, and not what they originally accepted and were saved by.
does being stupid in your thinking, holding doctrines which are contrary to the gospel when they're taken to their logical conclusions, count as unbelief?
Yes, it counts as unbelief when it
replaces what you originally believed to be true.
The real question is, "does salvation really hinge on whether or not you believe Christ was raised from the dead?" Apparently so.
does it count as unbelief before you've been corrected?
I think the real question is, "In order for you to be saved, do you have to believe that Christ was raised from the dead? Isn't your sins being forgiven through his death sufficient to save a person?" Apparently not since justification has to do with the resurrected life of Christ, not his death.
Perhaps this is connected to the necessity of him being alive in heaven to intercede on behalf of the believer. He can't do that if he's dead.......and if you don't trust that he's there to do that for you, even if in reality he really is alive in heaven. And that's pretty much what my whole nosas argument is about.
does it count as unbelief if you've been corrected and refused to accept the truth?
By pure definition, if you refuse to believe something, that's unbelief.
Does that particular point of unbelief make the difference between being saved and not being saved?
Apparently, yes. At least in regard to justification. Justification seems to be wrought through the
resurrection of Christ, not his death:
25He was delivered over to death for our sins and was raised to life for our justification. - Romans 4:25
Payment of sin comes through his death. Justification comes through his resurrection.
So it would stand to reason that if you don't believe in the resurrection part of the gospel
you are not justified. (Oh, I feel a nosas argument coming on!) You have to believe in the ministry of a living Christ in heaven to be saved. The implication being, it's an ongoing condition of believing that secures an ongoing ministry of Christ. And without that ongoing belief in a risen Christ his ministry of intercession ends for you.
does it count as unbelief if it just hasn't sunk in yet?
As a matter of pure definition, yes.
that's one question raised. another question raised is whether true faith is faith that persists or not; that isn't being addressed in this chapter.
And that's the point I've been making.
where is that addressed? 1 John 2:19 is pretty clear and it forms a basis for one answer to that second question. what do you say about it? do you believe it?
I believe it.....because that's what the Bible says. But we have to realize it can't be applied the way osas applies it. The saved Galatians fell away from and left trust in Christ for justification and went back to trust in law keeping for justification. So how can 1 John 2:19 mean what osas says it means? It can't of course. I think the reason one falls away determines if their falling away shows they were never saved to begin with. In context, John is talking about those who do not think Christ came in the flesh. It's impossible to have been saved if you thought all along that Christ never came in the flesh. Food for thought.