The Spirit of God can leave a person, or a thing, just as easily as He came in, and anytime He wants.
Yet with zero NT Scripture to back it up.
We have the old testament to show us without doubt that the Spirit can leave a person, or a thing, just as easily as He came in, and anytime He wants. Surely you familiar with Ezekiel 10?
"Then the glory of the Lord departed from over the threshold of the temple" - Ezekiel 10:18
And in the New Testament, osas has decided that the word 'sealed' means 'unable to be unsealed'. Of course it has to do that to defend it's assertion that the Holy Spirit can't leave His place of residence. God can lift His seal of ownership anytime He wants to just like He did in the temple in the old covenant.
Basically what you're saying is Christ will leave us and forsake us
Yes, He will leave and forsake you,
if you leave and forsake him...
"the Lord your God goes with you;
he will never leave you nor forsake you." - Deuteronomy 31:6
"
17And in that day
I will become angry with them and forsake them; I will hide my face from them, and they will be destroyed. " - Deuteronomy 31:17
It's interesting how the second part of the promise always gets conveniently left off by osas. And if you want to use the tired out argument 'that's the old testament', Paul says the same thing:
"If we disown him, he will also disown us" - 2 Timothy 2:12
(Remember, stay true to your Calvinist osas when answering.)
and, that we should tremble in trepidation because just whenever he wants, he can do it.
What a schizophrenic unbiblical "gospel" it is that you preach.
He has told us what will cause Him to do that.
You only need tremble in trepidation if you do what He says will cause Him to leave you.
If you keep believing you need not fear and tremble anymore than you do about crossing the center line when driving on the road.
Do you characterize your fear of crossing the center line into oncoming traffic as schizophrenic? Then neither should the devout believer about staying on this side of the dividing line between belief and unbelief. A good healthy fear of doing that is sufficient. And that is what Paul tells us to have in Romans 11.
What is it you think Paul gave him? Works? Effort? A promise to never fail? Nope. He entrusted his eternal future and this was guarded by Christ. Note John 10:27ff.
You need not challenge me about some presumed argument about works salvation.
I was challenging the osas teaching that says the necessity to continue believing is us trying to earn our salvation.
Which I know you agree with but what you will be curiously silent about.
What Paul said actually establishes eternal security/OSAS/Perseverence of the Saints, because in his wording right there it is all Christ. yet you're using it to say that isn't true.
No, I'm not saying that.
Continued
believing does that.
I'm not a works salvationist.
Just because I don't buy into the osas argument doesn't mean I think justification and salvation is earned on the merit of righteous work.