To mailmandan,
My reply to your post requires 2 posts. Here goes:
Not all belief is the same.
This is a specious argument. The Bible NEVER teaches any of this. When the Bible says someone believes, it means they got saved. Every time. Even in the case of Simon.
You simply give the word "believe" a broad brushed definition of "saved" and with that logic, you would have to say that the demons are saved because they "believe" that "there is one God." (James 2:19)
First, you're trying to compare apples with oranges. There is no comparison between the human race and the angelic race.
Second, the demons believe from EXPERIENCE and not from FAITH. Can you discern between the 2? Some people learn from experience, like not touching a hot stove (idiots). Others trust their parents and know from faith that one should not touch a hot stove.
One thing is very clear: demons are NOT trusting (faith) that God is One. They KNOW it because they were created in heaven and saw it with their own eyes.
To use v.19 as some kind of "unsaving faith" is really missing the point.
Keep in mind the same Greek word for believe "pisteuo" is used in James 2:19 as it is in Acts 16:31 - .."believe" on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved.. yet the demons are not saved.
And I just explained why they aren't. And salvation isn't even the issue in v.19, so James was NOT even referencing "saving faith".
What the demons believe (know to be true) is that "God is One". They witnessed it. That's why they believe it.
v.19 has NOTHING to do with saving faith or salvation at all.
Yet a shallow, temporary belief that has no root and withers away doesn't grow.
This is true. There are believers who do not grow up in their salvation. In fact, Peter exhorted believers to grow in their faith. 1 Pet 2:2
It's not so much about quantitatively as it is about OBJECT and CONTENT. The Bible clearly teaches that not all belief is the same and not all belief saves.
No, the Bible does not. So I challenge you to prove your claim with verses. And Simon doesn't prove your case.
As I previously explained, if you read in John 8:31-59, you will see that the Jews who were said to have "believed in Him" turned out to be: slaves to sin, indifferent to the words of Jesus’, children of the devil, liars, accused Jesus of having a demon and were guilty of setting out to stone and kill the one they have professed to believe in. So we can see at best, these Jews believed in Him (based on their own misconceptions and expectations) of Jesus, yet upon gaining further knowledge about Jesus through His words, we see they did not truly "believe in His name/believe in Him" and become children of God. (John 1:12; 3:18) but were instead children of the devil.
Well, another poorly understood passage. I'm not blaming you, but all those poorly prepared pastors who failed to read carefully.
Let's start here:
13 The Pharisees challenged him, “Here you are, appearing as your own witness; your testimony is not valid.”
14 Jesus answered, “Even if I testify on my own behalf, my testimony is valid, for I know where I came from and where I am going. But you have no idea where I come from or where I am going.
This is the beginning of a long dialogue between Jesus and UNBELIEVING Jews. They (unbelievers) say something, and Jesus responds to what they say. That's the pattern in ch 8.
v.19 starts with "they", which refers to these Pharisees. In fact, EVERY mention of "they" refers to Pharisees. v.21 - them (Pharisees), v.11 (the Jews-Pharisees),v.25 they (Pharisees) v.27 they, v.33 they.
OK, that's the pattern. Now, let's examine what John, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit wrote:
30 Even as he spoke, many believed in him.
31 To the Jews who had believed him, Jesus said, “If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples.
32 Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”
Here, John makes clear that "many in that crowd believed in Him". iow, they got saved by believing Him to be the Messiah.
And John makes clear who Jesus speaks to in v.31 by saying "to the Jews who had believed Him". That is clear. So, here we see that there was a smaller group in the larger crowd of unbelieving Pharisees who DID believe in Him. And it is to THAT smaller group that Jesus addresses in v.32. iow, IF these new believers hold to His teachings they are REALLY His disciples and ONLY then will they know the truth, which will set them free (of the Pharisees false teaching and religion).
Then comes v.33 where we again come to another "they said". Who said? The new believers? No, the unbelieving Pharisees. When they heard Jesus speak of being set free, they butted in with a lie about never having been slaves to anyone. Right. Sure. They just forgot the 430 years in Egypt.
So, from v.33 on, Jesus is again responding to the unbelieving Jews. This is proved from v.45 - Yet because I tell the truth, you do not believe me!
So you are faced with a contradiction in John's writing. If you believe what he wrote in v.30,31, applies to v.45, you have a direct contradiction.
The ONLY solution is to realize that those in v.30,31 are NOT who Jesus was talking to in v.33-59.
In John chapter 6, we see that many of Jesus' so called disciples complained and were offended (verses 60-61) about what Jesus said in verses 51-59. These are the very so called "disciples" who Jesus says "do not believe." (John 6:64) They also walked with Him no more. So apparently, these alleged disciples of Jesus set out to be learners and followers of Him (based on their own misconceptions and expectations) of Jesus, then as soon as Jesus said something that was hard for them to understand and did not line up with their expectations, they left Him, which demonstrates no saving belief.
The key here is that Jesus clearly stated that they "do not believe". He never used the commonly used and unbiblical words like "shallow faith, dead faith, temporary faith, or any of the other misguided wording.
So to believe in Christ "unto salvation" goes beyond mere "mental assent" belief in the existence of Christ.
Are you insinuating that human works are involved? I hope not.
It also goes beyond merely believing that the death, burial and resurrection of Christ "happened."
Of course that's not saving faith. One must believe that Jesus did it on their behalf. That He died for their sins, and they MUST trust that He will save them.
Even the demons believe that.
OK, now we're back to James. The demons believe that be cause they have experienced that. There is NO TRUST in what the demons believe. Please understand that.
*We must believe from the heart (Romans 10:9) in the death, burial and resurrection of Christ by TRUSTING in the death, burial and resurrection as the ALL-sufficient means of our salvation. (1 Corinthians 15:1-4; Romans 1:16) Saving belief continues and does not wither away.
Well, there you go. Belief is trust. No human works at all. It's pure trust. That is saving faith, my friend.