From that perspective, there is no need for God in salvation. A person can simply read the Bible and believe and they are saved.
Except, that's not how scripture deals with salvation. Men in their natural estate never seek after God. It is always God who initiates with man.
Except, that's not how scripture deals with salvation. Men in their natural estate never seek after God. It is always God who initiates with man.
I think this is a drastic overstatement/reaction to my comment. The very fact that I am referencing the importance of accepting the Gospel shows that God is the author of our salvation. I don’t think its necessary to say that God had to send his Son to die for us in our lost state, AND also has to make us believe in order for God to be needed in Salvation. In fact, ”faith” is contrasted from ”works” in scripture. So to argue that the ability to believe is essentially man earning/working out his salvation is directly contrary to how Scripture distinguishes work from grace/faith.
Also, there are plenty of Christians who do not hold to this type of predestination view on God’s sovereignty who still believe that God is both active in saving men through the cross and also helping them to accept the message. The concept of “prevenient grace” taught by Augustine and others (which essentially means “grace that precedes”) was also embraced by non-Calvinist’s such as John Wesley. His view was that the Holy Spirit prepares a persons heart to hear the Gospel so that they can understand it, but for Wesley, this drawing of the Spirit could be resisted.
Anyway, in sum, there are a lot of ways of viewing this without suggesting that one side does not accept salvation by grace as a work of God alone.
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