Welcome to the party — it won’t take you long to spot the heretics around here. I’ve been calling out their nonsense since the day I joined this forum.Not a biblical truth reports
Welcome to the party — it won’t take you long to spot the heretics around here. I’ve been calling out their nonsense since the day I joined this forum.Not a biblical truth reports
You’re overcomplicating something Scripture makes simple. God isn’t just the “original cause” — He’s the only cause when it comes to regeneration and transformation. Our cooperation doesn’t create the change; it responds to it. Philippians 2:13 KJV says it plainly: “For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure.”Means and cause can overlap which is the way I took your statement. @Cameron143 seemed to take what you said and go to or question original cause which is not what I thought you said. God is original cause - we cooperate by means - as we grow that means becomes in effect a secondary cause (but never original cause).
Anyway, that was my take. I never saw original cause in your wording.
This still doesn't have the conformity as the result of the activity of man. Outward conformity does not cause inward conformity. Inward conformity engenders outward conformity.It's called growth. If you don't do the works of the spirit you don't grow up into Christ. You might think you do, but it's a delusion. Use it, or lose it. The servants that increased the spritual riches (talents) entrusted to them were rewarded, but the work-phobic servant who didn't do anything was cast into outer darkness.
That’s a creative construction, but it’s not what Scripture teaches. You’re slicing salvation into artificial “steps” that the Bible never defines.
This still doesn't have the conformity as the result of the activity of man. Outward conformity does not cause inward conformity. Inward conformity engenders outward conformity.
Putting on conformity never results in greater inward conformity. All inward conformity is the result of the activity of God.
If He isn’t raised, justification fails and salvation collapses with it — because they’re inseparably linked.
Nope. Only that inward growth has taken place.And conforming our behavor to the word produces inward growth
Actually, Romans 5:10 KJV is precisely defining two aspects — reconciliation and salvation — and even separates them by tense and cause:The bible never defines two aspects ... smh
For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God through the death of his Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved in his life. Romans 5:10
You are such a DISHONEST and DECEPTIVE person. You clearly took your statement out of context.I'm glad you agree justification alone doesn't save.
That’s a misrepresentation. He ignored my actual point — that justification and salvation are inseparable because both depend on Christ’s resurrection — and reframed it as if I had affirmed his view that justification by faith alone isn’t sufficient.
There is no time where what we do externally changes what we are internally. What is the scriptural basis for a claim otherwise?
Dude, I'm not going to go looking for the verses. Nothing comes to the top of my head atm, but the NT is filled with them
This proves how little you know about theology! You are not even qualified to speak on this subject! That reply from ChristRoseFromTheDead (“Justification doesn’t depend on the resurrection at all…”) is so biblically and theologically incorrect, and I can expose it cleanly.Justification doesn't depend on the resurrection at all. It is based on Christ's death. Salvation is based on justification and the resurrection.
You’re still merging two different biblical terms and pretending they’re interchangeable — they’re not.
In the Greek text, πίστις (pistis, faith) and ὑπακοή (hypakoē, obedience) are never used as synonyms. Paul treats them as distinct — faith is the root, obedience is the result. Romans 1:5 KJV and 16:26 speak of the obedience of faith (hypakoē pisteōs) — that’s obedience that flows from faith, not obedience that defines faith.
If they were identical, Paul couldn’t write Romans 4:5 KJV the way he does: “To him that worketh not, but believeth…” He’s drawing a hard line between believing and doing.
James doesn’t blur that line either — he’s condemning dead faith, not redefining faith itself. Real faith produces works, but it isn’t works.
What you’re teaching collapses the distinction Scripture itself makes and ends up replacing grace with performance. That’s not exegesis — it’s revision.
Grace and Peace
Acts 17:11 (KJV)
“These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.”
https://ergonis.com/typinator
Highly Recommended - great for often cited scripture verses!
I wasn't referring to that so no worries. I was responding directly to inward change as a consequence of outward behavior. It's the cart before the horse. No physical behavior has ever brought inward change. The material doesn't impact the immaterial. It works the other way around. Putting on physical clothing doesn't change the heart of an individual, but changing the heart of an individual may well lead to his putting on different clothing.No interest in discussing the view that God changes us so we can believe. Just commenting in what looked like some potential confusion.
This is your opinion which fits your systematic theology.
Strawman tactic again. A few posts ago I agreed that they are not "synonyms." Nor are they "identical"
Making obedience = work then using Rom4:5 to say obedience/work is not faith likely involves 3 fallacies being used to misinterpret Scripture.I've explained how James in James2:17 & 24 and the verses between them refute your concept of faith-alone.
If you're inferring that I've said obedience defines faith, you'll need to point me to that statement. I does help to define and clarify that faith by itself is not genuine faith and is dead.
At least 4 more fallacies in your closing statement.
This is repetitive in content and fallacy. Anything new?
That’s a stunning admission, because it flatly contradicts Romans 4:25 KJV:
“Who was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification.”
This proves how little you know about theology! You are not even qualified to speak on this subject! That reply from ChristRoseFromTheDead (“Justification doesn’t depend on the resurrection at all…”) is so biblically and theologically incorrect, and I can expose it cleanly.
That’s a stunning admission, because it flatly contradicts Romans 4:25 KJV:
“Who was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification.”
Paul couldn’t be clearer — justification depends on the resurrection.
If Christ stayed dead, there’s no justification, no imputed righteousness, no completed redemption — only an unpaid verdict.
To claim “justification doesn’t depend on the resurrection” is to gut the very foundation of the gospel. The cross pays for sin, but the resurrection proves it was accepted and declares us righteous before God (cf. 1 Cor 15:17 KJV).
Without the resurrection, you don’t have justification — you have a corpse and a cancelled gospel.
Your claim is not a matter of opinion—it contradicts Scripture.
“Who was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification.” — Romans 4:25 KJV
“If Christ be not raised, your faith is vain; ye are yet in your sins.” — 1 Corinthians 15:17 KJV
Saving faith itself includes believing “that God hath raised Him from the dead.” — Romans 10:9 KJV
Christ’s death paid the penalty; His resurrection is the Father’s public verdict that the payment was accepted and righteousness is imputed. If justification doesn’t depend on the resurrection, Paul’s statements above make no sense—one could be “justified” and yet still “in sins.” Scripture says the opposite.
So no, this isn’t about my “theology”; it’s about biblical text. Your statement collapses under Romans 4:25 KJV and 1 Corinthians 15:17 KJV. If you disagree, show how your view fits those verses as written.
Grace and Peace
Acts 17:11 (KJV)
“These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.”
https://ergonis.com/typinator
Highly Recommended - great for often cited scripture verses!
The material doesn't impact the immaterial
You’re overcomplicating something Scripture makes simple. God isn’t just the “original cause” — He’s the only cause when it comes to regeneration and transformation. Our cooperation doesn’t create the change; it responds to it. Philippians 2:13 KJV says it plainly: “For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure.”
When you start dividing “original cause” and “secondary cause,” you’re not doing exegesis anymore — you’re building theology out of philosophy.