Ok, though it seems to me you're generalizing with your criticism. Those who speak of the need for obedience don't necessarily hold themselves faultless, especially in a discussion like this. If they were out yelling at people trapped in addiction to stop sinning, then yeah that's a problem. But they're not, they're confronting people who have appointed themselves teachers telling them to be wary of the unintended consequences of their message. When it comes down to Scriptural discussion on the matter its more often speaking past each other and each side citing verses and reading them through their paradigm. And when it comes down to brass tacks OSAS proponents fall into an often false humility accusing those who propose the modest proposition that God is not mocked aren't aware of their shortcomings/sins.
I do apologize for not being charitable with my reading of your statement.
I do apologize for not being charitable with my reading of your statement.
This is thread about giving full credit to God's grace for our salvation, contesting licentiousness here is only bringing all participants to frustration. It would be a WAY better effort to open separate threads addressing specific false teachers (and also that way their followers may find it when googling)...
We only differ in that we believe that salvation isn't something losable, in that case nobody can be called saved nor is there real safety, salvation can only be proclaimed upon death (when one can't mess it up anymore). Instead, we believe than that a person wanting to "live it up with the world" is still unregenerate and needs to be born again. It makes no sense that someone receives a new heart from God, and this new reformed heart wants to trample the blood of grace. People teaching such evils are unregenerates. The new heart doesn't rejoice in sin (which as we agree doesn't mean the person is immune from stumbling). God chastising us and providing correction when we stumble proves we are His children.
Salvation loss theology is as dangerous as licentiousness. This instills doubts into the less mature who are being drawn to God still but don't yet know Him, making a person believe that God abandoned them and that they are damned if they stumble. In fact, this had kept me away from God for many years before I was born again. Instead of turning to God and pressing on until the obstacle is overcame, they might lose heart, needlessly staying in a spiritual limbo and suffering, or rebelling against God for a long time. They will look at other Christians to compare themselves and since some claim how they never sin anymore, they may start thinking they'll never make it, become atheists or maybe get deceived by licentious teachers...
It's that narrow middle way, not to the right, or to the left.
Apology accepted, and thanks for allowing me to clarify
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