Morning Blue......give us words of wisdom today from the cat lady HAH
Studyman,
Good Scriptures you have offered. The context of those Scriptures are descriptive of believers, they are not then prescriptive texts.
Now, you also speak of those who say they love God, but do not follow or obey God in essence. That is also descriptive of something, perhaps it describes what they truly are in opposition to their profession, but we cannot be certain of this. That these allegedly do not obey God adds nothing to what you are attempting to convey with the Scriptures quoted. It only describes them, they cannot by deciding to obey God then earn heaven, or enter the Kingdom, or even see the Kingdom (John 3) until they are first regenerated.
At times people err in Scriptures by using some as prescriptive texts when they are instead descriptive. You are zealous to serve God it appears, however you are making the mistake I am speaking of. I hope you can accept this in humility and continue to grow in grace and knowledge.
The willful sin being talked about in Hebrews 10:26 is the sin of willfully abandoning trust in Christ and willfully going back to the world, or to a false system of belief, in unbelief. Unbelief in Christ is always signified by a lifestyle of sin.Yes. Those that want to try and hang on to the "willful sin" escape clause, as if they don't willfully sin, justify themselves with reassurances in their minds, that THEIR sin isn't willful.
I see it. That's why I say you can't keep a salvation that is dependent on belief in Christ's blood for salvation. It's that simple.That's why they have to work for their salvation.
They either can't or won't understand what the willful sin is the writer to Hebrews is talking about.
Which ironically enough is NOT relying on Christ's Blood alone for their salvation!
They just can't see it. Sad really.
Where in my statement did I justify sin? Where did I say we should dwell and stay in sin? Why are you putting words in my mouth?
It would be helpful if you would be specific in your rebuke so I might learn from it.
Here is the problem, I am not saying you are saying this, I am saying those
who wish to criticise your position are doing precisely this.
Anyone who they feel fails they will attack.
Unfortunately it is easy to missread some peoples contributions, as the opposite
of what they mean. I apologise if you have done this.
By the way they are happy to heap whatever they can on the "opposition" lol.
I would have to be real hungry...and I mean so hungry that my backbone was chewing on my stomach......
We don't need to KEEP believing in Jesus, to be saved. We only need that initial first belief, then it's just natural to keep believing.. although NOT to keep salvation..![]()
We don't need to KEEP believing in Jesus, to be saved. We only need that initial first belief,
then it's just natural to keep believing.. although NOT to keep salvation..![]()

John 3:16
For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, so that all who believe on Him shall not perish but have everlasting life..
Note the word "believe". Also take note that the verse does NOT say, "all those who KEEP BELIEVING"...
The word 'believe' is in the present tense. Can you explain how it is that one presently believes without continuing to believe, as if they are two different things?John 3:16
For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, so that all who believe on Him shall not perish but have everlasting life..
Note the word "believe". Also take note that the verse does NOT say, "all those who KEEP BELIEVING"...
When genuine tongue talking believers abandon the faith we know that it isn't just fake believers who fall away into a rejection of Christ.I agree, the Nature of a Truly Born Again Human Spirit is to keep believing. Those who fall away only prove they only knew about Jesus in their head, and NOT in their heart, in a newly born again human spirit.
But you have NOT stopped doing that. Just the other day you claimed that if I said there was nothing a believer can say, or do, or think that can cause them to lose their salvation, then I say that grace is a license to sin. Your ideas about yourself are as others who push their good works: self deceived. Whatever new level you imagine you have achieved is not as great as you suppose.When genuine tongue talking believers abandon the faith we know that it isn't just fake believers who fall away into a rejection of Christ.
Don't project your experience with God onto every other Christian. Just because you're strong in your believing doesn't mean every other believer is too. But I know that is a tendency of our fallen nature to project our feelings and experiences onto others in a judgmental kind of way. A big, big step of spiritual maturity for me was to stop doing that. That sent my growth in the agape way of God's love to an all new level.
The word 'believe' is in the present tense. Can you explain how it is that one presently believes without continuing to believe, as if they are two different things?
Now I can't tell if you are presently in 'H-grace OSAS' mode, or 'Calvinist OSAS' mode, lol, so I don't know which argument to address, but what is clear from this and other verses is it is only the believing person (present tense) who presently has eternal life. If you stop believing you no longer fulfill the qualification of the one who Jesus said presently has eternal life. So you can go one of two ways with this: You can say the true believer never stops believing, or else he was never a true believer to begin with, and therefore always fulfills the condition for having eternal life, or, the person who stops believing still has eternal life despite the fact that he no longer believes and is not presently believing (which is a joke).
It's easy to see the Calvinist OSAS argument is by far the only reasonable one of the two (the true believer can't stop believing), but that makes passages like Hebrews 10:26-31 meaningless. And of course we can instantly discount any argument that says ex-believers will enter into the kingdom of God. So that's out. But in my doctrine (you are saved as long as you are believing) all the scriptures about eternal life and believing, and the warnings about what will happen if you stop believing come into perfect harmony and in no way cancel out or nullify one another.
John 3:16
For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, so that all who believe on Him shall not perish but have everlasting life..
Note the word "believe". Also take note that the verse does NOT say, "all those who KEEP BELIEVING"...
The willful sin being talked about in Hebrews 10:26 is the sin of willfully abandoning trust in Christ and willfully going back to the world, or to a false system of belief, in unbelief. Unbelief in Christ is always signified by a lifestyle of sin.
And, no, I haven't committed that willful sin. But I know of those who have. It's far different and distinguished from the willful sin of the one who is still believing in Christ.
I see it. That's why I say you can't keep a salvation that is dependent on belief in Christ's blood for salvation. It's that simple.
If you want to argue that the true believer can never stop believing, well, fine, do that. You and you alone will find the answer out to that question when you come into your 'Job' suffering and face the temptation to get out of your suffering by going back to the world. You won't need me or anyone else to lecture you about if you can stop believing or not at that time.
The word 'believe' is in the present tense. Can you explain how it is that one presently believes without continuing to believe, as if they are two different things?
Now I can't tell if you are presently in 'H-grace OSAS' mode, or 'Calvinist OSAS' mode, lol, so I don't know which argument to address, but what is clear from this and other verses is it is only the believing person (present tense) who presently has eternal life. If you stop believing you no longer fulfill the qualification of the one who Jesus said presently has eternal life. So you can go one of two ways with this: You can say the true believer never stops believing, or else he was never a true believer to begin with, and therefore always fulfills the condition for having eternal life, or, the person who stops believing still has eternal life despite the fact that he no longer believes and is not presently believing (which is a joke).
It's easy to see the Calvinist OSAS argument is by far the only reasonable one of the two (the true believer can't stop believing), but that makes passages like Hebrews 10:26-31 meaningless. And of course we can instantly discount any argument that says ex-believers will enter into the kingdom of God. So that's out. But in my doctrine (you are saved as long as you are believing) all the scriptures about eternal life and believing, and the warnings about what will happen if you stop believing come into perfect harmony and in no way cancel out or nullify one another.