R
Ruby123
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I smuggled one onto his mail truck.. LOL
Beauty, I hope it is bound for Australia. I'll have two please.
I smuggled one onto his mail truck.. LOL
Thanks friend. I will keep digging until I can put it all together, perhaps there are many books written by both camps of the debate trying to reconcile it. I refuse to spend any money to get answers so I will pray, ask around here and there and everywhere. But I believe Scripture cannot contradict itself, and if it does it is due to different covenants people are under at that time or it is spoken to specific people only.If you have questions on how to reconcile bible passages, keep looking into it and ask others and a pastor if you like. I would probably check different sources and read about how different people see things from Scripture. Sometimes you may run into passages that are hard to understand together and reconcile. That's ok. I have ran into that as well and I don't understand everything I read either. In particular the Old Testament prophets are tricky for me often times.
Being sealed in no way implies not being able to be unsealed. Once saved always saved has added that definition to the word.There is a difference between the role of the Holy Spirit in the Old Testament and in the New Testament in regards to "indwelling." The New Testament teaches the permanent indwelling of the Holy Spirit in believers (Ephesians 1:13-14; 4:30; 2 Corinthians 1:22; 2 Corinthians 5:5). When we place our faith in Jesus Christ for salvation, we are sealed in Christ by the Holy Spirit. The apostle Paul calls this permanent indwelling the “guarantee of our inheritance” (Ephesians 1:14).![]()
Being sealed in no way implies not being able to be unsealed. Once saved always saved has added that definition to the word.
I don’t need to add anything. Sealed until the redemption of the purchased possession/unto the day of redemption says it all.Being sealed in no way implies not being able to be unsealed. Once saved always saved has added that definition to the word.
Thanks. As I already said to you in another thread here, I always appreciate your demeanor and Christian behavior and approach. More verses off my list, not sure I got any left. What type of Church do you go to?*Notice - Brethren, if anyone "among" you wanders from the truth..turns a "sinner" from the error of his way.. Some would argue that James says this one who turned from the truth was a "sinner," and was "among" but "not of" the Brethren, then he wasn’t previously saved. That fits 1 John 2:19 - They went out "from" us, but they were "not of" us..
IF this person was a genuine believer, yet how do we know for sure this is the second death in the lake of fire? In Matthew 26:38, Jesus said: "My soul [psuche] is deeply grieved, to the point of death." Jesus was not saying that His soul was deeply grieved to the point of spiritual death, Rather, Jesus was talking about physical death, his human life. In Revelation 16:3, "The second angel poured out his bowl into the sea, and it became blood like that of a dead man; and every living soul [psuche] in the sea died". In 1 Peter 3:20 "... God kept waiting in the days of Noah, during the construction of the ark, in which a few, that is, eight persons, [psuche-souls] were brought safely (saved from drowning, physical death) through the water" by the ark (Hebrews 11:7).
Jesus covered our sins in one way (Romans 4:7) by bringing forgiveness for all believers, yet sins can also be covered in a different way. In Proverbs 10:12, we read: Hatred stirs up strife, But love covers all sins. In 1 Peter 4:8, we read: And above all things have fervent love for one another, for "love will cover a multitude of sins." Where there is strife, there is hatred and unless love prevails, the strife will only get worse. Love covers offenses and sins when a believer turns back from error.
So is this wanderer a professing Christian, whose faith is not genuine, or a sinning Christian, who needs to be restored? For the former, the death spoken of in verse 20 is the "second death" (Revelation 21:8); for the latter, it is "physical death" (1 Corinthians 11:29-32; 1 John 5:16).
Believers are not passive in continuing in sound doctrine, but it's not merely in our own power that we continue. God alone saves, but "in a sense" we save ourselves and others through continuing in sound doctrine, as we continue to believe the gospel and are used as God's instruments to bring about the salvation of others through preaching the gospel to them as well.
If you fell into a well with no way out and someone threw down and rope and pulled you out of the well, "in a sense" you can say that you "saved yourself" by choosing to grab and hold onto the rope and allowing that person to pull you out of the well, but ultimately, the person who pulled you out of the well saved you and ultimately, it is Jesus Christ who saves us.
Even though this shallow ground hearer in Luke 8:13 is said to have "believed," yet he is never said to have been "saved." How do we know that the shallow ground hearer was never actually "saved"? Allow me to explain why:
First, his heart condition is contrasted with that of the "good ground" hearer in the 4th soil, who's heart was "good" and "honest." Thus, his heart was not "good," being like the soil to which it corresponds, being "shallow" or "rocky," lacking sufficient depth. Such soil represents a sinner not properly prepared in heart. People who "believe" and "rejoice" at the preaching of the gospel without a prepared heart, and without a good and honest heart, and without having "root" in themselves, do not experience real salvation.
*IN CONTRAST TO Mark 4:8 - But other seed fell on good ground and yielded a crop that sprang up, increased and produced: some thirtyfold, some sixty, and some a hundred. Luke 8:15 says, But the ones that fell on the good ground are those who, having heard the word with a noble and good heart, keep it and bear fruit with perseverance. So the rocky soil represents a person not properly prepared in heart so the seed planted ends up with a lack of "root" (lack of being firmly planted, or established) and good soil represents a person properly prepared in heart who having heard the word with a noble and good heart, keeps it and bears fruit with perseverance.
*Unlike saving belief, temporary, shallow belief is not rooted in a regenerate heart. How can no depth of earth, no root, no moisture, no fruit, represent saving belief? Also the same Greek word for believe "pisteuo" is used in James 2:19, in which we read that the demons believe "mental assent" that "there is one God," but they are not saved.
John has portrayed people who "believe" (at least to some extent) but are clearly not saved. There is a stage in the progress of belief in Jesus that "falls short of firmly rooted consummated belief resulting in salvation." As we see in John 2:23-25, in which their belief was superficial in nature and Jesus would not entrust/commit Himself to them.
Also, in John 8:31-59, where the Jews who were said to have "believed in him" turn 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. 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 unto salvation" and become children of God (John 1:12; 3:18) but were instead children of the devil.
Glad to help mate.![]()
The Galatians and the Corinthians were really saved, yet the word they heard did not continue in them. So, obviously, the 2nd type of soil can be the soil of a saved person.
And they also show us that 1 John 2:19 can't mean that every person who stops believing was really a fake believer and was never really saved in the first place. And even if you argue that they came back, that still nullifies the once saved always saved argument because it says leaving shows them to have not really been real believers.
No, the whole counsel of the Bible says it all. The promise is conditional on continuing to believe.I don’t need to add anything. Sealed until the redemption of the purchased possession/unto the day of redemption says it all.(Ephesians 1:13-14; 4:30) Now show me the word “unsealed.”
John 14v15 NASB
15 “If you love Me, you will keep My commandments.
- The order is not reversed. We don't keep His commandments to show that we love Him. We Love Him, which means we keep His commandments.
We acknowledge sin for what it is and we preach that the only solution for sin is to trust in the Saviour...... you and all your NOSAS friends preach trust yourself... this is not the Gospel... end of story!!!!
OK, lets continue with the bible lesson only using what you have quoted above.and what are those commands? well, if you are done yelling about command keeping for salvation, I will educate you as to what the commands are.
according to 1st John 3, the same man who wrote this gospel, and the 3 letters bearing his name, John said the commands are to believe on the name of the Son, and love one another.
so, to believe ( entrust, place confidence in, to think to be true) is to obey.
there is you Bible lesson of the day. your welcome.
If I can find any truth from you, I'll be sure to let you know.@Chris1975 why spamming the thread? Coming to terms with the true Gospel of salvation that is secure in Him apart from any and all works?
Feeling overwhelmed by the truth you have been shown?
All we have to do is look at the phariseesThe main trouble I see with examining fruit is that it is so very easy that one could take that and depend on themselves rather than Jesus or judge incorrectly whether the self or others. One may judge others outside of Christ when they are not. One may judge the self outside of Christ when it is not so. Or one may judge oneself in Christ and look down on others. People can and do take things like examining fruit to extremes. Not always but it does happen.
I wonder if the key could be love. After Peter denied Jesus, he was very grieved and wept. This response I believe is because Peter did love Jesus. So, could the question of faith be do you have love for Jesus?
According to 1 John 4: 20-21...:
If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he is a liar: for he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God whom he hath not seen? And this commandment have we from him, That he who loveth God love his brother also. 1 John 4:20-21 KJV https://bible.com/bible/1/1jn.4.20-21.KJV
They will never understand the grace issue until they first realize their sin issueAll you are demonstrating is that you believe your works save you... because this the lowest argument to show how self worthy you are of salvation.
Once saved always saved .... and you prove nothing... deeds never saved.. it is not a sin issue for the believer... all sin was dealt with at the cross...... anger, murder, hate and every vile thing.. wrap your head around that for once... it is a grace issue.
No, the whole counsel of the Bible says it all. The promise is conditional on continuing to believe.
24As for you, let that abide in you which you heard from the beginning. If what you heard from the beginning abides in you, you also will abide in the Son and in the Father. - 1 John 2:24
Yeah. Who keeps believing? THE SHEEP or THE GOATNo, the whole counsel of the Bible says it all. The promise is conditional on continuing to believe.
24As for you, let that abide in you which you heard from the beginning. If what you heard from the beginning abides in you, you also will abide in the Son and in the Father. - 1 John 2:24
If I can find any truth from you, I'll be sure to let you know.
Coming from you, this is a nonsensical respons. Continuing to demand from others what you will not do yourselfSo no response.