EG....we all see what we want to see!
You don't know how much it disturbs me that we're not all on the same page.
Amen.
EG....we all see what we want to see!
You don't know how much it disturbs me that we're not all on the same page.
Lets just defend what we believe without making it personal with those we disagree with and take the emotions out of it, I know its not easy to do because we are all very "passionate" and "protective " about what we believe and why we believe it.
I have had to learn to do this myself as I was not easy to talk with if we disagreed while I was on other forums.
Brother, this was neither an emotional nor a personal response. While I do appreciate the demands placed on you in monitoring these discussions, I believe it is sometimes necessary to recognize that a rebuke may be intended as a corrective effort--to bring the interlocutor into alignment with truth or order.Lets just defend what we believe without making it personal with those we disagree with and take the emotions out of it, I know its not easy to do because we are all very "passionate" and "protective " about what we believe and why we believe it.
I have had to learn to do this myself as I was not easy to talk with if we disagreed while I was on other forums.
The moral choices we make have nothing to do with our Christianity?they are not growing.
they have always been huge.
satan has always inserted a legalistic mindset. a mindset that tells the human to say Hey God look at me, see what I did.
It started with Cain.
It was huge is judaism
it is huge today in both Islam and in Catholicism.
its one thing to teach morality in a church, its a far other thing to teach that our moral choices we do or do not do have a say in our eternity.
I meant YOUR marriage EG.that was already set in stone.. and when we committed our first immoral choice, we earned our condemned state..
the marraige supper of the lamb is a future event
No comment.Would my father kick me out of his family if I do not do what he said?
Could he make me not be his natural son even if he did?
His blood is in my viens I will always be his son.
Just like Jesus blood purchased me, and I will always be his son.
as for what he expects. He gave me things to do. warned me not to do things. If I obeyed, he blessed me, when I disobeyed, he chastened me
sounds exactly like what God said he would do.
well he let my brother and sister get away with anything, never corrected them. and treated them like they never did anythign wrong.
Both of them are basically homeless. so yeah, As God helped me in my christian life by not allowing me to walk all over him. My faith did the same.
those who say salvation can be lost.
lol. This term in itself is a misnomer
grace is basically mercy given that is not deserved. While it is not free. it is payed for by the giver.
if costs the one who receives it nothing..
But it causes the one who recieved it to shout for Joy, to change his life. To love the person for who it is given, if they truly experience it.
Actually it did
it was just shut down by the power of Rome for for far to many years.. And had to go underground because anyone who taught it would have been martyred or imprisoned or cast out.
I do not know which is worse. your pro catholic leaning, or your anti calvin leaning. sadly. its almost like you have 2 strikes against you when it comes to Gods promise concerning those who are his children
But eating well cooked pork is not an sinful acts before God, to think so is to bring Judaism into Christianity which the apostles never did, and even when Peter lapse into being fearful of certain brethren, that believed yet cling to the Jews' rellgion and would not let it go,
Paul rose up and rebuked Peter to his face before all people.
It's called "projection" and it's not uncommon, especially among politicians.This is a classic case of hypocrisy--accusing another of the very fault one possesses.
J.
This was for everyone myself included. No one in particular.Brother, this was neither an emotional nor a personal response. While I do appreciate the demands placed on you in monitoring these discussions, I believe it is sometimes necessary to recognize that a rebuke may be intended as a corrective effort--to bring the interlocutor into alignment with truth or order.
J.
You nailed it!What doth it profit? (ti ophelos̱). Rhetorical question, almost of impatience. Old word from ophellō, to increase, in N.T. only here, Jas_2:16; 1Co_15:32. “Ti ophelos was a common expression in the vivacious style of a moral diatribe” (Ropes).
If a man say (ean legēi tis). Condition of third class with ean and the present active subjunctive of legō, “if one keep on saying.”
He hath faith (pistin echein). Infinitive in indirect assertion after legēi.
But have not works (erga de mē echēi). Third-class condition continued, “but keeps on not having (mē and present active subjunctive echēi) works.” It is the spurious claim to faith that James here condemns.
Can that faith save him? (mē dunatai hē pistis sōsai autoṉ). Negative answer expected (mē). Effective aorist active infinitive sōsai (from sōzō). The article hē here is almost demonstrative in force as it is in origin, referring to the claim of faith without works just made.
Robertson
1) If one should say that he has faith, but do no good works or produce no fruit to confirm it, would "that kind" of faith, unworking faith, be the kind of faith that saves? Eph_2:8-10. The answer is "no" and that true faith will manifest itself in some type of good work. The good work does not save, but genuine faith in Jesus Christ does initiate desires for and sustain one in deeds of fruitful service to Jesus Christ.
2) The original language indicates a sense of almost disgust on James' part. It is ironic for one to say or keep on saying, or persistently say, that he has faith and is saved if he has no works. His claims demonstrate that his faith is spurious if the claims are not accompanied by some fruit.
That kind of faith which talks loudly, but works not at all, appears to be a farcical faith or claim of a kind of faith which the claimant does not possess, Joh_15:14.
Nowhere does Scripture teach or imply that good works save, in either the initial justification or eternal salvation sense.
Rather, Scripture affirms a consistent order:
Grace → Faith → Salvation → Good Works (as fruit)
Any reversal of this order leads to theological error or contradiction of the Gospel.
J.
You're absolutely right, brother, and I appreciate your insight. That said, I’ve been meaning to have a conversation with you about Hebrews 6. Just yesterday, I was discussing this very passage with another brother, and I was reminded again how complex and highly debated it is. Contrary to how some may present it, the meaning is not as 'set in stone' as it might seem at first glance.It's called "projection" and it's not uncommon, especially among politicians.
After a careful contextual study, and properly harmonizing scripture with scripture, I shared my views in post #768.You're absolutely right, brother, and I appreciate your insight. That said, I’ve been meaning to have a conversation with you about Hebrews 6. Just yesterday, I was discussing this very passage with another brother, and I was reminded again how complex and highly debated it is. Contrary to how some may present it, the meaning is not as 'set in stone' as it might seem at first glance.
You and I both understand that Scripture interprets Scripture, and we also recognize the tension created by the many paradoxical triads and pairs that appear throughout the biblical narrative. One of the challenges we face, I believe, is the tendency to read our Bibles through a Western, rationalistic, and often political-philosophical lens...rather than the Eastern, Hebraic worldview from which it emerged.
What I’m trying to express, brother, is that Hebrews 6 seems to present, on the one hand, the very real possibility of apostasy, and on the other, the absolute security of the believer-a tension that demands careful, contextual study. So rather than using Hebrews 6 as a definitive proof-text for whether a believer can lose salvation, I believe we must examine the who, the what, and the why of the passage in its full covenantal and literary setting.
Just my thoughts, shared in grace.
Johann.
I disagree we all see what we want to see.EG....we all see what we want to see!
You don't know how much it disturbs me that we're not all on the same page.
in the greek, faith refers back to the phrase (a person says he has faith)Do you realize that some version state CAN FAITH SAVE THEM? It leaves out the THAT which is all important to you.
But, you know, I hate discussing words when we can't even agree on big issues.
It does not stand alone. In sequence everything James says is based on the topicI stayed in James to support my view.
You know very well that we need supporting scripture for any verse.
A verse cannot stand alone.
me too. The longer the responses get I believe the more lost we can become..lolI wish there was an UP arrow to get us back to the post we're responding to.
It makes me dizzy going back and forth....
who said I was dismissing everything else he says?OK. So let's dismiss everything else he says?
yes no worksPaul says we are saved by faith alone....
amen, he should as should we all help disciple others to help them become more like christ.then he goes on to state how we're to behave in all his writings.
Actually we are saved By Grace alone. Gods mercy alone. based on the work of the cross alone.So are we saved by faith alone or not?
There is no such thingInitial salvation....OK.
No. Paul would be contradicting himself and everyone elseBut then why is it important for Paul to discuss our behavior all the time?
Surely this has something to do with salvation.
being thrown out of the church and thrown out of heaven are two different things.One man was thrown out of the chuch in Corinth...was he never saved??
He was let back in, so....
And what about Matthew 18?
Jesus said to treat the offending party as they would a tax collector.
Was that person never saved?
No sis. God does not contradict himself. I pray again you see this one day.Too many verses teaching the opposite of OSAS.
yes. decades after he was made right with God and saved forever.Right. But he DID offer his son.
There is no such as initial salvation. Your speaking catholic talkAnd two different writers spoke to this...
One at initial salvation...
and one many years later.
Yes. Because every time we take a step of faith in obedience. we find out our faith was not in vein, it was justified. it was in the right thing. and the more we step out. the more it becomes an automatic. and less stepping out in faith.Obedience perfects faith.
Faith without obedience is a dead faith and puts one in danger.
John 3:36 is the perfect verse but I hate having to discuss the word OBEY...
so let's not get into that.
You tell meWhat else is the gospel for if not eternal life?
He taught us how to get to heavenThe whole point of Jesus is for the atonement and to teach us how to get to heaven.
to get saved. Again, study the book of John, Look at eph 1: 13 - 14, 2: 8 - 9 titus 3: 5 there are so many verses or passages I can not come close to naming them allWhat is there to teach if faith is ALL we need??
never heard of a saved person say we do not need to obey a command we can live however we want.Agreed.
Agreed.
So does a saved person who claims we don't even need to obey the commandments have life in him?
I mentioned this yesterday...
Yes. Proving he had faithLOL Abraham did works all along EG.
He left his home to obey God!
lol.. He spoke to his bretheryn in the flesh. the children of Israel.You're putting persons into scripture that are not there.
James is speaking to believers...
TO THE 12 TRIBES THAT ARE DISPERSED ABROAD....
CONSIDER IT ALL JOY MY BRETHREN......
James 1:1-2
if we want to be blessed. yesVerse 12: BLESSED IS A MAN WHO PERSEVERES UNDER TRIAL.....
IOW, we must persevere under trial.
it means our faith is not yet pure. it has not been perfected.He even says we won't be approved till then....but who knows what he meant.
We are approved now...not in the end.
It says doing well.. doing well is not enough.Chapter 2, verse 8: IF YOU ARE FULFILLING THE ROYAL LAW,,,YOU ARE DOING WELL.
Sounds like we need to fulfill the royal law.
lol. Your stuck on a word.MUST pertains to God giving a command.
It's not a suggestion...
it's a MUST.
Your rightWhether or not we do it goes into a different topic...
1 John 1 and 2 for instance.
But God cannot be mocked...
I just used it as an exampleAgreed !
I can't go back to my post again...but I doubt I said anything like that.
This is why I hate analogies...did I actually post one? lol
who is pushing back for wanting to do good works?Well I agree with you 100%.
This is why I post on doing good works.
How could there be pushback for wanting to do good works?
me too..For wanting to obey Jesus?
I think it's dangerous NOT to obey Jesus...
again, who is pushing back?and the pushback sounds like we don't really have to.
God will not allow that to happenPeople who are stubborn and refuse to repent of their sin, can indeed end up returning to being a sinner;
A heathen who is lost.
never thought of this,. thats how I keep in line, Maybe thats what she was talking about. I have to use it. or I would be lost..lolthere is an up arrow in the quote when you reply to a poster- its a small blue up arrow next to your name Godsgrace said:
100%Pretty frustrating at times when someone keeps repeating that they're right and you're wrong.
As if THEY have all the truth and everyone else that disagrees with them does not have the truth.
I'm in the process of doing an in depth study on Hebrews 6. There are 3 possibilities as to who the Author is addressing in 4-8.You're absolutely right, brother, and I appreciate your insight. That said, I’ve been meaning to have a conversation with you about Hebrews 6. Just yesterday, I was discussing this very passage with another brother, and I was reminded again how complex and highly debated it is. Contrary to how some may present it, the meaning is not as 'set in stone' as it might seem at first glance.
You and I both understand that Scripture interprets Scripture, and we also recognize the tension created by the many paradoxical triads and pairs that appear throughout the biblical narrative. One of the challenges we face, I believe, is the tendency to read our Bibles through a Western, rationalistic, and often political-philosophical lens...rather than the Eastern, Hebraic worldview from which it emerged.
What I’m trying to express, brother, is that Hebrews 6 seems to present, on the one hand, the very real possibility of apostasy, and on the other, the absolute security of the believer-a tension that demands careful, contextual study. So rather than using Hebrews 6 as a definitive proof-text for whether a believer can lose salvation, I believe we must examine the who, the what, and the why of the passage in its full covenantal and literary setting.
Just my thoughts, shared in grace.
Johann.
how did we get from a church that looks to self the religion of works salvation to what choices we make?The moral choices we make have nothing to do with our Christianity?
again, what does this have to do with the fact 90% of all the earths religion teach our entrance to heaven is based on hos good we are. what works we perform. what works we do nto perform. or how many sins we may commit?This is all Jesus and the other writers taught...:
2 Timothy 2:15
15Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth.
Galatians 5:19-21
19 Now the deeds of the flesh are evident, which are: immorality, impurity, sensuality,
20 idolatry, sorcery, enmities, strife, jealousy, outbursts of anger, disputes, dissensions, factions,
21 envying, drunkenness, carousing, and things like these, of which I forewarn you, just as I have forewarned you, that those who practice such things will not inherit the kingdom of God.
1 Corinthians 6:18-20
18 Flee immorality. Every other sin that a man commits is outside the body, but the immoral man sins against his own body.
19 Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and that you are not your own?
20 For you have been bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body.
1 Corinthians 6:9
9Or do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: neither the sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor men who practice homosexuality,
Mark 7:20-23
20 And He was saying, "That which proceeds out of the man, that is what defiles the man.
21 "For from within, out of the heart of men, proceed the evil thoughts, fornications, thefts, murders, adulteries,
22 deeds of coveting and wickedness, as well as deceit, sensuality, envy *, slander, pride and foolishness.
23 "All these evil things proceed from within and defile the man."
sorry, It did not fit. because I do not look at God in this way yet..I meant YOUR marriage EG.
I do hate analogies and am sorry I posted one.
I know. But you do use alot of catholic argument.No comment.
Just for your information...I'm non-denominational and have been for years.
Matthew 8:32
“And he said unto them, Go. And when they were come out, they went into the herd of swine: and, behold, the whole herd of swine ran violently down a steep place into the sea, and perished in the waters.”
You are being deceitful in your post, by using so many logical fallacies ~ Whatever they clearly mentioned is to be avoided, yet no man has the right to add his private convictions into the scriptures which you are attempting to do.
I’d genuinely love to read your final analysis on Hebrews 6, civic--particularly your treatment of the Greek verbs in the passage.I'm in the process of doing an in depth study on Hebrews 6. There are 3 possibilities as to who the Author is addressing in 4-8.
1- unbelievers-
2- Apostates- who were once saved- I don't believe this as they were never saved.
3- Backsliders, carnal believers who willfully sin- think the Israelites in the wilderness who did not enter the promised land which included Moses. We would never say Moses was an unbeliever or lost his salvation.
Just like in 1 Corinthians 3 we read at the Bema ( Judgment Seat of Christ ) the wood , hay and stubble will be burned up, their works destroyed yet they will be saved as by fire. We also know The Father disciples those He loves. Sin does not go unpunished. Think Annanias/ Sapphira God took their lives for lying in Acts. Think 1 Corinthians 11 where Paul says many are sick and many have fallen asleep for taking the Lords supper unworthily.
I'm leaning towards the warning passages are for carnal believers living in sin, not repenting and God disciplining them as we read He does in Hebrews 12. They are still saved but as by fire. Think of Jude below
Jude 1:23-24 Be merciful to those who doubt; 23; save others by snatching them from the fire; to others show mercy, mixed with fear—hating even the clothing stained by corrupted flesh
The fire purifies and also burns up the wood,hay,stubble. It reveals ones work/fruit. God takes the unfruitful branch and removes it. Sometimes God takes them home prematurely. Salvation is permanent, the new birth is permanent, eternal life is permanent but willful sin and disobedience has consequences. God will not be mocked and those He loves He disciplines including taking their unfruitful rebellious lives home.
I'm leaning this way and just wanted to lay out my thoughts before doing the deep dive.
God will not allow that to happen
Yes those participles imply he is talking about believers. There is no way to be a partaker of the Holy Spirit apart from Him woking and living in you.I’d genuinely love to read your final analysis on Hebrews 6, civic--particularly your treatment of the Greek verbs in the passage.
Hebrews 6:4–5 is densely packed with participial constructions that carry serious theological weight-
Hebrews 6:4–5:
Ἀδύνατον γὰρ τοὺς ἅπαξ φωτισθέντας (once enlightened),
γευσαμένους (having tasted) τε τῆς δωρεᾶς τῆς ἐπουρανίου (the heavenly gift),
καὶ μετόχους γενηθέντας (having become partakers) Πνεύματος Ἁγίου (of the Holy Spirit),
καὶ καλὸν γευσαμένους θεοῦ ῥῆμα (having tasted the good word of God),
δυνάμεις τε μέλλοντος αἰῶνος (and the powers of the age to come)...
Each of these aorist participles--φωτισθέντας, γευσαμένους, γενηθέντας-points to definitive past experiences, not theoretical or superficial exposure.
The use of ἅπαξ (once for all) further amplifies the finality of these events. The cumulative effect is unmistakably emphatic, and the syntax offers no hint of ambiguity or pretense.
I won’t go into the full exegetical unpacking here...I’ve found that discussions like these often draw more ad hominem than genuine engagement, especially since many here don't study the text in this way.
But I did want to say your insights would be valued, and I’m sincerely looking forward to hearing your input.
Leighton Flowers just don't "cut it for me"-it is almost as if he is trying to "convince" himself, know what I mean?
Johann.