Doug Brents
Active Member
Read Rom 10:9-10 again. "with the mouth he confesses, resulting in salvation." Salvation is the result (comes after) of confession (must come before). And the public confession mentioned in Matthew and Luke are conditions (meaning they must come before) upon which Jesus' confession of us (salvation) is based.Not true, the Mat. and Luke verses speak of public confession - "before men". The verses in Romans say nothing about a public confession, just simply a confession, so your adding the word "public" is dishonest. Also NONE of the 4 four verses require confessing "Jesus is Lord" to be saved. On the contrary, all 4 verses speak of a person who is already saved making that confession, affirming that they are indeed disciples of Jesus.
Death to sin is a single event. Col 3:5 says "as dead", meaning it has already happened, not that it continually happens over and over. Likewise, Gal 5:24 says that we "have crucified the flesh", not that we crucify over and over. Dying to sin is an immediate, one time event that occurs when we are buried with Christ in baptism.Dwight - Wrong. Dying to sin and being baptized into Jesus' death are two different concepts. People who are already saved still need to learn to die to sin - in fact we must do that for the rest of our life. Galatians 5:24 says: "Now those who belong to Christ Jesus (i.e. already saved) have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires." Colossians 3:5 also mentions this: "Therefore consider the members of your earthly body as dead to immorality, impurity, passion, evil desire, and greed, which amounts to idolatry." Dying to sin is a process, not something that happens instantly either at salvation or baptism.
Through baptism.Romans 6:3 is a reference to salvation - entering into the body of Christ, by the Holy Spirit.
There is only one baptism in the NT Church (Eph 4:5), and that baptism saves (Matt 28:19, Mark 16:16), and requires water (1 Pet 3:21), and is the point at which the Spirit removes our sins and adds us to the Church (Col 2:11-14). 1 Cor 12:13 says that we are baptized into the One Body (the Church), and so is a reference to the one baptism that saves: water baptism.1 Cor. 12:13 It is not a reference to water baptism.
At which point we die to sin, are united with Jesus' death and resurrection, and are "saved".Romans 6:4-7 is a picture of being buried with Christ and being raised with Christ, represented by water baptism, when we are lowered into the water (buried with Christl) and brought back out of the water (raised up with Christ).
Confession is made into salvation? Still means the same thing. If you put on the hat you will be inducted into the club. Putting on the hat is a condition for entering into the club. If you confess with the mouth you enter into salvation. Still cause and effect; still the one results in the other. Not a bad translation at all.I am neither blind nor in full rebellion against God and I do NOT accept that there are any physical acts (which is another description of works) required to receive salvation. In Romans 10:10, the words "results in" or "resulting in" are a mistaken translation of the Greek word "eis", so it does NOT say "results in salvation" or "resulting in salvation". The actual translation is "to salvation" or "into salvation", which simply affirms that someone has already been saved.
Let's say I purchase for you a rocket that will take you to the moon; not just a ride on the rocket, but actually the rocket, the launch platform, the fuel, the property on the moon with a home already built, the whole works: a $100 Trillion package. And I give it to you as a gift. But the launch platform is in Tibet, and you have to go there to use the rocket.Wrong again. The Greek word for "believes" here in Acts 10:43 is NOT "pistis". It is a form of "pistis" - the word "pisteuo" which means just what the NASB says it means: to believe, or entrust. It is NOT the word faith.
Do you still not understand that believing God for salvation requires NO physical act or acts? It is a GIFT and we DO NOTHING physical, no physical work, to obtain a gift. We simply repent and believe in Jesus and the GIFT of salvation IS GIVEN to us. Physical works are commanded AFTER salvation.
Does you going to Tibet "earn" the gift? No.
Do you get the benfit of the gift if you don't go to Tibet? No.
Is there any way in which you will ever be able to earn enough to buy or earn this gift? No.
That is what God has done with salvation. He has purchased for us the gift that only He could earn or deserve. He has established certain conditions upon which we receive His gift: repentance, confession of Jesus as Lord, and baptism. And He has said that He will adopt into His family anyone who trusts Him enough to set aside their preconceptions, sin, feelings, etc. and submit to His will and His command. Anyone who does not obey Him is in rebellion to Him, and will not partake in the home He has gone to build for us.