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Iron_Donkey
Guest
That’s only true if you have never asked a Protestant what constitutes a sin leading to death. (What you would call a mortal sin)
It is true that the only way to Hell is the rejection of Christ, but this rejection does not have to be an explicit statement “I deny Christ.” Many will say “Lord, Lord” and still be damned. This means that it is possible to think that one has Christ and yet be rejecting Him. To oppose Him by sinning while saying that we’re following Him in our minds.A sin leading to death would be the rejection of the Son of God. To say that everyone will be saved is un-biblical, we know that many will be damned. We also can both agree that the only way to Heaven is through Jesus Christ. However, most Evangelicals believe that the only way to Hell is not having Jesus Christ.
We believe that if you have Jesus your works will prove it, therefore if you have Jesus you’re not going to go on a murderous rampage but you may tell a white lie because it’s easier to fall into temptation of things like masturbation and lying than it is to kill a human being in cold blood.
I think “having Jesus” is similar to the Catholic idea of “state of grace”. And it is true that being in a relationship with Christ fortifies us, and helps us to resist temptation - but it is absolutely false that it makes us immune, or makes any of the deadly sins John references less deadly.Now, if we have Faith, we’ll stop doing the things we ought not to (like masturbation) and the less Faith we have the less of a chance we’ll stop. It takes a ton of Faith not to ever lie or commit petty sins, but that’s how Faith and works work hand in hand. There honestly is no sin scale and the only unforgivable sin is Blasphemy of the Holy Spirit.
So yes - “having Jesus” will help us resist sin, but it is not a direct consequence that the sin will stop. There are many priests and preachers who commit adultery/fornication. Does this mean that they never sincerely believed, never sincerely desired to follow Christ with all their heart? No, of course not. Does it mean that they will go to Hell? Assuming a reasonable level of knowledge and will, then yes it does - unless they repent before death. Is the sin unforgivable? Absolutely not, but the forgiveness must be accepted.
The only unforgivable sin is blasphemy against the Holy Spirit, but this blasphemy is exactly refusing God’s efforts to restore us to a state of grace, the rejection of forgiveness offered. The decision not to accept forgiveness offered is the only thing that cannot be forgiven as long as it is persisted in.
But your answer actually dodges the point a bit here. If there is deadly sin, and if, as John says, I can tell whether or not someone else is engaging in activity that (presuming knowledge and willingness) would be such sin, there must be sin that can be committed by a person who is in a state of grace (or has Jesus) that can result in their damnation, and it must be something that I can see.
Since I can’t see in their heart to tell if they are blaspheming against the Holy Spirit, such sins must be things that are visible - along the lines of murder, adultery, masturbation.
There definitely is a sin scale though. A person in a state of grace who tells a white lie will not go to Hell if he gets hit by a bus 30 seconds later. A person who knowing that it is evil willingly commits adultery and then gets hit by a bus before repenting (and barring extraordinary action on the part of God) will go to Hell.It comes down to whether you believe that “all sins” means the future as well. I may end up saying this a million times but there is no sin scale.
That is the scale. It might be hard for us to tell where exactly a sin is on the scale, but that does not mean the scale doesn’t exist. It may be that there are sins of equal gravity, or sins that are so bad that while one is worse than the other, that comparison becomes moot because both lead to damnation.
For the past/future thing, hard to say. What I say is that any mortal sin will cause any person to go to Hell, unless they repent and and are restored to a state of grace before they die. Future sins may destroy the state of grace again, but that does not affect the state of grace now.