Assurance of Salvation

  • Thread starter Thread starter Oumashta
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Lulu, you have misrepresented the OSAS argument with your first two sentences. You would not have done that if you had reviewed earlier posts. Next you have taken John 17:12 out of context and with an incomplete quote. Here it is as Jesus prayed for His disciples:

John 17:12 While I was with them in the world, I kept them in Your name. Those whom You gave Me I have kept; and none of them is lost except the son of perdition, that the Scripture might be fulfilled.

Now the greater context.

So Jesus said to the Twelve, “Do you want to go away as well?” Simon Peter answered him, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life, and we have believed, and have come to know, that you are the Holy One of God.” Jesus answered them, “Did I not choose you, the Twelve? And yet one of you is a devil.” He spoke of Judas the son of Simon Iscariot, for he, one of the Twelve, was going to betray him. John 6:67-71

“Now before the Feast of the Passover, when Jesus knew that His hour had come that He should depart from this world to the Father, having loved His own who were in the world, He loved them to the end. And supper being ended, the devil having already put it into the heart of Judas Iscariot, Simon’s son, to betray Him,” John 13:1-2

So, in context, we can see that Jesus chose Judas to fulfill the Scriptures. In Jesus’ prayer, we know Judas was lost. Why would that be? Because Judas was not a believer. He didn’t have a Savior.

Where does it say “Judas walked away from Christ of his own free will.”?
Where does it say God will never violate free will?

Consider Jonah chapter 1. At the end of chapter 2, Jonah says “Salvation is of the Lord” and the great fish vomits him on to the dry land.

Consider Paul’s conversion in Acts 9. Paul was notorious for his persecution of Christians.

13 But Ananias answered, “Lord, I have heard from many about this man, how much evil he has done to your saints at Jerusalem. 14 And here he has authority from the chief priests to bind all who call on your name.” 15 But the Lord said to him, “Go, for he is a chosen instrument of mine to carry my name before the Gentiles and kings and the children of Israel. 16 For I will show him how much he must suffer for the sake of my name.” From Acts 9.

And, with your last sentence, once again a misrepresentation. I started posting on this thread on page 3, #42. If you review and follow the scriptural arguments presented, you will see why your statements here are fallacious.

And note, Jesus did say His sheep “will never perish” (John 10:28).

Jesus did say, “37 All that the Father gives me will come to me, and whoever comes to me I will never cast out. 38 For I have come down from heaven, not to do my own will but the will of him who sent me. 39 And this is the will of him who sent me, that I should lose nothing of all that he has given me, but raise it up on the last day. 40 For this is the will of my Father, that everyone who looks on the Son and believes in him should have eternal life, and I will raise him up on the last day.” From John 6.

And even earlier, Jesus said, “Truly, truly, I say to you, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life. He does not come into judgment, but has passed from death to life.”

The Scriptures form a cohesive whole that do not contradict themselves. Please consider reading the older posts on this thread. It is the Scriptures that are God breathed.

Sincerely, OldProf
How can you claim Judas was lost.? Judas was picked and choosen by Christ himself, Jesus knew he was going to betray him. The devil himself was a fallen Angel, so he also was one of Gods very special choosen ones. So to say they never were saved to begin with is ludacris.
** There is no such doctrine as OSAS, as it is not scriptural. Anyone at anytime can walk away, Christ does not force us to love him, that is why he gave us free will . He only asks us to have faith and obey him. Scripture is God breathed I concur, however you only quote Paul rather than Christ himself. The Eternal Security believers only misinterpret Paul and never quote Christ and his request, they cherry pic a few verses to advocate lawlessness. They seem to only quote Romans, Gal. and Eph. You never see them quote most of the NT gospels. I am not saying all OSAS believers do this, however most do., their doctrine is just not biblical.

In other words, they say, you can live like a devil yet live with God, just as long as you made a promise at some point, when you said you accepted Jesus as your Lord and Savior. Some refer to this act as the “Sinners Prayer.” They call this “magical” act as being saved. Think about it, they say you can live like the devil but live with God. NOT SO! Each and every day you must choose whom you will serve.

**If you are truly “begotten” you will choose to serve Jesus and HIS Father, God. You’re now in the Spiritual womb and on your way to the Kingdom. Hang in there! You might fall short at times but that’s just a temporary thing because you will ask forgiveness, repent and continue in your walk, growing, becoming more like Christ., **

Lulu**
 
I think he concludes that only the elect are Saved and that all others cannot gain Salvation because it is reserved only for the elect/sheep.
Maran atha!
Angel
that would mean that old prof is teaching predetermination, instead of predestination. Now i think i can find the difference in our theology.
Ubenedictus
 
How can you claim Judas was lost.? Judas was picked and choosen by Christ himself, Jesus knew he was going to betray him. The devil himself was a fallen Angel, so he also was one of Gods very special choosen ones. So to say they never were saved to begin with is ludacris.
** There is no such doctrine as OSAS, as it is not scriptural. Anyone at anytime can walk away, Christ does not force us to love him, that is why he gave us free will . He only asks us to have faith and obey him. Scripture is God breathed I concur, however you only quote Paul rather than Christ himself. The Eternal Security believers only misinterpret Paul and never quote Christ and his request, they cherry pic a few verses to advocate lawlessness. They seem to only quote Romans, Gal. and Eph. You never see them quote most of the NT gospels. I am not saying all OSAS believers do this, however most do., their doctrine is just not biblical.

In other words, they say, you can live like a devil yet live with God, just as long as you made a promise at some point, when you said you accepted Jesus as your Lord and Savior. Some refer to this act as the “Sinners Prayer.” They call this “magical” act as being saved. Think about it, they say you can live like the devil but live with God. NOT SO! Each and every day you must choose whom you will serve.**

**If you are truly “begotten” you will choose to serve Jesus and HIS Father, God. You’re now in the Spiritual womb and on your way to the Kingdom. Hang in there! You might fall short at times but that’s just a temporary thing because you will ask forgiveness, repent and continue in your walk, growing, becoming more like Christ., **
Lulu
i think osas is a good example of circular reason. Well everybody said the sinners prayer and the pastor say they have been saved, if 10yrs later someone who was proclaim save become an atheist everybody will say ‘well he was really saved in the first place’. So we end up with a doctrine that says, ‘‘once saved, if really really saved, alway saved’’ osirrsas.
Ubenedictus
 
OldProf, you keep quoting good Scriptures that clearly shows God’s determination for the Salvation of man… there’s never any problem with that (for God so loved the world); your problem is in determining that “Salvation” means that man is unable to reject God (hence Salvation) and that a Believer cannot place him/herself outside of God’s Salvation because God (here’s where your Chineese acrobatics go into play) will render the “sheep”/“elect” devoid of free will.

God does seekout man and offers Salvation (which is Eternal Life) but He will not force His Will upon anyone, including those who Believe… I have attempted to help you see the Truth but you continue to reject Scriptures… quoting your interpretation of Scriptures does not make it so… Jesus’ very selected sheep left Him (I will strike the Shepherd and the sheep will scatter…); Jesus forewarned Kephas about this very incident and He demonstrated that the sheep would reject Him but that He had prayed for Cephas so that once he returned to Him he would gather and strengthen the brethrens!

Salvation: Eternal Life: Eternal.

Man’s will: not always fully surrendered to God; hence, Salvation can be lost because you or I can chose to remove ourselves from the Fold!

May the Holy Spirit enlighten you and show you the Path to Life!

Maran atha!

Angel
I am sure that, over the past 495 years, every eventuality regarding OSAS has been finessed into an almost plausible doctrine. Yet, OSAS seems to infer that unwilling souls will go to heaven. Can you imagine that? Someone who, because of what happens after their salvation, decides to reject God, turns from Him and leads a life of dissipation, will be forced into heaven?

And, if there is OSAS, why isn’t there OLAL? I mean, if God created some simply to destroy them in hell, there most certainly are some who fall into this category. I though our Lord said those who call on His name will be saved? Not so, if you are Once Lost Always Lost. You truly have no hope.

As well, if some of us are lost and can do nothing about it, while others are saved and can do nothing about it, why does it matter if we believe Jean Calvin’s doctrine? I mean, we’re either saved or lost anyway, right?

I think we need a wall chart to know if we’re saved or not. But, how can we know, since we have to actually get into heaven before we are actually saved.

And the weirdest thing of all is that God kept this a secret for 1,500 years.
 
Good one!! Where can I get that? A good splash in the morning would do wonders!

Sorry I’ve been offline so much, and there has been so much to comment on! My work sometimes comes in clumps of deadlines which precludes my sitting down and writing thoughtful responses. And there is a lot of interest.

Is “once-saved-always-saved” or “if-saved-always-saved” a biblical doctrine with biblical support, or just the product of some reformation protestant theologians in the last 500 years? It’s a good question, and relates to this thread.

Does John 6 teach transubstantiation? It’s a good question. Is there another thread for this, or is this an assurance issue I’m missing?

I’ll try to get to some of those and others when this period of deadlines passes.

Sincerely, OldProf
 
How can you claim Judas was lost.? Judas was picked and choosen by Christ himself, Jesus knew he was going to betray him. The devil himself was a fallen Angel, so he also was one of Gods very special choosen ones. So to say they never were saved to begin with is ludacris.
** There is no such doctrine as OSAS, as it is not scriptural. Anyone at anytime can walk away, Christ does not force us to love him, that is why he gave us free will . He only asks us to have faith and obey him. Scripture is God breathed I concur, however you only quote Paul rather than Christ himself. The Eternal Security believers only misinterpret Paul and never quote Christ and his request, they cherry pic a few verses to advocate lawlessness. They seem to only quote Romans, Gal. and Eph. You never see them quote most of the NT gospels. I am not saying all OSAS believers do this, however most do., their doctrine is just not biblical.

In other words, they say, you can live like a devil yet live with God, just as long as you made a promise at some point, when you said you accepted Jesus as your Lord and Savior. Some refer to this act as the “Sinners Prayer.” They call this “magical” act as being saved. Think about it, they say you can live like the devil but live with God. NOT SO! Each and every day you must choose whom you will serve.**

**If you are truly “begotten” you will choose to serve Jesus and HIS Father, God. You’re now in the Spiritual womb and on your way to the Kingdom. Hang in there! You might fall short at times but that’s just a temporary thing because you will ask forgiveness, repent and continue in your walk, growing, becoming more like Christ., **

Lulu
I have a strong rebuttal to this, but I’m wondering. Is it Roman Catholic doctrine that Judas was a believer, a sheep of Jesus (John 10), a sheep with eternal life, a sheep that will never at this time or at any future time perish (John 10:28 word study on “never”), and then Judas betrays Jesus, dies, and goes to hell (he perishes)?

Regards, OldProf
 
“The Lord knows those who are His, and let him who claims the name of the Lord depart from iniquity.”

I think that’s the bottom line, whatever side of the debate you find yourself on.
 
The ultimate question is, does whomever is postulating any doctrine have the authority to do so? If they do not, then it seems that they risk adhering to a man-made faith. Before doctrine came authority - and that is the point at which the Body of Christ became fragmented, rather than united. We either choose to submit to the authority that Christ placed in His Church, or we do not. If not Church authority, then whose?
 
“The Lord knows those who are His, and let him who claims the name of the Lord depart from iniquity.”

I think that’s the bottom line, whatever side of the debate you find yourself on.
**Perfect verse, it means that anyone who continues to live in sin, shall depart from the Lord, which defines there is no such thing as Once Saved Always Saved Doctrine, its just not scriptural. We must endure and remain in our Faith .

lulu**
 
I have a strong rebuttal to this, but I’m wondering. Is it Roman Catholic doctrine that Judas was a believer, a sheep of Jesus (John 10), a sheep with eternal life, a sheep that will never at this time or at any future time perish (John 10:28 word study on “never”), and then Judas betrays Jesus, dies, and goes to hell (he perishes)?

Regards, OldProf
**Hi, The devil fell from grace, he was once Gods greatest angel, how do you explain that one.? If we are truly already saved ,so to speak, then there would be no need for judgement for the Lords believers. Also we would not need church attendance as we do this in rememberance and for the forgivness of sins. This is basic gospel in the KJB .

So if Jesus himself is asking us to do these things for forgivness and out of Faith, understand Faith is also an action on our parts.**
lulu
 
I have a strong rebuttal to this, but I’m wondering. Is it Roman Catholic doctrine that Judas was a believer, a sheep of Jesus (John 10), a sheep with eternal life, a sheep that will never at this time or at any future time perish (John 10:28 word study on “never”), and then Judas betrays Jesus, dies, and goes to hell (he perishes)?

Regards, OldProf
From Merriam-Webster:

Definition of IF

1
a : in the event that
b : allowing that
c : on the assumption that
d : on condition that
 
It seems to me that there is a lot of nit-picking, parsing, and lawyering in this thread regarding “assurance of salvation”. From my point of view I believe that Jesus was and is my Lord and Saviour and that he offers me the gift of salvation. My part is to accept that gift. Accepting that gift means that I do my best to ‘walk the walk’ as well as ‘talk the talk’.
So, I will give it my best shot knowing that I will sometimes stumble but then I need to get up and try again harder. I will trust the Lord and not be too overly concerned about the construction of an argument to assure myself that I am saved. My faith grounds me in the knowledge that the Lord is good for His Word.

AMDG
 
Re…once again
Con…with
Cilia…eyelash…from latin

Reconciliation

Turn then most gracious advocate your eyes upon the

Reconciliation with the Church.
 
It seems to me that there is a lot of nit-picking, parsing, and lawyering in this thread regarding “assurance of salvation”. From my point of view I believe that Jesus was and is my Lord and Saviour and that he offers me the gift of salvation. My part is to accept that gift. Accepting that gift means that I do my best to ‘walk the walk’ as well as ‘talk the talk’.
So, I will give it my best shot knowing that I will sometimes stumble but then I need to get up and try again harder. I will trust the Lord and not be too overly concerned about the construction of an argument to assure myself that I am saved. My faith grounds me in the knowledge that the Lord is good for His Word.

AMDG
You have all of the essentials of the Catholic perspective. And it is not simply an argument, it is first and foremost practical.

As you point out, we have a tendency to stumble, sometimes gravely. As you also point out the Lord keeps his promises.

So when we stumble we have the absolute assurance that Christ will forgive us when we come to him in the way that he proscribed, and in true repentance and purpose of amendment.

And, helpful to all of us is the fact that we are allowed to ask for help not to sin. After all, in confirmation we received the Holy spirit to strengthen us. We receive grace through the sacraments if we are disposed to receive it, and we only need ask Jesus himself for help to carry our cross daily. Also, as we recite in the mass “I ask Blessed Mary, ever virgin, all the angels and saints and you my brothers and sisters to pray for me to the Lord our God.” If we mean that, then there is a lot of help to live a holy life.
 
i think im lost, is anyone argueing that man can believe without grace? What are you argueing against.
Ubenedictus
It is quite simple, really. OldProf is complicating the matter.

*Matthew 7:11
If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give good things to those who ask him! *

It is possible for someone who is evil, whoever we consider that to be, to do good things in the natural order. After Adam and Eve everyone has a conscience that tells them there is a right and a wrong and for the most part what that is. Even atheists give to charity.

However, when it comes to salvation, no good works can ever initially justify us. St. Paul is clear about this, and so is the Council of Trent for anyone who cares to read it.

The Church has always taught that it is GRACE that initially justifies us, and it is GRACE that even prepares us to receive that justification. Even OldProf would agree with that much.

Where he would depart ways with the Church is also spelled out in Trent. The Council says that it is possible for someone to reject GRACE.

What one must accept, to accept the idea that God saves someone without their having any ability to reject that grace, is that God removes free-will from man at the point of salvation. After that point he no longer is a free agent. He cannot sin, simply because he no longer has any responsibility for it, being without free will, the primary ingredient of culpability. Any action he does, whether objectively sinful or not, cannot be held against him because he is no longer a free agent.

The only way that we can rationally conclude that man is still a free agent is if he is free to voluntarily love and follow God or choose a path away from God, however minor or temporary. Yet Jesus tells us that the greatest commandment is to love God. How is that possible without free will?

Remember, we are talking about the possibility of falling from grace here, not the likelihood. With the help of God’s grace in the sacraments, in studying Scripture, in prayer, we can have confidence that we are able to follow Christ and become more like him. But that is not the assurance OldProf is talking about, that OSAS proposes.

The discussion of the elect then is inevitably connected here. For the Catholic, the elect are those who die in a state of grace. How otherwise can they be known?

If, however, we try to play God and say that because God has said that he has chosen his own to be saved, then conversely he has chosen that everyone else is to be destroyed in hell, then we contradict Scripture.

2 Peter 3:9
The Lord is not slow about his promise as some count slowness, but is forbearing toward you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance.


Knowing that God doesn’t wish or will that any should go to hell, how is it then that Jesus says;

Matthew 7: 13-14
"Enter by the narrow gate; for the gate is wide and the way is easy, that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many.
For the gate is narrow and the way is hard, that leads to life, and those who find it are few. "


Is God powerless to save those who enter at the wide gate? If he has the power to save them, and he is unwilling that any should perish, what is the only other variable? Why are they not all saved?

Man’ s free will.

If God saves men against their will, then everyone will be saved, because he is not willing that any should perish.
 
(From post #272)
“Systematic Theology” by Dr. Wayne Grudem, 1994, is one of many books that provide a much more complete answer to this and similar verses that indicate endurance or continuance in the faith. Specifically, chapter 40, pp. 788-809, covers the most prominent verses in context and arguments for or against. The Scriptures are clear that we are to examine ourselves to make sure we are “in Christ” and that those “in Christ” will persevere. Here is an outline from Grudem’s book:

Chapter 40 The Perseverance of the Saints (Remaining a Christian)
Can true Christians lose their salvation? How can we know if we are truly born again?
*** A. All Who Are Truly Born Again Will Persevere to the End
B. Only Those Who Persevere to the End Have Been Truly Born Again
C. Those Who Finally Fall Away May Give Many External Signs of Conversion
D. What Can Give a Believer Genuine Assurance?***

The whole biblical picture is the strength of systematic theology, and people like myself, engineers, scientists, and the like, are drawn to the idea that God speaks through the Scriptures. He is glorified in truth, and He is capable of providing truth to His elect who are limited with finite minds. Due diligence is absolutely required on our parts so we can know Him and discern false teaching or false theology. It is a good work to study the Scriptures daily, and the Bereans were especially applauded for that (Acts 17:11).
This was a post that I particularly was interested in.

As a side-note, there is no theology more systematic than Catholic theology, beginning with the early councils forward.

Dr. Wayne Grudem whether deliberately or inadvertantly here actually makes the Catholic point quite well. His question number D above is the really pertinent one, is it not?

If you look at A and B you come to the conclusion that at the end of a person’s life, after perservering to the end, as we Catholics persist in saying, if that person dies in the state of grace, they will be saved.

We can heartily agree with C. Yes indeed, there are some, perhaps many, who show outward signs, yet in the end fall away.

So then, what you are really trying to establish in A and B becomes irrelevant, does it not? The idea of the one-time conversion experience, called in the Evangelical context “being born again” (we would define that as baptism) is what is being defended here. OSAS is actually an extension of that.

But if we examine that conversion experience closely, we find it to be poorly defined because it is internal in nature and highly subjective. In some respects it can become heavily dependent upon feelings. So then it is no comfort to say that someone who declared they had experienced “being saved” but then slid back into their former ways, was not actually “saved” in the first place and was not one of the elect. And vice-versa as Grudem says in A and B.

Ultimately, his question in D must gnaw at the thinking adherent to OSAS. Until you have lived your life to its end, you cannot really know which category you fall into, can you? You may think that your conversion experience is real, but on your own theology you cannot have that absolute assurance that you so desire because if it is internal to you, there is no way to have an objective reference in someone else. You only have what they represent to you in their words and their lives. If in fact they are one of those that perservere to the end, you will not know that until they do so, and then they are dead so you cannot be absolutely certain that they were not a fake all the way through. Reasonable certainty, yes, but not absolute assurance. And to reassure yourself and your own experience through their representation to you of theirs then still falls short of the absolute assurance you seek. Because in the back of your mind there is always C and the possibility that you belong to that category and have deceived yourself into thinking you are one of the elect.

So your own experience then is not certain, if only in the context of internal experience, for you have no point of actual reference. You have taken the objective assurance that Christ gave us in Scripture of *his own constancy toward us *and internalized it so that there is no objective way to prove it to anyone, even to yourself. So there goes the assurance.

And the Catholic stands by talking, as St. Paul does, about hope (faith, hope, love) which makes the OSAS adherent even more uneasy. All of the Scriptures that you have quoted, OldProf, give us assurance, absolute assurance, that Christ will fulfill his promises. We can depend on him, absolutely, Amen. And for someone who has fallen away, is deep in guilt, and despairs of their own soul, that assurance is critical. If someone comes to Christ in true repentance, he will always forgive them. That is what the Catholic Church has taught since Pentecost. It matters not if you have never been “saved” before, or have been down the aisle to an “altar call” seven times in an Evangelical meeting, or seventy times seven for that matter, if someone examines their heart and finds the guilt of sin, Christ is right there ready to forgive them if they repent, confess and ask for that forgiveness.

It is no more complex than that, and I thank and praise God for it, because without that assurance of his love, forgiveness and mercy, I myself would have no hope.
 
Re…once again
Con…with
Cilia…eyelash…from latin
Reconciliation
Turn then most gracious advocate your eyes upon the
Reconciliation with the Church.
=============================================

I like the thought and the intention, but your Latin bothers me a bit.

Re: Ablative case of ‘Res’. The ‘thing’ under consideration or pertaining to that ‘thing’. Not used to indicate ‘once again’.
Con: Prefix derived from Contra - Against. Can occasionnaly be used as a prefix to indicate ‘with’ but the term ‘with’ is most usually rendered as ‘cum’.
Cilia: Does refer to the root word for eyelash but most normally used in a medical or biological sense to refer to thin whiplike appendages extending from certain cells.
The Latin noun ‘concilium’ - meeting at which both pros and cons of a ‘thing’ (agenda item)are considered is most likely the appropriate word to use.

I believe ‘reconcile’ is derived from middle-French to mean to arrive at a mutually acceptable solution to an issue in dispute.

AMDG
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top