Actually, there are a lot of “Bible believing” people and churches that are not fundamentalist, just as there are Baptists and very many Evangelicals who are not.
You can certainly choose to disagree with the definition. And then offer your own.
As I pointed out previously, one of the problems with Protestant churches is that even those who use titles like born again or fundamental do not neccessarily have a cohesive doctrine.
And she would be correct.
Again, I disagree. My former church members disagree. And Sylve a current born again Protestant disagrees. There are many who are “born again” christians who do not believe in OSAS.
Oh, that’s brilliant. Pick a pentecostal church and ask them to speak for fundamentalists. If you’re going to do that, then why not pick Baptists and ask them to speak for Roman Catholics?
Nazarene is not pentecostal. And I do believe I said that AoG could be
subdivided into pentecostal.
My definition of fundamental and born again are essentially the same. You asked for my definition, I gave it to you.
I will be happy to stick with my original contention and abandon any more argument of what “fundamental” means if that will help this be less argumentative. People who are “born again” and identify themselves in this manner, like Assembly of God, Nazarene, Evangelical, church of Christ, nondenominational, many of them do not believe in OSAS.
I do however find the “tone” of this remark to be rather aggressively sarcastic. Forgive me if I am misreading this tone and that is not your intent. And I pray we can move past this sort of dialogue as it frequently can deteriorate into uncharitableness, something I do not believe either of us would care to participate in.
That’s not an essential.
Can you or can you not name just one essential that we’re not united on?
Then I suppose this would need to be in another thread of its own, what is an essential and non-essential doctrine as this is not the scope of this thread. I believe it would be essential to define whether or not one believes that after one has been saved whether or not one can then choose to reject God and go to hell, but as I said, that would need to be another thread as this is not in the scope of “born again”.
The original claim we were arguing against is that bible believing Christians who could be classified as “born again” or self identify as born again are OSAS. As pointed out by Sylve and I, this claim is not true for MANY. There are
many who are “born again” christians who believe one can be saved at one time but “backslide” and a former Christian can find themselves in hell. Conversely, it has been acknowledged that some are “born again” and OSAS.
As well as the discussion has been of assured salvation and assurance of salvation. Assured Salvation would be another way to say OSAS. Assurance of salvation is not. One can believe that they Know they are going to heaven but also believe it is possible to lose ones salvation.
So, the issue that was being discussed in which I, due to my definition of fundamental, used fundamental for “born again”, is whether or not all or even many who are “born again” Christians believe in OSAS. Respectfully, Sylve a born again Protestant and, I, a born again Catholic revert disagree with you. As do the many who attend the Churches we go(went) to who call themselves born again.
There are many who are not OSAS who are “born again” chritsians and would identify themselves in this manner who completely disagree with the doctrine of OSAS, as well as teach a holiness doctrine.
It has also been presented by us that while OSAS would certainly teach that one is no longer under the law of Moses, most do not believe you can be saved and go out and murder someone, that if one who claimed to be saved did that, they were never saved to begin with it has been claimed that both OSAS and born again teach a lawlessness. While I, in fact, know that this is completely wrong about many of the born again crowd some of whom in fact teach a “holiness” doctrine, I was arguing that this is a gross characterization of OSAS and few (if any?) believe that a saved person can commit murder and still go to heaven.
Do you in fact believe that one can go out and commit murder if one is saved? That a saved person can act in this lawless manner and still go to heaven? Or do you disagree with the claim that Lawlessness is taught by OSAS Christians?
God Bless,
Maria