It was to Adam that God promised to send the Messiah. Anyone in heaven is a part of the Bride of Christ. If, indeed, Adam is in heaven (we don’t know that) then he is a part as well. After Christ died and before his resurrection, he descended to the abode of the dead to release the righteous that they may enter heaven. This would include Adam, Eve, and everyone who died prior to Christ’s redeeming sacrifice who were found righteous in the eyes of God. Christ’s sacrifice was for all men, not just those subsequent to his incarnation, death and resurrection.
Interesting, I didn’t know the RCC taught that. This explains some of our differences because protestants such as I don’t consider the OT saints as being part of the Bride of Christ or the church proper. Everything else you said is agreed; Christ’s death being efficacious for those in Abraham’s Bosom/Paradise, etc…
Again, the imagery of a Shepherd is the image of our Savior and its purpose is to tell us about God, not about ourselves.
I disagree, the image of the sheep fits us really quite well.
He is not only a Shepherd, but the Good Shepherd. The Good Shepherd leaves the 99 to save the one. This is exactly what our Lord has done. He has given his very life and pursues us constantly, always knocking. The problem is, we must answer. He doesn’t break down our door and bind us and hall us off to our home. He knocks. He gives us an invitation. We must respond and if we do not he allows us to perish.
But I see you describing the idea that if we let Him in and ask Him to stay and He says I’ll never leave you nor forsake you, that He doesn’t mean it, He may walk out again.
It has nothing to do with God disowning his children. It has to do with God’s children disowning him.
Apostasy would be declaring emancipation, as I said, I’m open to that. As you say, God doesn’t disown us. Why? Because it is Jesus’ righteousness that counts, not ours.
What was Paul taking about when he said we must persevere to the end? And where do you see in scripture that salvation is an event and not an ongoing process. I would agree that at the time of my Baptism I was saved. And when I committed my first mortal sin I lost that saving grace and had to repent and ask forgiveness. God is always ready and willing to grant that forgiveness, but I must ask for it.
So you have to be born again, and again, and again, or adopted disowned adopted disowned? I don’t see that. That would be like going from sheep to goat to sheep to goat with your hope being that you die a sheep not a goat, but no guarantee.
False. All sin separates us. Where do you find that no sin can ever separate us?
It’s a little more complex than that. John says a true regenerate believer cannot sin. Not will not sin, but cannot. How can that be; because again there are two things nailed to the cross with Christ; the Law and Sin. God had to do something so radical because a mere human always falls short when works are involved. Thence comes the heresy of sinning so that grace can abound, and I agree with Paul; God forbid!
So is murder, adultery, stealing, bearing false witness…
I don’t agree. The idea of Apostasy is very specific.
Study what happens to a sheep if it keeps running from the voice of his shepherd. It very often dies in the wild, even if the shepherd relentlessly pursues it, hoping it will respond to his voice.
Luckily for us our Good Shepard is omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent. However, I fully believe that God can take any sheep out of the picture should that become necessary.