D
deb1
Guest
Sigh. This belief was what my former pastor taught and caused me a lot of unnecessary pain. If I am not mistaken you are saying that if a person is saved, then he or she should not want to sin. The problem was and is, I want to sin. For example when someone starts gossiping, it takes an extreme act of will on my part to not listen. I am not always succesful.Good post.
This is the best summary of the Evangelical position:
The idea is that once you trust in Christ as your Lord and Savior, you do not continue in sin. Why? Because your old nature, which continually desires sin is not in control any longer. You are a new creature with new passions and desires.
It is like Luther said when someone objected to his position concering justification by faith alone saying that if it were true then everyone can do whatever they please. Luther responded, “This is true, now what pleases you.”
Christians have the regenerative power of the Holy Spirit in our lives. We have new pleasures, not of our own making, but of the making of the Holy Spirit. This way, we truly serve God, not out of obligation, fear of punishment, or with a sour face, but because we are drawn to his beauty, knowing that He freely gave to us a gift we did not deserve or earn in any way.
What a glorious thing salvation is!
Michael
So how do Protestants know that they are saved? Is it just a feeling? If a person asks forgiveness of their sins, and accepts Jesus into their hearts, and then say commits adultry, were they not saved to begin with? So how does a Protestant know that his being saved took? I’m not being flippant with the last question-I just couldn’t think of any other way to word it.