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NonCatholic
Guest
Hi, NonCatholic,
You know…you have a point there … that was a rather exaggerated setting for a question.
So, allow another attempt: Under what, if any conditions, can a person with free will claim at one point in his life to be ‘saved’ and then later in his life go about objectively breaking the 10 Commandments?
There are seveal referces from St. Paul that were given identifying that it is not over, until it is over and we stand before the Judgment Seat of God. But, the one I like best is Christ’s parable of the 10 Virgins (Matt 25:1-13)
The way I read this, unless you persevere until the end, you will not be saved. Please note, the story does not end with something like*…“Afterwards the other virgins came and said, ‘Lord, Lord, open the door for us!’ But he said in reply, ‘Amen, I say to you, you were pretty good girls after all, come on in!.’ Therefore, it does not make a difference if you stay awake or not, for while you know neither the day nor the hour, it does not make any difference because you have been saved!” *
First, You missed the entire point of the parable, let me try explain. And so the purpose of this parable is very simple. It is to call for inward preparedness (Virgins with oil) for the return of Christ, rather than simply an outward show (w/o oil). This particular theme is found all the way through the New Testament. Over and over and over again God expresses His concern for those people who outwardly make a profession of Christ, but inwardly do not know Him who are so ill prepared for the inevitable encounter which they shall some day have either at the return of Christ, or in death.So, to paraphrase as I piggy-back on Benedictus2’s question: were these five foolish virgins in the OSAS cagegory? And, if not, why not? Hopefull, this is simple and straight forward
God bless
I think it adds greatly to the power of this parable that the foolish virgins are not reprobates. If we were using the picture that Jesus gave in Matthew 13 about the soils, we would say they have no deepness of earth. Here they had no oil, they had no real saving faith, they had no real saving grace. Half of them were without it, half with it.
So the bridesmaids are divided. That’s how it is in the church, that’s how it will be with the people of God until Jesus comes. It will always be this way, even during the time of the Great Tribulation, there will be those attaching themselves to the church who are professing believers but who are not real. Matthew 7 talks much about the “Few” and the “Many”, all religious, but some are possessors and some professors.
The tragedy of unpreparedness. It comes at the Second Coming of Christ and it comes at death as well. Death is no different than the Second Coming of Christ in the sense that when you die, you come before the judgment of God. Hebrews 9:27 says it. “It is appointed unto men once to die and after this, the judgment.”
The principle…be ready or be left to judgment. Verse 11, “Later the other virgins came saying, ‘Lord, Lord, open up for us.’” “Lord, Lord” sounds familiar, doesn’t it? Sounds like Matthew 7:21, “And many will say to Me in that day…what?..Lord, Lord. And I will say, ‘Depart from Me, I never knew you.’”
Second, all of continue to break God’s law, that’s where grace, repentance and forgiveness comes into play; however anyone who uses God’s Grace as an excuse to sin is probably a phony…Paul spoke of this in Romans. Also, the “pattern” of your life should be to sin less and less and less as you come to maturation in Christ and appreciate the sacrifice and love God has for you. I think children are a good example of this as they mature, then become more respectful and obedient. This is why it is so important to learn what God has taught us and to live it out in obedience and reverence for Jesus.
God bless!