M
moondweller
Guest
If this is the true Catholic definition of saved, then based on this definition, “saved” for the Catholic is never a status/reality entered into during this life."*Salvation is **the freedom from **the bondage of slavery to sin. It is not eternal life in heaven. As such, salvation is a process, because we are capable of binding ourselves back to sin throughout our lives…"*If “saved” is the freedom from that bondage and you’re capable of binding yourselves, then by that definition you’re not truly “saved,” you’ve never been “freed” but still remain subject to bondage. Hence, for the Catholic, there is no concept of salvation during his lifetime. For this reason one could say it’s not a Biblical “faith” which clearly states concerning every true believer in Christ:Eph 2:8-9 "For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, the gift of God; not as a result of works, so that no one may boast."The Biblical believer has truly been freed from the bondage of sin through the redemptive work of Christ. He has entered into a “saved” state by grace through faith in Christ alone, having been redeemed (purchased) out of the slave market of sin (never to return: Gr.: agorazo, ekagorazo, lutroo) by the blood of Christ, the price paid (in full) - according to God’s Word.Salvation is the freedom from the bondage of slavery to sin.
It is not eternal life in heaven.
As such, salvation is a process, because we are capable of binding ourselves back to sin throughout our lives…
Christ’s atonement made possible what once was not possible…and that is the unbinding of the shackles of sin. Before Christ, we were doomed in slavery.
Christ’s death gave us the key where once it was non-existent…but we must unlock the chains with His help and grace…and we must keep ourselves in His light, lest we re-shackle ourselves to the very sin He came to free us from.
When we die, our eternal destination is based on whether we are still bound to the shackles of sin, or we are satisfactorily unbound.
All by the Grace of God.