SteveGC:
md, please describe for us this “time of personal belief”…the time at which one is instantaneously destined for heaven.
I mean, how do you explain this to the unregenerate when they ask you what level of belief is necessary? What precisely IS “heart-felt” belief in terms of defining the transitional moment where one moves from unsaved to saved?
I would explain nothing to an unregenerate (a
psuchikos, a natural man). I would present to him the gospel of Jesus Christ by which, through faith, he could be saved and receive the free gift of eternal life. I would simply explain to him that, according to the Scriptures, as the “
Lamb of God” the Man Christ Jesus died a sacrificial death FOR his sins that were, at that time, imputed to Him on the cross, and that He died,
once for all, TO his sins, and rose bodily to new life on the third day. And that he would receive the “GIFT” of salvation by believing in the Person and sacrificial work of Jesus Christ on his behalf. I can do no more. At that point it’s up to that person to believe the gospel message. Just as Paul and his companions responded to the Philippian jailer when he asked: "
Sirs, what must I do to be saved?"Acts 16:31 "They said, “
Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved,”
Is it just a “you’ll know it when it happens” sort of thing? Is that how you describe it to someone…“you’ll know because the Spirit of God will affirm it to you”…?
As I said. I don’t explain anything of the sort to an unregenerate. However, when an unbeliever turns from his unbelief and believes the gospel message concerning Christ, sin, the gift of salvation and eternal life, at the time of true belief he is
regenerated by the Holy Spirit and having been made
spiritually alive he knows he’s saved. He’ll then grow in the grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ and his salvation through other born again believers who have the gift of teaching and studying the written Word of God which reveals all “…
the things FREELY given to us by God” (1 Cor. 2:12).
Certainly you would agree that there are varying levels of belief, and not all of them warrant the authenticity of “being saved”, right?
I do not! I would not be asking him to become a Mason. There are no “
levels” of belief in respect to salvation. There are, however, “
false brethren” who have professed belief. These are the “
tares” planted among the wheat by the enemy (Matt. 13:24-30)2 Cor 11:26 “{I have been} on frequent journeys, in dangers from rivers, dangers from robbers, dangers from {my} countrymen, dangers from the Gentiles, dangers in the city, dangers in the wilderness, dangers on the sea, dangers among
false brethren;”
Gal 2:4 “But {it was} because of the
false brethren secretly brought in, who had sneaked in to spy out our liberty which we have in Christ Jesus, in order to bring us into bondage.”
Can someone possess merely the emotional fear of hell in them, and submit to a fear-based, self-willed level of belief in Christ, confess Him and invite Him into their heart, and be born again (saved)?
I don’t know what you mean by “
self-willed.” But if this one is in fear of Hell because he now understands the gravity of his sinful state having been convicted by the Holy Spirit of sin and judgment, and after hearing the gospel message of Christ regarding his sins, believes in Christ, yes, then of course, he is at that moment gifted salvation by God (Eph. 2:8-9) and created a new creature in Christ (v. 10). One of the works of the Holy Spirit coming into the world is to convict the world of judgment (Jn. 16:8). That would result in a healthy fear of Hell. Which would be a very good and effective reason for turning from unbelief to belief in Christ for the forgiveness of sins, salvation and eternal life.
On the flip-side, can it be an emotional desire for eternity in a blissful heaven, and a subsequent sinners prayer?
Yes, certainly. If the prayer was rooted in belief in the Person and sacrificial work of Christ on his behalf. It’s the
belief in Christ, however, through which God saved him, not the prayer.
Or must it be based on a genuine, heart-felt love of Christ?
No one is saved through a “
love of Christ.” Salvation is divinely gifted through FAITH in Christ. Salvation based on one’s “
love of Christ” is the Catholic “gospel.”
How much belief is necessary to be born again in your theology, and be 100% assured of eternal life in heaven?
It’s not a quantity of belief, but quality. Assurance of eternal life is based on divine revelation, the written Word of God (see for instance, Jn. 3:14-18; Rom. 6:23; 1 Jn. 5:9-13). True faith also results in believing God’s Word as revealed in Scripture. A false faith argues against it.
Forgive all the questions related to this…but I wanted to be sure you understood what I’m asking…and I sincerely presumed that a “once saved always saved” advocate would be very capable of thoroughly explaining the truest essence of the “once saved” part.
The “
once saved” is based on divine revelation. It’s understood when one believes first the gospel message of Christ and then what God has said concerning the believer’s saved state through the redemptive work of Jesus Christ as revealed in the
theopneustos Scriptures. As He said to the prophet Jeremiah:Jer 1:12 "Then the Lord said to me, "
You have seen well, for I am watching over My word to perform it."And Peter wrote to his fellow Jewish believers:2 Pet 3:18 “…
but grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To Him {be} the glory, both now and to the day of eternity. Amen.”