Curious:
So what you’re saying essentially is that Christians that are doing the best they can need not worry?
If a Christian really is doing the best that he can to please God, then he need not worry -
at that moment in time. The problem with Baptist/antinomian OSAS is that it teaches that once you get “saved” you need not worry -
ever. Which means that if you are “saved”, you can do what you know God hates, and God will be forced to give you a place in heaven.
The Baptist/antinomian version of OSAS completely reverses the relationship that men have with God. The “saved” man becomes the Lord of his life and God becomes his slave that must accept whatever the “saved” man wishes to do. The “saved” man is free live his life any way he feels like living it – holy or depraved, it doesn’t matter, because how he lives has no bearing at all on if he will enter heaven when he dies.
According to the gospel of antinomian OSAS, the “saved” man does NOT have to have Jesus as his Lord, because by saying the “sinner’s prayer", he has received a legal contract that binds God to a contractual obligation for doing the work of saying the sinners prayer. And that legal contract has a clause in fine print that says that God is forced to accept into heaven Christians that die as depraved and unrepentant sinners. The “saved” man is free to live a holy life
if he feels like it. A holy life is, of course, encouraged among the Baptists – but the bottom line is that a “saved” man can become a unrepentant depraved, raping and murdering maniac if he wants to live like that, and God would be forced to bow to the will of the maniac.
But if you ask a non OSAS Christian who is doing the will of God to the best of their ability and to their knowledge if they will go to heaven or hell, they’ll still reply, “I hope heaven.”
If they know the Gospel, they would probably say that their hope is in Christ.
Through him we have obtained access to this grace in which we stand, and we rejoice in our hope of sharing the glory of God.
Romans 5:2
For through the Spirit, by faith, we wait for the hope of righteousness.
Gal. 5:5
Because they think the best they can do still might not be good enough.
Who knows for sure how they will stand up under intense persecution and/or torture? The life that we are living today may tommorrow take a drastic turn for the worse. The only Christians that are assured of being saved are those that endure to the end in times of persecution. … brother will deliver up brother to death, and the father his child, and children will rise against parents and have them put to death; and you will be hated by all for my name’s sake. But he who endures to the end will be saved.
Mark 13:12-13The Christian that does not bother to strive for the virtue of courage and endurance when times are good has no reason to hope that he is going to have courage and endurance when times are bad.
Christ gave us the parable of the seeds sown on different soils for a reason. Some Christians are like the seeds sown on the rocky path – they are happy Christians when times are good, but when times get tough, they fall away: “the ones sown upon rocky ground, who, when they hear the word, immediately receive it with joy; and they have no root in themselves, but endure for a while; then, when tribulation or persecution arises on account of the word, immediately they fall away.” Mark 4:16-17
Jesus warned many times that there would be Christians that would fall away when they were faced with tribulations.… all this is but the beginning of the birth-pangs. "Then they will deliver you up to tribulation, and put you to death; and you will be hated by all nations for my name’s sake. And then
many will fall away, and betray one another, and hate one another.
Matt. 24:8-10The author of Hebrews warns against falling away by unbelief:Take care, brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil, unbelieving heart, leading you to fall away from the living God.
Heb. 3:12The lie of antinomian OSAS is that a Christian need not ever worry about the consequences of falling away. Even if the “saved” man becomes a total coward and denies Jesus in times of tribulation, he doesn’t have to worry about whether he will go to heaven. In fact, the “saved” man doesn’t even have to worry about denying Jesus when he isn’t being persecuted - he is free to commit whatever sin he feels like committing, do whatever he wants to do, live however he wants to live - because he has the “assurance of salvation”.