M
mikemck
Guest
I’m just telling you what the Bible says. You’re free to believe it or not believe it.You’re denying reality. They were Christians. They now are not Christians.
And, as I pointed out to you before, we’re not talking about backsliding, we’re talking about atheism.Yes you can. People do it all the time. We live in time. We grow and change. The things of childhood and youth become forgotten. A youth can have a very strong relationship with Christ during the college and early career years. Then, something happens that pulls him away from the practice of his faith - he falls in love with someone who does not share his beliefs, or he gets a job that requires him to be in remote places where there are no churches, or he simply becomes busy with the day to day of staying alive in this material world. The things of youth, including his relationship with Christ, are first neglected, and then entirely forgotten.
The problem is that you cannot have a relationship with someone and then claim that they do not exist.If you were with someone all day every day for months on end, then you had a relationship with them, right? But, if you haven’t spoken to them in 20 or more years, then you no longer have that relationship, do you?
Either you believe that they don’t exist, or you never had a relationship with them.
Let’s say that I was hit by a train and lost both of my legs in the accident.And yet, it happens.
One day, about ten years later, you and I sat down over dinner and I told you, “I lost my legs when I was hit by a train, but I no longer believe that trains exist.”
Would that seem reasonable to you?
Again, they may very well have believed that they were saved. Again, the Bible tells us that there are false converts.Because they told me
and because I lived with them and saw how they lived. They were definitely Christians. They were not pretending in public, and then doing something else in private, and they certainly weren’t trying to impress anyone.
No, I didn’t say that the Bible said that they were pretending. Please try to pay attention to my posts if you’re going to respond to them.Of course, but these people were never just pretending.
The Bible tells us that they may show all of the outward appearances and even appear very pious and charitable. But the Bible still calls them false converts.
He doesn’t, unless you believe that the author of Hebrews is Paul.Then why does St. Paul continually warn Christians not to fall away?
Even so, Heb 6:6 is precisely one of the passages that supports the Bible’s teaching about false converts.
It’s easy to throw around the phrase “fall away”, but you neglect to cite the entire passage in it’s proper context.
Name one.If we can’t fall away, then why discuss the ways to avoid this at such great length, in every letter of his?