P
PJM
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Should ALL Christians be confident of their salvation?
Why?
Why not?
Why?
Why not?
It is more healthy for all Christians to be concerned for their salvation. That way they are constantly thinking “Is this what Jesus would want me to do?” WWJD forever![]()
In what way? Confident that the beliefs we have in the church we are a part of is correct and will bring us to salvation if followed properly? Or just a general confidence that we are saved?Should ALL Christians be confident of their salvation?
Why?
Why not?
Do you mean confidence that the salvation won for human-kind on the cross at Calvary is real, that grace is, therefore, available to us for Christ’s sake? Sure, by faith, and hope for eternal life.Should ALL Christians be confident of their salvation?
Why?
Why not?
I disagree with the bolded. Salvation is promised to everyone, though not everyone is saved. The assurance of salvation (grace) is the hope of the regenerate.I think we should all continue to work out our salvation with fear and trembling. Nothing is promised to anyone. Christ gives us two roads, one to His Church and to Salvation, the other to eternal damnation. We must choose where we walk and we must live (and die) with the consequences of our choices in life. No one is “assured” of salvation. No one who is alive can say, “I AM saved.” All they can do is work hard to be as close to Christ and as loving as they can be.
Either or both=ConstantineTG;10751838]In what way? Confident that the beliefs we have in the church we are a part of is correct and will bring us to salvation if followed properly? Or just a general confidence that we are saved?
=kimg901;10752745]Well lets look at the word Salvation.
sal·va·tion (sl-vshn)
n.
1.
a. Preservation or deliverance from destruction, difficulty, or evil.
b. A source, means, or cause of such preservation or deliverance.
2. Christianity
a. Deliverance from the power or penalty of sin; redemption.
b. The agent or means that brings about such deliverance.
SORRY; but I don’t get your point?Sure Christ died for our sins. But we are sinners all the time. As long as its not a mortal sin then I would say im confident in my salvation.
There was a time when the Roman Church defined “Sins Against the Holy Ghost”, of which “Presumption of God’s Mercy” headed the list. This appeared in my first 1962 Missal. As a Roman Catholic, I accepted it without question. As an Orthodox Christian, my position remains unchanged. Some things are that simple.Should ALL Christians be confident of their salvation?
Why? Why not?
newadvent.org/cathen/12403a.htmNew Advent Catholic Encyclopedia:
Presumption is here considered as a vice opposed to the theological virtue of hope. It may also be regarded as a product of pride. It may be defined as the condition of a soul which, because of a badly regulated reliance on God’s mercy and power, hopes for salvation without doing anything to deserve it, or for pardon of his sins without repenting of them. Presumption is said to offend against hope by excess, as despair by defect. It will be obvious, however, to one who ponders what is meant by hope, that this statement is not exact. There is only a certain analogy which justifies it. As a matter of fact we could not hope too much, assuming that it is really the supernatural habit which is in question.
=Kirovsakya;10755686]There was a time when the Roman Church defined “Sins Against the Holy Ghost”, of which “Presumption of God’s Mercy” headed the list. This appeared in my first 1962 Missal. As a Roman Catholic, I accepted it without question. As an Orthodox Christian, my position remains unchanged. Some things are that simple.
I too recall that
Well, we should be confident in our Church or denomination that we have the whole truth. If not, why are we still here? Convert alreadyEither or both![]()
LOL. Sorry, i confused myself here. I was thinking of another topic and writing on this one. Forget I said anything.SORRY; but I don’t get your point?![]()
=ConstantineTG;10756182]Well, we should be confident in our Church or denomination that we have the whole truth. If not, why are we still here? Convert already![]()
Permit to then ask: how can one KNOW if their church is God’s One church?As for the confidence of salvation, I guess that too is a big vague. We can be confident in the hope of salvation, which is what Christ offers us. We can’t be confident in a surety, salvation isn’t cut and dry. There isn’t a checklist that we need to do and once we’ve done that list we are guaranteed eternal life.
Investigation, learning, testing, praying, having faith in God, following your conscience. It is not a science. I wish it was cut and dry, but it isn’t. I’ve said in another thread about people leaving the Catholic Church that we can only do so much and know so much. People have been convincing me to come back to Catholicism by convincing me of the truth of the Papacy. But the reality is for every tract Catholics have, there is a tract the Orthodox has to answer back. How can we really now the truth? Theologians across the centuries debated this matter and the debate 'til today isn’t done, how are we commonfolk able to know which is the truth? The answer is our own very conscience. If our desire is to follow Jesus, if our desire is to be with God for all eternity, there is no fault in that. Only God is perfect, and Christ will fill in the imperfections in us, including our beliefs, if our intentions are pure. This is not a justification for indifferentialism, but rather an acknowledgement that we are only human and there is only so much we can do. These people who are trying to convince me that the Papacy is the true teaching, they honestly believe that. I don’t. And I cannot in good conscience accept that. Will God fault me for that? If I’m wrong, then I will plead for even more mercy. I did my best to know what is true and by my estimation, this is the truth. I have nothing more to do but live my life faithfully as an Orthodox Christian and seek God. Then I rest my hope in God that I am following the truth and that this path is the path to salvation.Permit to then ask: how can one KNOW if their church is God’s One church?
Actually MY FRIEND=ConstantineTG;10756310]Investigation, learning, testing, praying, having faith in God, following your conscience. It is not a science. I wish it was cut and dry, but it isn’t. I’ve said in another thread about people leaving the Catholic Church that we can only do so much and know so much. People have been convincing me to come back to Catholicism by convincing me of the truth of the Papacy. But the reality is for every tract Catholics have, there is a tract the Orthodox has to answer back. How can we really now the truth? Theologians across the centuries debated this matter and the debate 'til today isn’t done, how are we commonfolk able to know which is the truth? The answer is our own very conscience. If our desire is to follow Jesus, if our desire is to be with God for all eternity, there is no fault in that. Only God is perfect, and Christ will fill in the imperfections in us, including our beliefs, if our intentions are pure. This is not a justification for indifferentialism, but rather an acknowledgement that we are only human and there is only so much we can do. These people who are trying to convince me that the Papacy is the true teaching, they honestly believe that. I don’t. And I cannot in good conscience accept that. Will God fault me for that? If I’m wrong, then I will plead for even more mercy. I did my best to know what is true and by my estimation, this is the truth. I have nothing more to do but live my life faithfully as an Orthodox Christian and seek God. Then I rest my hope in God that I am following the truth and that this path is the path to salvation.
I think this is where some of us scratch our heads and say “Huh?”Permit to then ask: how can one KNOW if their church is God’s One church?