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alwayswill
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What God will do …in us, to change us“will do” As in good works?
to desire to please God by obeying His commands.
What God will do …in us, to change us“will do” As in good works?
I don’t believe Paul is revealing that man’s will is not cooperative in faith that saves. I think he is speaking in terms of salvation coming to those who accept faith and so walk by faith. God chose (not man or his will) to call even Gentiles, who did not have the Law or birth right, his heirs of the promise, since the law of faith is what is required. The Law of works proved that all deserve death, but the law of faith shows God is merciful.Nearly 2000 years ago Paul answered these very objections
Romans9
:19 One of you will say to me: “Then why does God still blame us? For who is able to resist his will?” 20 But who are you, a human being, to talk back to God? “Shall what is formed say to the one who formed it, ‘Why did you make me like this?’” 21 Does not the potter have the right to make out of the same lump of clay some pottery for special purposes and some for common use?
in 2016 I;ll answer this way :
Are the truly guilty paying their just penalty in prison
BECAUSE no one stopped them from the transgressions?
Are the truly guilty paying their just penalty in prison
BECAUSE no else paid the penalty for them?
of course not ? the guilty are paying their prison penalty BECAUSE they are guilty.
If God send every sinner the Hell He would be completely just:
If God chose to pay the penalty of only 100 He would be more merciful that any one deserved.
I think that would be great. I’m “all in”.I would like to discuss his points
I finished the article… very well done, I think. These are some excerpts I found important:this article at EWTN by Jimmy Akin brings up many good points:
ewtn.com/library/ANSWERS/SOLAFIDE.htm
it is a short read:
If you get a chance please look it over: I would like to discuss his points
I think this is a fair question (request). It’s also like asking where someone receives Communion, and what do the people (from whos hands they receive Communion) believe and profess.Alwayswill, if you don’t mind me asking: were are your beliefs personally in relationship to Calvinism, Arminianism, or other? If you don’t know, are wish to just express yourself just as yourself that 100% ok.
Other Catholic apologetic authors have addressed that.…
The other reason is that, frankly, the formula itself (though not what it is used to express) is flatly unbiblical. The phrase faith alone (Greek, pisteos monon), occurs exactly once in the Bible, and there it is rejected:
You see that a man is justified by works and not by faith alone. (Jas. 2:24)[/indent]
How much of this do you think will actually produce healing among Christians? What would you like to discuss?
So combining Akin’s and Kreeft’send quote
:
It seems to me that the Reformed/Calvinism view on Soteriology best explains the whole council of Scripture.Alwayswill, if you don’t mind me asking: were are your beliefs personally in relationship to Calvinism, Arminianism, or other? If you don’t know, are wish to just express yourself just as yourself that 100% ok.
Lets see if you agree with this:…
I was asking if you are thinking good works flow from your supernatural faith.
And if you do, you are partially correct.
But our good works ALSO NECESSARILY flow from our grace and gift of . . . . charity.
And if your good works flow from a faith . . . . a faith to move mountains . . . but is not animated by charity . . . . your faith gets you nothing according to St. Paul.
This supernatural faith is good and it is NECESSARY.
But if this supernatural faith is unaccompanied by supernatural Charity, this necessary supernatural faith falls short of salvation.
So if you are saying your necessary good works MUST be animated by faith AND charity . . . I have no issue.
But if you are saying your necessary good works and “charity” all flows from supernatural faith only, I will take issue with that.
**James also mentions ten other things that faith does **
alwayswill;14261262:
does NOT accomplish these works. But that faith leads to these things if completed.alwayswill, the point James was making (or rather God made through James) is that mere faith alone
I disagree that was the point James was making:
I agree with what Kreeft said was the point James was making.
“Actually, James’ point is very clear and simple, it is not a contrast between faith and works but between a real faith, a faith that works, and a fake faith, one that does not.”
No sola fide Protestant believes a fake faith saves
No sola fide Protestant believes a real faith doesn’t save
rcwitness;14261492:
I don’t know how you just found a difference in what I just said.I disagree that was the point James was making:
I agree with what Kreeft said was the point James was making.
“Actually, James’ point is very clear and simple, it is not a contrast between faith and works but between a real faith, a faith that works, and a fake faith, one that does not.”
No sola fide Protestant believes a fake faith saves
Do you believe the Catholic faith properly Teaches Justification?
Do you believe a person can be Sanctified without being Justified?
alwayswill;14261514:
Justification is a one time eventI don’t know how you just found a difference in what I just said.
Do you believe the Catholic faith properly Teaches Justification?
Do you believe a person can be Sanctified without being Justified?
Sanctification is the process of become more holy, more Christ like.
it is impossible to Sanctified without being Justified first
All who are Justified will continue with Sanctification until they are Gloried at the end,
The chain of event cannot be broken
Romans 8:29-30
29 For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers and sisters. 30 And those he predestined, he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified.
Thank you for this thorough and informative answer. Your view point was making sense (no human action), but then the last paragraph on baptism seems very different as it relies on human action. Did I get that right?It seems to me that the Reformed/Calvinism view on Soteriology best explains the whole council of Scripture.
Some examples of the Reformed Theology that I hold
1 Sola scriptura (“by Scripture alone”)
2 Sola fide (“by faith alone”)
3 Sola gratia (“by grace alone”)
4 Solus Christus or Solo Christo (“Christ alone” or “through Christ alone”)
5 Soli Deo gloria (“glory to God alone”)
“It is by God’s Holy Scripture alone, that teaches us that salvation is by Grace alone, through Faith alone, in Christ alone, to the glory of God alone.”
(1) Christ’s death purchased eternal salvation;
(2) the saved are justified by grace through faith in Christ alone;
(3) sinners cannot earn divine favor;
(4) God requires no preparatory works or pre-salvation reformation;
(5) eternal life is a gift of God;
(6) believers are saved before their faith ever produces any righteous works; and
(7) Christians can and do sin, sometimes horribly.
I agree with the points here at
gty.org/media/pdf/Lordship_Salvation.pdf
If your faith doesn’t change you then your faith doesn’t save you
or
If your faith didn’t change you then your faith didn’t save you
Imputed righteousness :
“Justification is that step in salvation in which God declares the believer righteous. Protestant theology has emphasized that this includes the imputation of Christ’s righteousness (crediting it to the believer’s”account“), whereas Roman Catholic theology emphasizes that God justifies in accord with an infused righteousness merited by Christ and maintained by the believer’s good works,”
Monergism states that the regeneration of an individual is the work of God the Holy Spirit alone, as opposed to synergism, which, in its simplest form, argues that the human will cooperates with God’s grace in order to be regenerated. To most synergists, regeneration is a process that begins when a man responds to God’s initiative, repents, and begins the labor of loving God and his neighbor.
Monergists believe that regeneration takes place as a single act in which God regenerates a man from his fleshly state and, thus now enabled, a man can believe, and that he inevitably and invariably will do so.
Total Depravity (also known as Total Inability and Original Sin)
Unconditional Election
Limited Atonement (also known as Particular Atonement)
Irresistible Grace
Perseverance of the Saints (also known as Once Saved Always Saved)
Baptism
- Believer’s baptism by immersion is a public testimony of one’s personal relationship with Jesus Christ (Acts 2:41). Therefore, salvation is a prerequisite to baptism. Baptism is an act of obedience, it pictures the work of Christ, and is significant in the Scriptures
The belief expressed is the baptism an act of obedience with no salvific effect.Thank you for this thorough and informative answer. Your view point was making sense (no human action), but then the last paragraph on baptism seems very different as it relies on human action. Did I get that right?
Baptism
- Believer’s baptism by immersion is a public testimony of one’s personal relationship with Jesus Christ (Acts 2:41). Therefore, salvation is a prerequisite to baptism. Baptism is an act of obedience, it pictures the work of Christ, and is significant in the Scriptures
Oh I see, I misread the part I bolded backwards. That makes more sense.The belief expressed is the baptism an act of obedience with no salvific effect.
rcwitness;14261525:
We are told in Hebrews that one can be Sanctified, yet fall away through sin after.Justification is a one time event
Sanctification is the process of become more holy, more Christ like.
it is impossible to Sanctified without being Justified first
All who are Justified will continue with Sanctification until they are Gloried at the end,
The chain of event cannot be broken
Romans 8:29-30
29 For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers and sisters. 30 And those he predestined, he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified.
Hebrews 10
For if we sin deliberately after receiving the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice for sins, but a fearful prospect of judgment, and a fury of fire which will consume the adversaries. A man who has violated the law of Moses dies without mercy at the testimony of two or three witnesses. How much worse punishment do you think will be deserved by the man who has spurned the Son of God, and profaned the blood of the covenant by which he was sanctified, and outraged the Spirit of grace? For we know him who said, “Vengeance is mine, I will repay.” And again, “The Lord will judge his people.” It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.
You believe that only real faith (alone) justifies and further sanctifies unto assurance of salvation.
The Church believes that we can have a faith that accepts and believes, and receives Sanctification, but does not accept the virtue of Charity, and so denies the faith that brought justification and even sanctification… and the last sate of that person is worse than an unbeliever.
alwayswill;14261531:
. A man who has violated the law of Moses dies without mercy at the testimony of two or three witnesses. How much worse punishment do you think will be deserved by the man who has spurned the Son of God, and profaned the blood of the covenant by which he was sanctified, and outraged the Spirit of grace? For we know him who said, “Vengeance is mine, I will repay.” And again, “The Lord will judge his people.” It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.We are told in Hebrews that one can be Sanctified, yet fall away through sin after.
Hebrews 10
For if we sin deliberately after receiving the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice for sins, but a fearful prospect of judgment, and a fury of fire which will consume the adversaries
You believe that only real faith (alone) justifies and further sanctifies unto assurance of salvation.
The Church believes that we can have a faith that accepts and believes, and receives Sanctification, but does not accept the virtue of Charity, and so denies the faith that brought justification and even sanctification… and the last sate of that person is worse than an unbeliever.
In What Sense Were They “Sanctified”?
Now this third description is very controversial. And I do not claim infallibility for my own interpretation. But I commend it to you as consistent with the rest of the book and the rest of Scripture, I believe. Some take it to mean that you can be truly born again and justified by faith, and on your way to heaven through a life of spiritual sanctification - and yet be finally lost and destroyed by forsaking the truth. Because it says here that these apostates had been “sanctified.”
Others say that the possibility raised here of sanctified people committing apostasy will, in fact, never happen, because those who are truly elect and born again will be kept from apostasy by the work of the Holy Spirit. So no sanctified people ever do, in fact, apostacize. And this prospect in Hebrews 10:26-31 never happens. The elect take heed to the warning and persevere in faith and holiness.
The first of these I think to be untenable in view of what this writer says elsewhere and what the rest of the New Testament teaches about the security of the believer in Christ. In Hebrews 3:14 he says, “For we have become partakers of Christ, if we hold fast the beginning of our assurance firm until the end” - meaning that if we do not hold fast to the end, then we “had not become a partaker of Christ.” Failure to persevere in faith is not a sign of losing salvation but of never having been a partaker of Christ. And in this same chapter (10:14), he says, “By one offering He has perfected for all time those who are being sanctified.” In other words, there is a kind of true, spiritual sanctification that is sure evidence of being eternally perfected in God’s sight - perfected for all time. God’s justifying, perfecting work is not temporary. And the evidence that it is done, is that we are being truly made holy - sanctified.
So I conclude that the sanctification of verse 29 is not the same as the sanctification of verse 14. The one proves eternal perfection (verse 14) and the other proves great guilt after apostasy (verse 29). **What is this fruitless sanctification? It seems to be the religious separation and outward purification that often happens when a person becomes part of the visible church. They come under the influence of truth in preaching and teaching. They come under the influence of love among the saints. They come under the influence of the ordinances and even eat and drink the sacred emblems of Christ’s body and blood. They feel the blowing of God’s Spirit of grace and taste his wooing and winning influences. And in all of this, they are visibly set apart from the world - sanctified the way the people of Israel was sanctified among the nations, even though many of them were faithless. And all of this gracious influence was purchased by the blood of Christ, so that verse 29 says, it was indeed “by the blood of the covenant” that these hypocrites were sanctified. **
-John Piper
I can agree with this. It is when someone believes to a certain level, or has faith that is vain. They know the truth and seek its benefit, but they do not allow faith to bring the charity of Christ into the heart and effect conversion. Yet it brings one to the table of the Lord who offers the means of Sanctification. Piper is right, it’s hypocrisy and betrayal. This is why such a person is not considered an unbeliever, but a believer who does not allow faith to be completed by love in themselves. So there is a received Sanctification (through the Blessed Sacrament) but there is a denial of His work in the conversion of heart.So I conclude that the sanctification of verse 29 is not the same as the sanctification of verse 14. The one proves eternal perfection (verse 14) and the other proves great guilt after apostasy (verse 29). **What is this fruitless sanctification? It seems to be the religious separation and outward purification that often happens when a person becomes part of the visible church. They come under the influence of truth in preaching and teaching. They come under the influence of love among the saints. They come under the influence of the ordinances and even eat and drink the sacred emblems of Christ’s body and blood. They feel the blowing of God’s Spirit of grace and taste his wooing and winning influences. And in all of this, they are visibly set apart from the world - sanctified the way the people of Israel was sanctified among the nations, even though many of them were faithless. And all of this gracious influence was purchased by the blood of Christ, so that verse 29 says, it was indeed “by the blood of the covenant” that these hypocrites were sanctified. **
-John Piper
Some examples of the Reformed Theology that I hold
Unfortunately Alwayswill. You are not only holding fast to traditions of men. You are holding fast to traditions of men that nullify the commandments of God.1 Sola scriptura (“by Scripture alone”)
2 Sola fide (“by faith alone”)
3 Sola gratia (“by grace alone”)
4 Solus Christus or Solo Christo (“Christ alone” or “through Christ alone”) . . .