You're going to have to post the scripture if we're going to have a serious conversation.
I don't have the NT memorized so I don't know what Romans 6:1-11 states unless you post it.
I assume you have a print Bible. Yes? Perhaps even a digital one on your p.c.? There's Bible Gateway online, or Blue Letter Bible. Can you not access them?
So, again, are you stating that once a person is saved, he can either choose to obey Jesus and do good works OR not obey Jesus?
THIS sounds like what you said in the post to which I'm responding.
Again,,,here is what you posted in no. 343, to which I was responding:
"And so, Paul has many places in his letters where he explains the spiritual reality in which Christians are as adopted children of God so that they act properly in resistance of the old, carnal nature under which they once lived in bondage (and may still, if they so choose)."
Please correct me if I don't understand but the above SOUNDS LIKE you're saying that a born again person should act properly in resisting the old, caarnal nature in which they once lived....AND MAY STILL IF THEY SO CHOOSE.
I really would like to clarify this.
IOW,,, it sounds like you're stating that, if we so choose, we could still live under the old carnal nature.
I find your confusion here very odd. Perhaps you're expecting that I hold to antinomianism, or I'm a "free grace" person who thinks salvation is a license to sin. I'm not. When I say a Christian may still choose to live in sin I am NOT indicating that any Christian SHOULD do so, or that God is okay with the Christian who lives according to the dictates of their old, unregenerate Self. Of course not. I mean only that the born-again person has a sin-nature as well as a new nature in Christ and that these war against each other within the Christian (
Ga. 5:17), as Paul described in
Romans 7:14-22. Neither nature has an overwhelming, compelling power over the Christian person, which is why they choose one or the other to follow every day.
HOW can a Christian choose to follow the direction of the old carnal self??
The better question, I think, is: How can they not? Anyway, no Christian
should be directed by the old Self as
Romans 6:1-11 explains, but many, if not most, are directed by it because they understand next-to-nothing of
Romans 6, Galatians 2:20; 5:16, 25, Philippians 2:13 or
Romans 8:9-14.
YOU posted Romans 7:14-22 so you must like what it states.
I asked you what you believe it states,
to which you have not replied.
What you've written above is a glaring
non sequitur. Why would I "like" the terrible struggle Paul described in
Romans 7? Why would my reference to it necessarily mean I "like it"? I've referenced murder, adultery, homosexuality, lying, even human sacrifice in various forum posts I've made over the last twenty years but never in approval of these things. Does the oncologist who speaks of his patient's tumor do so because he likes the tumor? Is the police officer who speaks in court of the details of a murder expressing, therefore, that he
likes murder? I'm sure you'd say not.
Paul tells us to stand fast in our faith.
I'll post the scripture again...perhaps you could concentrate on Paul stating that we must hold fast TO OUR FAITH.
I already pointed out what he actually wrote. And he wrote nothing about a Christian losing their salvation. He wrote that if they did not remain steadfast in their faith they would not be presented holy, blameless and unreproveable at the Final Judgment but this isn't to say they would be
unsaved. If Paul had wanted to say such a thing, he could - and would - have done so explicitly and plainly, which he
never does. Instead, folks like yourself misconstrue or stretch his words to mean salvation-lost. But your willingness to impose this meaning on his words in no way obliges me to go along with you in doing so.
I asked you to explain Galatians 5:17...to which you have not replied.
What is there to explain, exactly? Paul could not have been more plain in his language in the verse. Shall I just repeat what he said in my own words? Is this what you're wanting?
Paul states that we will be presented holy and blameless before God
IF we CONTINUE IN THE FAITH....
IOW,,,we must CONTINUE IN THE FAITH IF we're going to be saved.
IF we DO NOT CONTINUE IN THE FAITH we will NOT be saved.
Yes, Paul wrote what you say he did in the first sentence above. But he most certainly did NOT write - or mean - what you've asserted in the second sentence. If Paul had meant to say that not remaining steadfast dissolved one's salvation, he was more than capable of stating that clearly and plainly. But he did NOT write this. He wrote only of a bad showing at the Final Judgment, not the loss of one's salvation (See
1 Co. 3:11-15). There is NOTHING in the text of the verse that requires the "in other words" that you're asserting. Nothing. You're simply forcing your saved-and-lost presupposition onto Paul's words, as far as I can see.
Because K,,,if one departs from the faith he is no longer ABIDING in Christ.
Abiding in Christ is necessary for one to be saved.
John 15:6 Jesus said
6 "If anyone does not abide in Me, he is thrown away as a branch and dries up; and they gather them, and cast them into the fire and they are burned.
Jesus never said in
verse 6 "If the saved person
no longer abides in Me," or "If
you no longer abide in me," or "If you cease to abide in me." No, he spoke of "anyone," not his disciples specifically, and said, "
Does not abide in me" rather than "no longer abides," or "ceases to abide."
Verse 6, then, doesn't describe a single person moving from one condition to another - from abiding to not abiding.
Verse 6 stands in
contrasting parallel to the person who abides in Christ (i.e. is saved). This is the yet-to-be-saved person, the lost person, who, if s/her remains so, is "cast into the fire and burned."
2 John 1:9
9 Anyone who goes too far and does not abide in the teaching of Christ, does not have God; the one who abides in the teaching, he has both the Father and the Son.
2 John 1:7-11
7 For many deceivers have gone out into the world, those who do not acknowledge Jesus Christ as coming in the flesh. This is the deceiver and the antichrist.
8 Watch yourselves, that you do not lose what we have accomplished, but that you may receive a full reward.
9 Anyone who goes too far and does not abide in the teaching of Christ, does not have God; the one who abides in the teaching, he has both the Father and the Son.
10 If anyone comes to you and does not bring this teaching, do not receive him into your house, and do not give him a greeting;
11 for the one who gives him a greeting participates in his evil deeds.
Who's in view in John's remarks here? Deceivers, who refuse to acknowledge that Jesus Christ came in the flesh (
vs. 7). What's at stake if John's readers are taken in by these deceivers? Their heavenly reward. Is this reward the same thing as their salvation? No. See
1 Corinthians 3:11-15. One can lose all of one's reward and still be saved. And, as well, salvation is
a gift, not a reward.
Romans 5:15
15 But the free gift is not like the transgression. For if by the transgression of the one the many died, much more did the grace of God and the gift by the grace of the one Man, Jesus Christ, abound to the many.
Romans 6:23
23 For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Ephesians 2:8
8 For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God;
A reward is earned but a gift is not. God gives to us His Son and salvation in him to us freely, as a gift, when we were yet sinners, weak, "dead in trespasses and sins," "foolish, disobedient and deceived" (
Ro. 5:6; Eph. 2:1; Tit. 3:3). When John wrote of "a full reward," then, he could not have meant salvation which no one deserves, no one can earn and which God offers to us purely as an expression of His love, grace and mercy.
In any case, the "anyone" who "goes too far" and "does not abide in the teaching of Christ" does not
lose God, s/he does not
become lost again. Instead, what John wrote was that such a person - a
deceiver, not a believer - "
does not have God," not "
no longer has God," or "
ceases to have God." John, then, is not writing about how one could lose one's salvation but about the never-saved deceiver who must be refused entrance into a Christian's home.