Yes no one could be saved, if only on their own. But there is one who saves, God.If that were true, you would have a catch 22 situation where no one could be saved. Jesus said the one who seeks will find. He didn't lay any conditions on it and say, that doesn't apply is you happen to have been born a Muslim or a buddist. Do you know that God is revealing himself to Muslims as Jesus even in their dreams? Again, you limit God to only working on people that are like you. God reveals himself to all according to scripture so that men are without excuse. If he never gives them enough knowledge to come to him, they would have the perfect excuse at the judgement.
You keep saying "Jesus said the one who seeks will find." We both agree. But I have already pointed out that one can only seek him that he knows and calls on him whom he believes.
You said "Do you know that God is revealing himself to Muslims as Jesus even in their dreams? ". I heard Muslims who profess to believe in the gospel of Jesus Christ, tell their story over the internet. But that does not make your point nor does it refutes my point that one can only seek him that he knows and calls on him whom he believes.
You said "God reveals himself to all according to scripture so that men are without excuse." Yes, we can read that in Romans 1. And you can read there how man had done with that revelation in that same part of scriptures. And you can read God's testimony about mankind in Genesis.
You said "If he never gives them enough knowledge to come to him, they would have the perfect excuse at the judgement." God is not indebted to any sinner in any way. So, please don't make it appear as though He is. As had just been pointed out, Romans 1 scriptures tells us that men are without excuse, and that, even without special revelation from God, that is, only with the revelation of the things that were made, that is, creation. No sinner at the judgement have an excuse why they should not be cast to hell.
Yes, Paul indeed told us that Christians formerly were slaves to sin, that is referring to the unconverted state. And that Christians are now slaves to Christ, that is referring to the converted state.No, he uses it in both senses, first that we were slaves to sin and now are slaves to Christ:Just as you used to offer the parts of your body in slavery to impurity and to escalating wickedness, so now offer them in slavery to righteousness leading to holiness. 20For when you were slaves to sin, you were free of obligation to righteousness. What fruit did you reap at that time from the things of which you are now ashamed? The outcome of those things is death. 22But now that you have been set free from sin and have become slaves to God, the fruit you reap leads to holiness, and the outcome is eternal life.…
Why are you now a slave to Christ? Is it because you believed in Him? Or is it because He had redeemed you from your former slavery, that is, to sin, that now, He is your new master, and He owns you?If you can still fail to be a perfect slave to Christ as a Born again believer, why would you believe that your slaver to sin previously was so complete that you could not choose Christ? In either case, you can see that our obligation is to do something about the state we are in. If still slaves to sin, our obligation is to cry out to God for rescue. If slaves to righteousness our obligation is to continue in the path he has put before us instead of falling back into sin. God doesn't make the choice for us, otherwise, Paul would not be urging believers to "offer them in slavery to righteousness leading to holiness." To offer ourselves requires something of us. It's not automatic.
You asked "If you can still fail to be a perfect slave to Christ as a Born again believer, why would you believe that your slaver to sin previously was so complete that you could not choose Christ?" Good question. The answer is simple. Why you still fail to be perfectly obedient is because you are still in what Paul call "body of death", in your flesh, where sin dwells. You can read Romans 7 about that. Why I believe that the sinner, unless God quickens him, is not able to choose Christ, simply because scriptures teach that the sinful man is rendered dead in relation to righteousness and God.
You asked "Did God hit you over the head and drag you into the kingdom or did you respond to his invitation and grace?" God had given me grace and saved me. In God's time, He touched my sinful heart, and revealed Himself to me, at some point in my sinful life. And when He did that, I found myself drawn into Jesus Christ, as one being in love. Now, I believe that you know how it is to fall in love, right?Did God hit you over the head and drag you into the kingdom or did you respond to his invitation and grace? We are in a battle between good and evil and that includes all. You see this in unsaved people as well as saved. We all fight with our sinful inclinations. Very rarely, as CS Lewis says will there be a man who just says: " To hell with any standard of right and wrong." (I'm paraphrasing, but only slightly.) Even the unsaved will have some standard of what right and wrong is because we all have a God-given conscience. This is the image of God in men. We get to decide whether we follow the light or succumb to the dark. Good grief, the entire Bible makes this clear over and over again, I don't see how anyone can miss it.
You said "Even the unsaved will have some standard of what right and wrong is because we all have a God-given conscience. This is the image of God in men." I disagree. The image of God is not anything like what you say there. Jesus Christ is the image of God, even the perfect image of God. If one wants to know what is the image of God in man, he will know it by looking at the man, Jesus Christ.
You said "We get to decide whether we follow the light or succumb to the dark." But this can not apply to the dead, unless they first be quickened, for this can only apply to the those who are able to see the light.
Tong
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