Excuse me Kokyu
I NEVER said that Christians MUST not sin or their salvation is forfeited.
This isn't the impression some of your statements have left with folk on this thread. As I pointed out in my last round of posts to you, some of your assertions about obedience and salvation were issued in a very absolute manner, giving the impression that what you deny above is exactly what you believe. Here again are some of the statements you've made that have fostered the thinking that you do believe what you deny above that you do:
"...those that DO NOT obey God WILL forfeit their salvation."
"...Christians that do NOT obey the Moral Law will not be seeing heaven."
"Satan's greatest lie is that we could disobey God and still be saved.
Those who believe in God will be saved....
Those who do not obey God will see the wrath of God.
John 3.36"
I get that it's handy to be able to slip and slide around your statements, to equivocate about them, seeming to assert one thing but then retreating from your statements to a less radical, more defensible position. This is the Motte and Bailey tactic, which is a fallacious form of argument - another one among the many you employ in your posts to this thread.
10 years now of hearing this nonsense.
What a strawman!!
How about sticking to the question at hand.
Is it necessary to obey God AFTER we become saved??
It would just need a simple YES...but no....we've been debating this for post after post.
So apparently you don't believe obedience is important.
I would have bet money this would be your response. Your flat dismissal here of the "how far is too far?" question
has to be your response because it is an impossible problem for your view. You don't know how much sin in the life of a believer ejects them from God's family and kingdom. God's word doesn't ever say. Why would it? Losing one's salvation isn't possible. But you are determined, nonetheless, that Christians should live in fear of crossing a line that neither you nor anyone else can locate.
It could be, then, that you've crossed the line into lost salvation yourself. In fact, if Jesus is right (which he is) and you must be
perfect as God is perfect (
Matt. 5:48), then it is certain you
have crossed it and are outside God's family. But this would mean you're urging others to a standard of obedience you haven't kept yourself and to retain a salvation for themselves you've been unable to retain.
It's interesting, too, that you refuse to hear what I've been communicating about obedience to God. Again and again, I've indicated that Christians are commanded of God to obey Him and that they should do so. But here you are again, trying to frame the difference between your view and mine in the Strawman way you've been doing all along, which is that you think Christians ought to obey God (and must, in fact, if they want to stay saved) and I think the opposite, that Christians can just go off and live like the devil, if they like.
On my end, anyway, I've never indicated that a genuinely born-again believer may carry on in sin. I've certainly never encouraged Christians to do so. Instead, I've pointed out repeatedly that they ought to obey God's commands. And so, the more I state this, the more your persistent misrepresentation of my statement becomes both apparent and bizarre.
1. I have NEVER given a moral standard.
2. I have NEVER stated anyone is not saved.
Yes, you have. Though, not a precise one. See above.
Jesus said it is possible to STOP abiding in Him
Do you believe Jesus?
John 15:5
5 “I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing.
Question:
Why would Jesus say IF someone remains in Him?
If denotes a choice.
As I've already explained in earlier posts, "abiding in Christ" is another way of saying "saved," or "born-again." Just like a branch is the "off-spring" of the tree from which it grows, a child of God is the "off-spring" of Christ out of which they grow. No tree branch has ever produced itself, and no Christian has ever made themselves a child of God. As the Bible states repeatedly, there is only
one Savior who saves; there are no co-Saviors (
Jn. 16:4; Ac. 4:12; 1 Ti. 2:5).
What, then, can it mean for a branch in the Vine to cease to "remain in him"? Well, as I've explained in past posts, this is speaking of the loss of the benefits and by-products of salvation. In particular, as Jesus points out, not continuing in him means, not a loss of
salvation, but a loss of
fruitfulness. One who does not remain in
fellowship with Christ, fixing their eyes upon him (
He. 12:1-3), beholding his glory and being changed by the Holy Spirit into the same image (
2 Co. 3:18; Ro. 8:29), by the life and work of the Spirit manifesting the "treasure" of Christ in their daily living (
2 Co. 4:7-11), cannot bear spiritual fruit that is pleasing to God.
Every Christian is brought into relationship with God through the Savior, Jesus Christ, but this doesn't automatically bring them into fellowship with God. No, a Christian can be a "branch" in the "Vine" but cut-off from the fruit-producing "sap" of the Vine because they are not "remaining" in the Vine, which is to say, I believe, not
continuing in fellowship with Christ. This is, essentially, the difference between "living in the Spirit" (saved) and "walking in the Spirit" (fellowship with God). See
Galatians 5:16 and
25; it is the difference between being a son of the Father while in a "far country" and being held in the Father's joyful embrace and kissed on the cheek (
Lu. 15:11-32); it is the difference between being a wandering sheep of the Shepherd and being carried in his arms to the sheepfold. And so on.
You are correct that the language of
John 15:5 implies choice - the choice to be a "fruitful branch" in daily, personal fellowship with Christ, or merely in relationship to him as an "unfruitful branch."