FHII said:
Some do. Some believe that grace only covers past sins, not the future sins. I believe grace covers all sins of the flesh. But there i go again being an abolutist! ;)
1. How one responds to grace to not mean they will quit sinning nor does it mean they will no longerdesire to sin. The response to grace??? A free gift?? no response is needed other than thanks. Grace, however only comes through faith, which must be maintained.
2. Explain to this sanctifying power of God's grace as you understand it according to the Bible.
3. What do youmean by the efficacy of God's grace?
I also believe grace covers past and future sins.
1. I never said it did, nor implied that to Richard, yet he continues to charge me with legalism. Yet, if one does not "repent" then they are not saved. A person can claim they love Jesus all day, but it doesnt mean anything unless they turn from a lifestyle of sin toward Jesus Christ. Someone who really puts their faith in Jesus does so with their whole being, not just their tongues. This doesnt mean they live perfectly, but it does mean they put old ways behind them. A person cannot love God and the things of this world, they must choose one or the other.
2. God's grace doesn't just put a person in heaven. God's grace empowers them to live differently. The same power that raised Christ from the dead lives in the believer to bring inner transformation to their lives. “But now that you have been set free from sin and have become slaves of God, the fruit you get leads to sanctification and its end, eternal life.” (Romans 6:22, ESV) Holiness is more than just a decree from God (although it is that), its is a lived reality that beings to form in the person who is touched by the grace and power of God.
3. As mentioned above, God's grace has transformative power. When the Word of God really manifests itself in a person's life, then transformation takes place. Creation is an illustration of this. In the beginning, the world was formless and void and dwelt in darkness. Yet God's Spirit hovered over the waters and God spoke. Through that, the formless world took on order, beauty and light. In the same way, through the Word of God, the Spirit of God and the waters of Christian baptism, a person becomes a "new creation." The old it put away and new order, beauty and light floods the person's life due to the working of God's love, grace and word. To suggest that God's grace would touch a person and that person would continue unashamedly reveling in lust, adultery, homosexuality, fornication, greed, hatred and filthy talk really calls the power of God's grace and Spirit into question, in my opinion. It would be like saying God said, "Let there be light" and the world stayed shrouded in darkness. How could that be? God's grace is powerful in its working. Yes, it can be resisted, but if a person is really lives by faith in God's grace, then their life is different. That is what James is talking about...and he is right.
On a side note, I have deep respect for both H. Richard and Wormwood. Guys... The bitter tones I read in these threads between you is beneath you!You guys deal with the bitterness between you as you like.... But I'm calling for you both to back off and focus on issues. Not each other. You both are capable of it and know better!
Personally, I do not believe I have been out of line. I have not attacked Richard personally, but I have said that his views are heretical (which they are). These are very weighty matters. He has continually attacked me concerning views I do not hold. More importantly, he has essentially claimed that James was in error, much of the NT doesnt apply or is wrong and that Paul is the only one who really preached the true Gospel..whereas the rest of the NT is written under the legalism of OT Judiasm and was incorporated in the Bible due to a legalistic early church that was twisting the true Gospel Paul preached. I find these views extremely dangerous and I think it is very important to let Richard and others reading how seriously dangerous his ideas are as they pertain to the nature of the Gospel and the Apostles teaching, the early church and the authority and validity of Scripture.
Furthermore, James, Paul and Jesus spoke against such personal dissections. Not necessarily debates... But against dissension.
Yes, but there was also reasons to cast people out of the fellowship. One of these has to do with false teaching that undermines the truth and discredited the teaching of the early Apostles (1 John 4:6). I do think issues like this qualify for breaking fellowship. Clearly, when someone discounts the majority of the NT as errant or irrelevant (and seeks to teach others to believe the same), than there is a major breach in the basic tenants of our faith such that others should be made aware that the Richard has deviated from the core teachings held by Christians. Simply saying, "I believe in Jesus died for my sins and I believe in grace" is not all there is to being a Christian. Mormans and JWs claim the same thing. There are other key elements to our faith upon which all Christians have agreed for thousands of years. It should be made known when a person deviates from those.