Eternally Grateful
Well-Known Member
I do to. thats why we do not see what you see.I believe any honest reader will agree with what is obvious,
but thats beside the point, again, lets stick to fact. and not strawmen
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I do to. thats why we do not see what you see.I believe any honest reader will agree with what is obvious,
when your ready to discuss it.. without attacking everyone who disagrees with you. let the world know. we will gladly discuss itIf anyone is able and willing to discuss the topic, let us do so.
or you could say their is an opportunity for us (including you) to change our view..When you disagree, whether honestly or not, there is an opportunity to expose it for readers, so it's helpful.
And again, This is not true. Because they never entered his rest because of unbelief. as proven by the fact they complained and sinned the whole timeTo recap:
The Jews' salvation from God's wrath on the unrighteousness in Egypt, which was by the blood of a lamb, was a type and shadow of the reality Christians now enjoy by the blood of Christ, Who is called "our Passover Lamb".
These are in error also. Non of these are required for salvation. They are works a believer who is saved do in appreciation for what God did to themThe Jews, afterward, were under the cloud (of the Presence), they were baptized into Moses in the Red Sea, and they ate manna in the wilderness--these correspond to receiving the Presence of God by the Spirit (Acts 3), water baptism into Christ, and eating the Communion.
They were never saved to begin with, as proven by your comment, they continued in sin, they disobeyed God and God was displeased. so they never entered his rest (salvation)Nevertheless, after they experienced these things, types of what we experience as Christians, they lived in a sinful way, disobeying God, and God was displeased, so God destroyed them, and that generation never entered the Land God had Promised--corresponding to the warning Paul is giving the Church about living in unrighteousness, and what will happen if they do live in unrighteousness, and that it will result in forfeiting the Promise God made them (eternal life that is only in the Son of God--failure to remain in the Son by obeying God's commands will result in forfeiting the eternal life that is only located in the Son).
lol. and here yuo go preaching self righteousness.Therefore, "salvation" cannot mean "I'm definitely going to heaven, no matter what--the wrath of God will never find me if I sin, because I was already saved from God's wrath on unrighteousness."--that's not what Scripture says, it says after having been saved from God's wrath on unrighteousness, if you are living in unrighteousness, you will fall under God's wrath anyway.
Discuss when you're ready.when your ready to discuss it.. without attacking everyone who disagrees with you. let the world know. we will gladly discuss it
No, I look forward to adding to, improving, view that I already have, but it cannot change any more could my view that homosexuaity is an abomination to God.or you could say their is an opportunity for us (including you) to change our view..
Have been doing this very thingDiscuss when you're ready.
Then your unteachable.No, I look forward to adding to, improving, view that I already have, but it cannot change any more could my view that homosexuaity is an abomination to God.
This has already been answered in multiple ways:And again, This is not true. Because they never entered his rest because of unbelief. as proven by the fact they complained and sinned the whole time
people who are saved change, they do not remain in the same rutt
You're misunderstanding: "salvation" was from the House of Bondage (corresponding to satan's kingdom), and was by the blood of lambs on their doorposts (corresponding to Jesus's blood)--ie, my entire point is that "salvation" happens first, and, afterward, you can still fall under wrath if you "go on sinning".These are in error also. Non of these are required for salvation. They are works a believer who is saved do in appreciation for what God did to them
No, again, they were "saved" typologically--and it is Paul who says we are to learn about what may happen to us in the anti-type, in substance, by reading about what happened to them in type, in shadow.They were never saved to begin with, as proven by your comment, they continued in sin, they disobeyed God and God was displeased. so they never entered his rest (salvation)
Walking in faith, as unto the Lord, is not "trusting in oneself that one is righteousness and viewing others with contempt", but God's righteousness revealed from faith to faith--doing things you doubt are correct is sin, unto condemnation, not justification (when you do things that are "correct", but they are not done in faith, as unto the Lord, that meets the threshold of "a righteousness of my own")--Hebrews 11 is not full of men who were "self righteous", but men who walked by faith, and were justified. You're accusing them of self righteousness if you're accusing me of self righteousness.lol. and here yuo go preaching self righteousness.
You've completely missed my point: salvation isn't earned, it's a gift; I'm discussing what happens after you are saved.My friend, You can;pt be good enough to earn salvation. You must trust God. you must believe to the saving of the soul. Believing in your works is not believing to the saving of the soul. The jews learned this the hard way in Pauls day. I pray you will
Would you also say that someone who will never change their mind that homosexuality is an abomination is also "unteachable", or wouldn't you say they simply know something that is so basic and plain that there is no place for changing that view?Then your unteachable.
so you should not be trying to discuss anything in a bible discussion forum.
Where are you quoting this from? I'm not aware of any passage which reads this way.My righteous one will live by faith, but if My righteous one draws back My soul will have no pleasure in him").
That is disengenous, though, because you are asserting that having received a gift, you then must go on to pay for it by good works. That is, you may lose it if you don't do the right things. So the continued payment is to preserve your salvation. No?You've completely missed my point: salvation isn't earned, it's a gift; I'm discussing what happens after you are saved.
Who's being "coy" now?Where are you quoting this from? I'm not aware of any passage which reads this way.
Much love!
You need to define "gift" as Scripture defines "gift", not as naked (ie, uninformed by Scriptural precedent) "logic" defines it: God "gave" the Jews the land, yet they were to go and "take" the land by conquest (Deut 1:8)--this is in exact keeping with eternal life being a "gift", and with Paul, yet, saying, "Lay hold on eternal life. Fight the fight of faith." Why is faith, by which we "lay hold" on eternal life (which is a gift) described as a "fight", or a "race", if it only happens "once and done"? Such a view has no Scriptural coherence. No, after having been saved by faith, the lifestyle must be a lifestyle of faith and obedience, and not a lifestyle of unbelief and sin whereby one who had previously been justified becomes condemned.That is disengenous, though, because you are asserting that having received a gift, you then must go on to pay for it by good works. That is, you may lose it if you don't do the right things. So the continued payment is to preserve your salvation. No?
Much love!
There are 4 places in the Bible which use these words, but none as you've "quoted" it.Who's being "coy" now?
You know it's Hebrews 10--and you know I'm saying "My righteous one" instead of "he", because people have the remarkable and convenient "ability" of "forgetting" the subject.
Contrary to your empty accusation, I can quote the passage--and my quoting the passage isn't going to help you.There are 4 places in the Bible which use these words, but none as you've "quoted" it.
Quote the real passage, include context, and we will look at it. Not your rewrite of Scripture though.
You cannot quote the place, that was why I challenged you, to put a fine point on it.
Hebrews is actually pulling together quotes from a few places if memory serves, you should go back to each of those places also to see the contexts.
It's just no good rewriting Scripture to match your view and then acting as though you hadn't.
Much love!
It does not mean it was refuted.This has already been answered in multiple ways:
You apparently do not comprehend they were not saved in any way. Thats the point God made when he said I swore in my wrath they would not enter his rest.1a. You apparently do not comprehend that the fact that the Jews were "saved" only in type and shadow, and not "really saved", like we are, is actually a feature, and not a flaw, in Paul's teaching. He knows that what they went through was only a picture of what we face today.
Your in error. What would be comparable would be entering the promised land, or entering the rest that God promised to them before they even left.1b. Being "saved from Egypt" in the type corresponds to being "saved" by faith in Christ in the anti-type--it's not relevant that they weren't "really saved", as that is not an issue my assertion relies upon (contrariwise, my point acknowledges that fact, and has already taken it into consideration).
This is nothing but self righteous propoganda1c. Accordingly, in the picture, the type, we see that while the blood of the lamb does save from God's wrath in one respect, it does not save anyone from any potential future of wrath one may incur should they veer from God's will, "turn back to folly"--this is nothing other than the doctrine of Hebrews 10 ("if we go on sinning willfully after having received the knowledge of the truth there remains no sacrifice for sins... you have need of endurance, so that after you've done God's will you may inherit the promise... My righteous one will live by faith, but if My righteous one draws back My soul will have no pleasure in him").
You completely missed the point. God saves his children. When he does. they are created as new creatures. They do not live like they did before. they are changed. John said they can no longer live in sin.2a. "Rest" is doing things God's way, instead of doing your own will/desire: Christ says "Come to Me... you will find rest... My yoke is easy and My burden is light." "Rest" is not "absence of activity", it is "doing things God's way". "Doing things God's way" is called "righteousness". Doing things your own way is "sin". Sin leads to torment, where there is "no rest" (Rv 14:11, 18:7).
When God says they will not enter His rest, it's a response to them not doing things God's way--and, remember, He was testing them to see if they would keep His commands in His Promised land, so the land is the place where they were to settle and keep God's commands, do things God's way, rest, but they did not inherit the Promised Land, and would never enter God's rest, because they made God wrathful by sinning.
This corresponds to whether we abide in Christ during our "wilderness" on earth after having been saved, and, finally, be confessed before the Father and His angels, and told, "Well done, enter into the joy of your master." or whether we will denied, and hear, "'Get away from Me, workers of lawlessness, I never knew you.' For only those who do the will of My Father will enter."
2b. When Hebrews describes "faith" (Heb 11), all those it describes performed righteousness--ie, they did things God's way, not their own way. Those who were told not to go collect manna on the Sabbath rejected that Word (disbelieved), and, afterward, went and performed the sin of attempting to collect manna on the Sabbath. They were guilty of the unbelief first--"they heard the Gospel but it was not mixed with faith" (Heb 4:2).
The error you are making is in concluding that the fact that they sinned "proved" they were in unbelief because God never granted them faith. On the contrary, throughout Hebrews, there is the constant theme of the need for endurance and persistence in doing God's will, which begins with faith in the Gospel, and ends in works of faith. Again, "If we go on sinning willfully after having obtained the knowledge of the truth, there remains no sacrifice for sins... you have need of endurance... My righteous one will live by faith, but if he draws back My soul has no pleasure in My righteous one." Why would God entertain the idea of "need of endurance" and "if My righteous one draws back" if it is a total impossibility?
You're misunderstanding: "salvation" was from the House of Bondage (corresponding to satan's kingdom), and was by the blood of lambs on their doorposts (corresponding to Jesus's blood)--ie, my entire point is that "salvation" happens first, and, afterward, you can still fall under wrath if you "go on sinning".
The having been saved, having received the Spirit, having been baptized, having eaten communion do not exempt anyone from wrath if they, despite having experienced all these things, go on sinning: "Do not be deceived, the unrighteous will not inherit God's Kingdom".
No, again, they were "saved" typologically--and it is Paul who says we are to learn about what may happen to us in the anti-type, in substance, by reading about what happened to them in type, in shadow.
Walking in faith, as unto the Lord, is not "trusting in oneself that one is righteousness and viewing others with contempt", but God's righteousness revealed from faith to faith--doing things you doubt are correct is sin, unto condemnation, not justification (when you do things that are "correct", but they are not done in faith, as unto the Lord, that meets the threshold of "a righteousness of my own")--Hebrews 11 is not full of men who were "self righteous", but men who walked by faith, and were justified. You're accusing them of self righteousness if you're accusing me of self righteousness.
No You completely missed the pointYou've completely missed my point: salvation isn't earned, it's a gift; I'm discussing what happens after you are saved.
Your trying to mix grace and works.Would you also say that someone who will never change their mind that homosexuality is an abomination is also "unteachable", \
or wouldn't you say they simply know something that is so basic and plain that there is no place for changing that view?
ie, begining in the spirit. but perfecting in the flesh.That is disengenous, though, because you are asserting that having received a gift, you then must go on to pay for it by good works. That is, you may lose it if you don't do the right things. So the continued payment is to preserve your salvation. No?
Much love!
My point was not that "you must agree", but that you ought to have answered those answers already supplied, and not have brought the same point that had already been answered, as if it had not already been answered.It does not mean it was refuted.
No,You apparently do not comprehend they were not saved in any way. Thats the point God made when he said I swore in my wrath they would not enter his rest.
Again, Christ is our Passover Lamb, so, the saving blood of Christ corresponds to the blood of the lambs that saved them from the Death Angel whereby the power of Egypt was destroyed and openly humiliated.Your in error. What would be comparable would be entering the promised land, or entering the rest that God promised to them before they even left.
The point of Hebrews is that people "need endurance", because "My Righteous one will live by faith but if he shrinks back My soul has no pleasure in My righteous one"--not that "so and so never had faith", but "you had faith, so, continue in faith and in works of faith."They never entered due to unbelief
Wow, I didn't know the writer of Hebrews was a heretic! LOL!This is nothing but self righteous propoganda
1. Yep, He cleansed us. I never denied that.The blood of Christ cleansed me from all sin.. Not just my past sin, Jesus died because I could not save myself. The jew could not save themself either. Sadly Many never trusted God and never experienced salvation
1. I was thorough in my response to you, but you are not thorough in your responses to me. I can't make you be thorough.You completely missed the point. God saves his children. When he does. they are created as new creatures. They do not live like they did before. they are changed. John said they can no longer live in sin.
Paul draws the parallel, not me.The people you use to prove salvation can be lost where never changed, the complained from day one. They made golden calf. they always cried they wanted to go back. and they lived in sin.
The Gospel is that Christ saved us from our sins, and that we are to live before Him, not "wickedly depart from my God", as is taught in Romans 14, in 1 Jn 2:28, 3:23,24, 5:21, etc, etc,.I guess you preach one can be saved and continue to live in sin.. Well thats not the gospel.
As I said to marks, you need to define "gift" as the Bible does, not as you prefer: when God "gave" the land to the Jews, they were to "take the land" by conquest, just as Paul says "Fight the fight of faith. LAY HOLD on the [gift of] eternal life to which you were called." If "faith" were "one and done", and not a lifestyle , then there would be no need to describe faith as a "race" or as a "fight", which connote an issue of "length of time" which require "endurance" (as Heb 10 says). Yes, eternal life is a gift, and it is by faith, but it is not "one and done"--Romans 14:23 says anything a believer does that is not from faith is sin, and they are condemned, not justified, so that believer is risking his eternal life by not remaining in faith.No You completely missed the point
If I say something is free.. then say I must earn it. it was never free to begin with, it always came with a cost.
The cost was the cross. Your tryign to replace the cross with your works.. Good luck with that