Jonathan_Gale
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John MacArthur's teaching on John 15:1-6, starting from 17:47 to 19:00, the idea of using this portion as proof text to deny OSAS is explicitly denounced.
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SignUp Now!John MacArthur's teaching on John 15:1-6, starting from 17:47 to 19:00, the idea of using this portion as proof text to deny OSAS is explicitly denounced.
But, this passage doesn't say one can't lose salvation. You're drawing and inference. That assumes you correctly understand the passage. In context Paul is expressing the message that he preaches. He's not even addressing what happens to those who turn away.Rom 10:13 Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.
Please see post 5 and 34. If you have time also read post 10, 13 and 30.
That's not the issue. Adam had eternal life and lost it. Your contention is that it can't be lost. We see it can be.Adam did not go off into eternal torment in the lake fire.
In the case of your annihilationist view, Adam did not get burnt and cease to exist after he sinned.
I didn't dismiss it. I put it in context. That's how we should read Scripture. Here is the verse you quoted.No, butch, you do not get to dismiss Heb 13:5 just because the same line is mentioned in Joshua and 'Israel sinned'. It describes a factual characteristic of God and that is the reason I quoted it.
Israel was not a born again sanctified person. Please read here What is a Christian and how do you become one? to see the difference between 'Israel' and a born again Christian.
A SLAVE of God, who has been bought and paid in full by "The BLOOD of HIS SON" is not free to just get up and walk away, The slave owners have "ANGELS" they will come and who can resist The POWERS of GOD!Of course even though no one else can take you from Jesus's hand, you are free to walk away on your own. Also, even though no one can snatch you from Jesus's hand. He Himself will will have some in His kingdom
thrown out. ( Matt 13:41; ) which of course refutes MacArthur's teaching.
One thing this thread proves... that rarely is anyone's mind ever changed on this subject.
So then, why have the debate at all?
I guess that'll teach me to take a few days off for Thanksgiving. I hope everyone had a great one.
But, this passage doesn't say one can't lose salvation. You're drawing and inference. That assumes you correctly understand the passage. In context Paul is expressing the message that he preaches. He's not even addressing what happens to those who turn away.
That's not the issue. Adam had eternal life and lost it. Your contention is that it can't be lost. We see it can be.
I didn't dismiss it. I put it in context. That's how we should read Scripture. Here is the verse you quoted.
5 Let your conversation be without covetousness; and be content with such things as ye have: for he hath said, I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee.
The Holy Bible: King James Version, Electronic Edition of the 1900 Authorized Version. (Bellingham, WA: Logos Research Systems, Inc., 2009), Heb 13:4–5.
Paul says, "for he hath said". That tells us that he is quoting what God said somewhere. That somewhere is the book of Joshua. Since Paul is quoting a specific event, the context of that event is important to understanding what Paul is saying. In that event God eft Joshua. That shows that it is not an unconditional statement.
Are you kidding? Read the very text you quoted out of. Verses are not biblical neither are they ordain or Inspired by GOD. the text is.
Well, what is scripture and how many kinds are there, and do all Religions have "Scripture"? And that is not a trick question.Scripture? Quote it, or stop trolling please.
A SLAVE of God, who has been bought and paid in full by "The BLOOD of HIS SON" is not free to just get up and walk away, The slave owners have "ANGELS" they will come and who can resist The POWERS of GOD!
To let iron sharpen iron.So then, why have the debate at all?
That is known as the one and only unpardonable sin, "blaspheming against the holy spirit". MacArthur points out that a person is like Judas who's been in Yeshua's ministry, but he was never saved in the first place. In another word, he had never abided in Christ. This is the same as the tares among the wheats.Of course even though no one else can take you from Jesus's hand, you are free to walk away on your own. Also, even though no one can snatch you from Jesus's hand. He Himself will will have some in His kingdom
thrown out. ( Matt 13:41; ) which of course refutes MacArthur's teaching.
Seriously, man, and everyone who denies OSAS, put down the bible and ask yourself this: if salvation can be lost, what's the point of being saved? Is it worth of giving up everything for a temporary salvation that is contingent upon your behavior? Where is your faith while you lecture on me about faith?But, this passage doesn't say one can't lose salvation. You're drawing and inference. That assumes you correctly understand the passage. In context Paul is expressing the message that he preaches. He's not even addressing what happens to those who turn away.
That's not the issue. Adam had eternal life and lost it. Your contention is that it can't be lost. We see it can be.
I didn't dismiss it. I put it in context. That's how we should read Scripture. Here is the verse you quoted.
5 Let your conversation be without covetousness; and be content with such things as ye have: for he hath said, I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee.
The Holy Bible: King James Version, Electronic Edition of the 1900 Authorized Version. (Bellingham, WA: Logos Research Systems, Inc., 2009), Heb 13:4–5.
Paul says, "for he hath said". That tells us that he is quoting what God said somewhere. That somewhere is the book of Joshua. Since Paul is quoting a specific event, the context of that event is important to understanding what Paul is saying. In that event God eft Joshua. That shows that it is not an unconditional statement.
DEPART or, apostatize. Gr. aphistēmi (S# G868, Luke 2:37; compare S# G646, apostasia, Acts 21:21 g and 2Thess 2:3 g).
Those who support the unqualified doctrine of "Once Saved, Always Saved," or unconditional eternal security, are in direct denial of another Bible doctrine, the doctrine or teaching of the Bible regarding the possibility and danger of apostasy.
There is much in the Bible on the subject of apostasy, and it cannot simply be ignored or "swept under the rug."
Those who teach unconditional eternal security need to consider whether the direct statements of Scripture affirm apostasy is possible.
One cannot logically be said to depart, fall away, or apostatize from a faith which one never held in the first place.
Paul is addressing these warnings to believers, not unbelievers.
Certainly there would be no point in warning believers against what was impossible.
While the Bible emphatically teaches the eternal security of the believer, and makes the security of salvation in no sense dependent upon good works to stay saved, this security belongs to believers who continue to place their faith in Christ for salvation, not unconditionally to persons who by a single act of faith allegedly "received Christ" but have since departed from the faith doctrinally or morally.
The Ultimate Cross-Reference Treasury by Jerome H. Smith © 2004
Johnathon, this isn't an argument, it's an opinion. Though you may not see any reason for such a salvation doesn't mean there isn't one. A major red flag should be that there is no Scripture that states salvation can't be lost. To make that claim and then argue from inferences doesn't prove the claim. Inferences are subject to error.Seriously, man, and everyone who denies OSAS, put down the bible and ask yourself this: if salvation can be lost, what's the point of being saved? Is it worth of giving up everything for a temporary salvation that is contingent upon your behavior? Where is your faith while you lecture on me about faith?
Yes it is. I've given you ample amount of examples from the Scripture in my previous posts, but none of that matters because you've probably got the wrong definition of salvation, so I just tried to reason with you. We're not supposed to just brainlessly copy paste scriptures like many of you guys do, we ought to mediate on it and apply it in our lives. The salvation I know was declared on the cross, "IT IS FINISHED!" It was further elaborated in Heb. 9 and 10, that animal sacrifice only temporarily covers sin, his sacrifice paid for all sins of mankind once for all. Your "such a salvation" degrades his perfect atonement for sin to the level of animal sacrifice.Johnathon, this isn't an argument, it's an opinion. Though you may not see any reason for such a salvation doesn't mean there isn't one. A major red flag should be that there is no Scripture that states salvation can't be lost. To make that claim and then argue from inferences doesn't prove the claim. Inferences are subject to error.
1Cor 9:26; Therefore I run in such a way, as not without aim; I box in such a way, as not beating the air;
1Cor 9:27; but I discipline my body and make it my slave, so that, after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified.
... I do this, so I wont be disqualified.
He's explaining his message. He's not addressing the issue of turning away. Remember there was an issue where Jews believed they alone would be saved. It's all about the context. The verse isn't an independent thought. Here's the problem you face. Paul also said this,The passage says ''everyone who calls on the name of Jesus will be saved''. Do you read it differently?
I've not heard that argument before, that OSAS only applied to Christians. Given that answer maybe you could define what you mean by saved?That is not what OSAS argues. The OSAS argument is in the word OSAS.
Adam was not a saved Christian.
Not at all. What I'm hoping to do is to help Christians see that this method of proof texting which they've been taught is not a valid way of thinking or reasoning. It's erroneous and has lead to much error in the church. It's one of the reasons we have so many different denominations. It seems everyone wants to grab a verse, put their spin on it, and claim the Bible says xyz. We can claim the Bible means xyz until the cows come home. That doesn't mean that's what the author of said verse really means. What that usually means is we're just wrong. Unless we look at all of what an author said on a given subject and reconcile everything he said, we're not very likely to come to a complete or correct understanding of his position on that subject.You are just wanting to argue this point. There are many more passages that state He will not leave nor forsake His people.
But, that assumes your understanding of those passages is correct. You've not presented anything that "states" salvation can't be lost. I think we all accept that the Scriptures are inerrant. Based on that, they are facts. The question is, how do we understand those facts? In another post, I gave an example of two scientists. They both look at the same fossil and draw two completely different conclusions, why? They both have the same degrees, they both went to the same school, etc. The only different is that one is a creationist and the other an evolutionist. It's the presuppositions that they bring to the evidence. One presupposes that God exists and the other doesn't. These presuppositions lead them to completely different conclusions from the same evidence. So, it's not the evidence that needs to be examined, it's the presuppositions. It's the same here. The Scriptures are the evidence, the presuppositions determine how one interprets that evidence. To solve this, we need to establish which, if either, set of presuppositions is correct. That's why these debates go on and on without any reconciliation. Each side has their presuppositions and sees the scriptures through that lens. The problem is they don't prove their presuppositions are correct. That's why I keep making the point that there is nothing that "states" that salvation can't be lost. We don't have a clear statement saying that. That means everything used is inference, interpretation, or opinion, all of which are based on presuppositions which are subject to error.Yes it is. I've given you ample amount of examples from the Scripture in my previous posts, but none of that matters because you've probably got the wrong definition of salvation, so I just tried to reason with you. We're not supposed to just brainlessly copy paste scriptures like many of you guys do, we ought to mediate on it and apply it in our lives. The salvation I know was declared on the cross, "IT IS FINISHED!" It was further elaborated in Heb. 9 and 10, that animal sacrifice only temporarily covers sin, his sacrifice paid for all sins of mankind once for all. Your "such a salvation" degrades his perfect atonement for sin to the level of animal sacrifice.
An ekklasia is a CALLED OUT ASSEMBLY. It could be an assembly called out for any business, could be a committee, an expert panel, a task force, a board, a council. A church, though, is called out to worship God and learn His Torah. Church wasn't born on Pentecost, it was born when Abraham was called out in Gen. 12:1-3, and all God's people are heirs of Abraham (Gal. 3:28-29).