T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1107.1 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Tue Jul 11 1995 13:20 | 22 |
| I believe this doctrine is supported by scripture. Once receiving
Christ as savior, you bear the Holy Spirit within you, a mark of
righteousness. The Holy Spirit indwells a believer forever and
therefore, to lose ones salvation would mean the following:
1. God would have to reverse time and undo what Jesus did on the cross.
2. God's forgiveness would only extend to a certain point therby
limiting the power of the cross.
3. The Holy Spirit would have to leave the indwelt regenerated
Christian.
Remember, the seven churches of which 5 fell into Paganism were still
Gods churches and although deeply exhorted for their sin, were still
admonished toward repentence.
If one could lose their salvation, at which point would they lose it?
At what point when we become faithless, God becomes faithless which is
contrary to scripture in itself?
-Jack
|
1107.2 | Philadelphia will escape it | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Jul 11 1995 14:58 | 5 |
| I presented the opposing scriptures yesterday. As for the 7 churches,
Thyatira was told that they would be in the Great Tribulation if they
didn't repent. They haven't thus far.
Mike
|
1107.3 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Jul 11 1995 15:08 | 4 |
| btw Jack, you mentioned something yesterday about this not being an
issue for the true believer that abides in Christ. I agree with this.
Mike
|
1107.4 | Our Will Is Also Involved | STRATA::BARBIERI | | Tue Jul 11 1995 16:40 | 32 |
| Hi Jack,
The main difference I have with your defense of OSAS is that
you place the entire onus of one's salvation on what God desires
and none of it on what the individual desires.
This would seem to lead to a lot of perplexities. Such as...
Is one's conversion solely a result of God's will or does it
include the individual's will?
If one's conversion is solely a result of God's will, then does
it not follow that the lost are lost because of God's will?
I believe that God wills that all be saved and thus if any be
lost, it is a result of their own choice (will).
I believe it is possible for one to choose to uninvite God as
perverse a choice as that is.
"For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened
and have tasted the heavenly gift and have become partakers
of the Holy Spirit and have tasted the good word of God and
the powers of the age to come,
if they should fall away to renew them again to repentance
since they crucify again for themselves the Son of God and
put Him to an open shame."
Hebrews 6 somewhere (toward the beginning). NKJV
Tony
|
1107.5 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Unquenchable fire | Tue Jul 11 1995 18:21 | 8 |
| This is one of those questions fundamentalists seem to enjoy endlessly
quibbling over.
Personally, I've never thought the question an important one.
Shalom,
Richard
|
1107.6 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Tue Jul 11 1995 18:35 | 11 |
|
Yep, we love quibbling over this one, yes we do. We send vaxmail to each
other trying to get the other to bring it up so we can quibble over it.
Jim
|
1107.7 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Jul 11 1995 18:53 | 1 |
| Shhhh Jim! You're giving away all the good secrets!
|
1107.8 | | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Wed Jul 12 1995 05:39 | 8 |
|
A question, from what is one being saved?
Phil.
|
1107.9 | From Sin | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Wed Jul 12 1995 09:52 | 19 |
| re: -1
Hi Phil,
From what is one being saved?
Most would say that we are being saved from a penalty of death
the Father has to dole out on someone because they sinned.
I don't believe in the above. I believe the penalty of death
is inherent to sin and sin alone.
We are saved from sin and sin alone.
(Well, we'll also be delivered from our corruptible flesh and
from the presence of sin and sinners, but the above is the
biggie to me.)
Tony
|
1107.10 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 12 1995 10:28 | 8 |
| We are freed from sin in the eyes of a Holy God. Therefore, the
penalty of sin also has no reign over us.
Richard, I would be surprised if you didn't consider quibbling over
this an exercise of exchanging beliefs. Jewish individuals quibble
over many doctrinal issues...in fact make an art of it.
-Jack
|
1107.11 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 12 1995 10:31 | 11 |
| Tony:
By the way, I want to respond to your usage of Hebrews 6 but I want to
do it justice. Suffice to say that Hebrews 6 does appear to support
your position; however, considering it was written to converted Jews
who were being influenced to go back to the Mosaic sacrificial system,
one would have to take that passage in context with the rest of the
epistle as well as other scripture. But it is definitely a passage
worthy of looking into!
-Jack
|
1107.12 | Jesus' sacrifice doesn't cover the willfull wrong doer | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Wed Jul 12 1995 10:42 | 25 |
|
Tony,
Thanks for your comments, for I want to establish from what one is
being saved. For example, there are many recorded events in the
Bible of God's people seeing the saving hand of their God. Paul
cites the examples of the Israelites who saw salvation against
the Egyptians 1 Corinthians 10 (verses 6-10 shows that they were
examples for us of what will happen to those who turn away from
God.). So salvation could be being saved during a certain event,
eg The Great Tribulation with eventually Armageddon (compare 2 Peter
4:9).
So freedom from the effects of sin, that is death.
As I understand it, God will overlook our sinful state if we excercise
faith in the provision that he has given for salvation, that is the
ransom sacrifice (Mattew 20:28). Now if one practices wrong doing
willfully, then according to Paul there is no sacrifice left to cover
one's sin, "For if we practice sin willfully after having received the
accurate knowledge of the truth, there is no longer any sacrifice for
sins left," Hebrews 10:26 NWT. So I don't see those who profess the
OSAS doctrine reconcile this.
Phil.
|
1107.13 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 12 1995 11:32 | 44 |
| ZZZ -< Jesus' sacrifice doesn't cover the willfull wrong doer >
Phil, in that case, Paul could take no comfort in his salvation.
Consider Pauls explanation of carnality in Romans 7, "For I know in me
there dwells no good thing. For the will to do good is within me, but
how to perform that which is good I find not." Paul is referring here
to the continual war going on within his members...the war that ravages
The Spirit against the flesh. If this be the case, then your statement
cannot be reconciled with scripture.
Also consider the analogy Paul gives in 1st Corinthians chapter 3.
This context also deals with carnal believers and I can assure you, the
Corinthian Church was a body of believers lead by the flesh.
Speaking of the judgement seat of Christ:
"For no other foundation can any man lay than that which is Jesus
Christ. Now if any man build upon THIS (Repeat...THIS) foundation
gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, stubble, every mans work
shall be made manifest; for the day shall declare it because it shall
be revealed by fire; and the fire shall try every man's work of what
sort it is. If any mans work abide which he has built upon, he shall
receive a reward. If any man's work shall be burned, he shall suffer
loss, BUT HE HIMSELF SHALL BE SAVED, YET AS ONE ESCAPING THROUGH THE
FLAMES." 1st Corinthians 3:11-15
I emphasize the last point because this judgement will be for believers
and all their works, both good and bad will be presented before God.
All our bad works will be burned and one may only have a foundation
left...that being Jesus Christ.
I think it's important to point out that fire is used in the New
Testament as a purging method. To the church of Laodicea, Jesus said,
"I urge you to buy gold refined by fire." The implication here is that
your deeds are like tarnished gold and that you need to exercise faith.
Same with the Corinthian Church. You will be saved as one escaping
through the flames, or you will build upon the foundation of Jesus
Christ with good works...the choice is yours. But the foundation
remains regardless.
As I stated a few replies back, Hebrews 6 needs to be taken into
context with other chapters in the epistle and with other scripture!
-Jack
|
1107.14 | He that has endured to the end is the one that will be saved | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Wed Jul 12 1995 12:34 | 48 |
| RE .13
Jack,
Yes, Paul had to get tough with himself to do what is right. But he
never let up from keeping his eyes on the prize or proving faithful.
Zephaniah 2:2,3 KJV reads "Before the decree bring forth, before the
day pass as the chaff, before the fierce anger of the LORD come upon
you, before the the day of the LORD's anger come upon you. Seek ye
the LORD, all ye meek of the earth, which have wrought his judgment;
seek righteousness, seek meekness; it may be ye shall be hid in the
day of the LORD's anger" Other versions use the word probabally, so
salvation is not something that one can be fully sure of, it depends
on continually seeking God and excercising continued faith in his
Son's ransom sacrifice. Paul even gives the admonishion "Consequently
let him that thinks he is standing beware that he does not fall."
1 Corinthians 10:12 NWT and the surrounding verses show he is talking
about God's power to save his servants.
Consider, Jude's words in Jude 3-5 NWT "Beloved ones, though I was
making every effort to write YOU about the salvation we hold in
common, i found it necessary to write YOU to exhort YOU to put up
a hard fight for the faith that was once for all time delivered to
the holy ones. My reason is that certain men have slipped in who have
long ago been appointed by the Scriptures to this judgment, ungodly
men, turning the undeserved kindness of our God into an excuse for
loose conduct and proving false to our only Owner and Lord, Jesus
Christ." For this reason I don't like the OSAS doctrine because one
could say to oneself "retire and wait your heavenly reward".
As Tony , I think, has pointed out free will is involved that is
choosing life or death as the Israelites had to (compare Deuteronomy
30:19,20).
Endurance is involved in the race for life as Jesus said "But he that
has endured to the end is the one that will be saved." Matthew 24:13
NWT
Jack, reading the portion of Scripture from 1 Corinthians 3:11-15 I
understand that ones has to abide by the foundation that was laid
by Jesus. What happens if one changes their mind and builds in another
foundation such as putting ones hope for salvation in material things
such as gold?. What is the reward for such a course?.
Phil.
|
1107.15 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 12 1995 12:47 | 29 |
| Phil:
Thanks for posting what you did. Coincidently, just about every
passage you used is intertwined with dispensationalism. I believe for
example, that the incidents of Matthew and Zachariah you use are
referring to the tribulation saints. I believe the church will be
raptured before these things occur. Ironically, this is where the
144,000 believers come into play. I'm not just making this up to
squirm out of being accountable for answering to these passages. I
have always believed this to be the case. As far as the Jude passage
is concerned, the passage you bring forth does refer to ungodly
individuals; however, the epistles of John address that very same issue
and it isn't clear that the agitators of this church were necessarily
converted believers in the first place.
Paul addresses the attitude of a believer and what it should be...and
it addresses your uneasiness about the OSAS position...
"What shall we say then; shall we continue in sin that grace may
abound? God forbid, for how shall we who are dead to sin remain
therein?" Paul asks the rhetorical question which calls for the
answer...You cannot remain in sin. I believe the act of repentence is
a predominant ingredient to one becoming a new creature in Christ.
I think we are dealing with somewhat a semantics issue here. I don't
believe the Holy Spirit can leave a person as they could in the Old
Testament. I would submit that if one lays a foundation and yet
abandons the faith, then one was not really saved in the first place.
-Jack
|
1107.16 | | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Wed Jul 12 1995 13:07 | 21 |
|
Jack,
Thanks for your reply, I now understand more of your viewpoint.
Regarding the Jude passage, if a chosen one turns to willfill
wrong doing wouldn't they be considered ungodly any. In my book,
being godly involves continually seeking God and imitating Him.
Christians are known by their fruit, if it's rotten it's not
Christian.
Guess we'll have to agree to disagree. However, I'll leave you with
the wise words of David to his son Solomon "And you, Solomon my son,
know the God of your father and serve him with a complete heart and
with a delightful soul, for all hearts Jehovah is searching, and every
inclination of the thoughts he is discerning. If you search for him, he
will let himself be found by you, but if you leave him, he will cast
you off forver." 1 Chronicles 28:9 NWT
Phil.
|
1107.17 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 12 1995 13:18 | 18 |
| Yes but from the same writer...
"If his children forsake my law and not walk in my judgements, if they
break my statutes and keep not my commandments, then I will visit their
transgressions with the rod, and their iniquity with stripes.
Nevertheless my lovingkindness will I not utterly take from him, nor
suffer my faithfulness to fail. My covenant will I not break nor alter
the things which have gone out of my lips." Psalm 89:30-34.
God made the Davidic covenant here...an eternal kingdom that would
last. How much less would Jesus consider the church...mad up of
fallable individuals such as Paul himself from his Romans 7 discussion!
Incidently, I am open to changing my position on this and am
participating because I like the dialog. Right now I am trying to
reconcile the issue! Thanks.
-Jack
|
1107.18 | Westminster Confession of Faith, 1647 | USAT05::BENSON | Eternal Weltanschauung | Wed Jul 12 1995 13:41 | 27 |
|
Of The Perseverance of the Saints
[6.094]
1. They whom God hath accepted in his Beloved, effectually called and
sanctified by his Spirit, can neither totally nor finally fall away
from the state of grace; but shall certainly persevere therein to the
end, and be eternally saved.
[6.095]
2. This perseverance of the saints depends, not upon their own
free-will, but upon the immutability of the decree of election,
flowing from the free and unchangeable love of God the Father; upon
the efficacy of the merit and intercession of Jesus Christ; the
abiding of the Spirit and of the seed of God within them; and the
nature of the covenant of grace; from all which ariseth also the
certainty and infallibility thereof.
[6.096]
3. Nevertheless they may, through the temptations of Satan and of the
world, the prevelancy of corruption remaining in them, and the neglect
of the means of their perseverance, fall into grievous sins; ad for a
time continue therein: whereby they incur God's displeasure, and
grieve his Holy Spirit; come to be deprived of some measure of their
graces and comforts; have their hearts hardened, and their consciences
wounded; hurt and scandalize others, and bring temporal judgments upon
theselves.
|
1107.19 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:04 | 2 |
| Too bad God's Word is higher authority than the Westminister Confession
of men.
|
1107.20 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:06 | 7 |
| Mike:
Let's get into some specific points. Do you believe the Holy Spirit
can depart from you? If so, how do you reconcile this with Ephesians
1:13?
-Jack
|
1107.21 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:14 | 7 |
| > Let's get into some specific points. Do you believe the Holy Spirit
> can depart from you? If so, how do you reconcile this with Ephesians
> 1:13?
It left King Saul and Judas.
Mike
|
1107.22 | | USAT05::BENSON | Eternal Weltanschauung | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:20 | 17 |
|
Mike,
Your ignorance is showing terribly. The Westminster Confession is a
summary of biblical doctrines and is based solely upon the Scriptures.
The men who assembled the Confession did so over a five year period in
an assembly. The men were the greatest intellects of their time and
probably the greatest group of intellects ever assembled throughout
history. The vow each made was that nothing but the Scriptures would
be reflected in the Confession.
You'll pardon me for accepting the depth of intellect and knowledge of
the Scriptures illuminated in the Confession while rejecting the modernism
of the Calvary Chapel sect and its shallow understanding of the Scriptures.
jeff
|
1107.23 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:24 | 8 |
| whoa,
now we have bible believers banging at each other.
In front of us "non believers" even.
Sounds like the Calvary church does not pass the test of orthordoxy
either. Now whatever is orthodoxy!
|
1107.24 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:26 | 22 |
| The Holy Spirit NEVER indwelt a person from the Old Testament as it
does the New Testament. The Holy Spirit came upon a person as it did
King Saul and King David but it never resided within their hearts.
You may remember the great Psalm of repentence from King David after
the Bathsheba incident where David says, "Do not remove me from your
presence, neither let your Holy Spirit depart from me." Yes, the Holy
Spirit would not always tarry with wickedness in the Old Testament.
However, Jesus established a new covenant with the Church and in John
14 it states, "And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you
another comforter, that he may abide with you forever. Even the Spirit
of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it sees Him not;
neither knows Him. But you know Him; and he dwells with you, and shall
be with you. I will not leave you comfortless, I shall come unto you."
Regarding Judas Iscariot, I don't recall the Holy Spirit leaving him.
The only thing I recall is that a demon came upon him at the last
supper and I for one believe that a demon and the Holy Spirit can not
reside within the same heart. In fact, I don't believe the apostles
received the Holy Spirit until Pentacost.
-Jack
|
1107.25 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:30 | 10 |
| Jack,
Are you saying that the holy spirit never dwelled within Abraham's
heart?
Is the holy spirit too the same today, tomorrow and forever?
Just tying to understand.
Patricia
|
1107.26 | | USAT05::BENSON | Eternal Weltanschauung | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:35 | 28 |
|
> now we have bible believers banging at each other.
> In front of us "non believers" even.
> Sounds like the Calvary church does not pass the test of orthordoxy
> either. Now whatever is orthodoxy!
I don't shy away from exposing ignorance no matter who's showing it.
Calvary Chapel is not orthodox, never will be.
I don't think it unreasonable to strongly suggest that the Reformers of
the 16th century, brilliant and biblically literate men that they were,
represent Protestant orthodoxy while modern sects like Calvary Chapel
represent less-orthodox Protestantism.
However, the more I see your attempts to support your own nonbiblical
views by the fact that there are differences in Christian beliefs the
more I see the reason to narrow the term "orthodox" to a smaller set of
doctrines which are shared universally. These would be the
fundamentals (where the word fundamentalist originated). This will
make our discussions fruitful if you'll agree to be measured by them.
Does anyone have "The Fundamentals"?
jeff
|
1107.27 | Where the Bible disagrees with the Westminister Confession | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:42 | 25 |
| I Timothy 4:1
NOW the Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart
from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils;
II Thessalonians 2:3
Let no man deceive you by any means: for that day shall not come, except there
come a falling away first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of
perdition;
II Peter 2:20
For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the
knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, they are again entangled
therein, and overcome, the latter end is worse with them than the beginning.
II Peter 2:21
For it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness,
than, after they have known it, to turn from the holy commandment delivered
unto them.
I Peter 1:10
Of which salvation the prophets have inquired and searched diligently, who
prophesied of the grace that should come unto you:
Jude 1:24
Now unto him that is able to keep you from falling, and to present you
faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy.
|
1107.28 | On Monopolies/Intelligence & Wisdom/Orthodoxy... | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:46 | 29 |
| Hi Jeff,
Does the Westminster 'whatever' have a monopoly on being
intelligent as well as desiring to be true to the scriptures?
If your answer is yes, I agree to disagree.
If your answer is no, my next question then is, "On what
basis are their conclusions better than anyone else's?"
I personally feel that you overemphasized the characteristic
of 'intelligence.' True it is that intelligence is needed
in order to partake of spiritual food, but I tend to prefer
wisdom to intelligence.
There are incredibly brilliant minds that are equally as
foolish.
Finally, Jeff, with your fondness for 'orthodoxy', I fail to
see how you could have seen any truth in Christ if your
orthodoxy was Judaism.
There is an endtime transition of covenant and adherence to
orthodoxy someday may equate to the abomination of desolation.
Adherence to orthodoxy was all that Israel needed to do to seal
their rejection of the Messiah.
Tony
|
1107.29 | | USAT05::BENSON | Eternal Weltanschauung | Wed Jul 12 1995 16:08 | 69 |
|
> Does the Westminster 'whatever' have a monopoly on being
> intelligent as well as desiring to be true to the scriptures?
In Protestantism I think so. I've found nothing comparable to it.
Indeed there is nothing like it to be found.
> If your answer is yes, I agree to disagree.
Do you have any examples to support your disagreement?
> If your answer is no, my next question then is, "On what
> basis are their conclusions better than anyone else's?"
Since my answer is "yes", I'll skip this question.
> I personally feel that you overemphasized the characteristic
> of 'intelligence.'
How so?
> True it is that intelligence is needed
> in order to partake of spiritual food,
Then how can intelligence be overemphasized?
>but I tend to prefer
> wisdom to intelligence.
What is wisdom and what is intelligence? What are you saying here?
> There are incredibly brilliant minds that are equally as
> foolish.
Equally foolish to each other? I agree that intelligence by itself is
as hostile to God as is purposeful ignorance. But intelligence
harnessed by the grace of God and infused with His Spirit is exactly
what is required to properly understand and instruct others in the
truths of God's word.
> Finally, Jeff, with your fondness for 'orthodoxy', I fail to
> see how you could have seen any truth in Christ if your
> orthodoxy was Judaism.
There were many orthodox Jews saved before and after Christ so I don't
see your point.
> There is an endtime transition of covenant and adherence to
> orthodoxy someday may equate to the abomination of desolation.
And what is the abomination of desolation in SDA thinking...let me
guess...Roman Catholicism instituting by law a Sunday sabbath across the
whole world?! Egads!!! This is truly farfetched. Roman Catholics
observe mass almost any day of the week and meet their oblgations. I
suspect there are Catholics in good standing who never receive mass on
a Sunday in their whole lives.
> Adherence to orthodoxy was all that Israel needed to do to seal
> their rejection of the Messiah.
> Tony
It is Christ who saves, by God's gift of faith and the regeneration
of the Holy Spirit. Many Jews (25% of Jesus' time) were saved and
countless others were saved prior to Jesus' time through faith in the
coming Messiah.
jeff
|
1107.30 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 12 1995 16:59 | 25 |
| ZZ Are you saying that the holy spirit never dwelled within Abraham's
ZZ heart?
ZZ Is the holy spirit too the same today, tomorrow and forever?
Yes, questions worthy of answers. Personally, I do not believe this to
be the case. My opinion on this matter is that the nation of Israel
was set apart as a nation and a people for Gods purpose. As Leslie
corrected me on yesterday, Abraham was justified by faith just as we
are today. When the Holy Spirit came upon individuals of the Old
Tesatament, these individuals were able to do mighty exploits.
Solomon, Sampson, Elijah, Deborah, Elisha, David, all the Prophets...
the list goes on. The Holy Spirit came upon an individual as God chose
them to be annointed.
Keep in mind that it is FAITH which justifies a person. God is the
same yesterday and today. In the Old Covenant, the sin of Israel was
covered (hidden) from the eyes of God through the sacrifice. Today,
the sin of believers is FORGIVEN, not merely covered. The Holy Spirit
is a gift of God, a comforter who will never leave you as mentioned in
John 14.
-Jack
|
1107.31 | silence is deafening | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Jul 12 1995 17:13 | 8 |
| Re: .27
I Timothy 4:1
II Thessalonians 2:3
II Peter 2:20
II Peter 2:21
I Peter 1:10
Jude 1:24
|
1107.32 | Orthodoxy versus An Endtime Transition of Covenant | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Wed Jul 12 1995 17:27 | 82 |
| Hi Jeff,
I felt you overemphasized intelligence in that it seemed to
be placed at a higher level than wisdom. From the content
of your last reply, I can see that even if it may have
seemed to come accross that way, it wasn't your intent.
I feel that there are many people who have sought the scriptures
with much sincerity. It often seems that a person comes along
who is blessed by receiving precious truth. If the scriptural
record is a guideline to the gradual unfolding of truth, it does
not usually seem to come all at once by some collective group
of individuals rather it seems to come at different times and by
different peoples. Kind of like what if people rejected
Jeremiah's exhortations because Isaiah represented their "West-
minster Confession"???
In terms of a last day transition of covenant, your mention of
Sunday and all of that was way off the mark of my own thinking.
I am Adventist, but I have some views that cannot be considered
distinctly Adventist.
But, there is a transition of covenant coming. Just yesterday,
I read in Hebrews 8 that...
"This is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel
after those days says the Lord. I will put my laws in their
mind and write them on their hearts and I will be their God
and they shall be My people."
[now catch this next verse]
"None shall teach his neighbor and none his brother saying 'Know
the Lord' for all shall know me from the least of them to the
greatest of them." ch. 8 NKJV
None shall teach his neighbor. Tie this in to Ephesians where
it speaks of God giving apostles, prophets, TEACHERS, etc. until...
until when.
Till they come to the knowledge of the truth to the measure of
the stature of the fulness of Christ.
That is pure apocalyptic. There are no teachers at this time and
Ephesians is definitely looking to the end.
My point is _there is an endtime transition of covenant_.
Look at Hebrews 10:1-4. Shadow gives way to VERY IMAGE.
THAT IS THE ENDTIME TRANSITION OF COVENANT.
And what does it produce? Heb. 10:1-4 again. The worshipers
have no remembrance of sin.
It produces perfection of character.
I don't want to dilute the controversy between Sabbath and
Sunday and while I don't want to downgrade the Sabbath, it
(along with Sunday) are primarily symbols.
The Sabbath will point to the full gospel which perfects the
conscience. It will (as a symbol) point to it.
In the last days, the controversy will be over two gospels.
The perpetuation of the old and the revealing of the new.
"In that He says, 'A new covenant' He has made the old
obsolete. Now what is becoming obsolete and growing old is
ready to vanish away."
Jeff, you sound like someone that would find it difficult to
even be able to consider fresh light. That was my point about
the Jews and orthodoxy. Not that some Jews did not accept new
light, but that strict adherence to orthodoxy can be a built-in
destructive mechanism making it difficult to embrace not yet
seen truth.
God Bless,
Tony
|
1107.33 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 12 1995 17:28 | 7 |
| Mike, you want me to address each one of these passages individually?
I will...and you brought up some good passages. (Just got back from a
meeting). I will respond to this!
Rgds.,
-Jack
|
1107.34 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Wed Jul 12 1995 17:41 | 9 |
| It's interesting regarding the intellectuals who wrote the Westminister
Commentaries and Jeff's suggestion that "That is Orthordoxy"
The whole purpose of the protestant reformation was to take back the
responsibility of reading and interpreting scripture from the Catholic
Church and let every believer read and interpret scripture for
<himself>. This proposal to use the commentary, is counter
reformatory. Why not just take away everybodies bible and produce a
catecism from the documentary and tell everyone what to memorize!
|
1107.35 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 12 1995 17:45 | 10 |
| From what I understand (I could be wrong), The catholic hierarchy of
years past claimed to have the authority or understanding of scripture
and it was up to them to interpret for the masses (No pun intended).
Any reformation was to bring the word of God back to the people and in
my mind, each person is obliged to study the scriptures for themselves.
It does say the disciples studied the scriptures day and night to see
if these things were so!
-Jack
|
1107.36 | "Give That Woman A Ceeeeegar!!!" | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Wed Jul 12 1995 17:55 | 21 |
| Patricia,
I think you hit one VERY fundamental nail right on the head!
Jeff's posture is papal in nature. It doesn't matter if every
bit of doctrine in the 'confession' be truth, the more signi-
ficant point is that it is bandied about like some universal
catechism (and thus) a church like Calvary Chapel finds itself
under a less than attractive label.
I think catechisms are detrimental. They suppress the receptive-
ness of fresh light because, by very nature of the fact that
fresh light is fresh, it cannot find itself in the "confession."
And if its not in the Confession...
Well, embracing it just might be heretical.
Yeah, its no spirit I want to partake in.
Tony
|
1107.37 | He that does the will of God remains forever | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Thu Jul 13 1995 10:16 | 35 |
| re .17
Jack,
Yes, the Davidic covenant will be fulfilled. That is God's kingdom
will be established with Jesus (from the lineage of David) as king
of that kingdom. Also predestined is a priest and king class to
rule along with Jesus as co heirs of that kingdom (Revelation 5:9,10).
However, the question is are *individuals* predestined to be part of
this heavenly kingdom?. Certainly, it is God who calls and seals these
prospective kings/priests but is their acceptance dependent on their
continued fauthfulness?. The letters to the seven congregations as
recorded in Revelation chapters 2 & 3 has bearing on this. Take for
example Jesus comment to the congregation in Smyrna "Prove yourself
faithful even to death, and I will give you the crown of life"
Revelation 2:10, Jesus was pointing out that their prize was
conditional upon excerising faith even unto death.
I like the illustration that I read last night, One is rescued from
a burning tower by the fire service. During the rescue operation
one is lead to a place of safety. Now if one, for some foolish reason,
goes back to that burning tower then they will put their life in danger
again. Now for Christians, the world is a place of danger that they
are to be no part of, John warns them "Do not be loving either the
world or the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love
of the Father is not in him, beacause everything in the world the
desire of the eyes and the showy display of one's means of life does
not originate with the Father, but orginates with the world.
Furthermore, the world is passing away and so its desire, but he that
does the will of God remains forever." 1 John 2:15-17 NWT Again safety
is conditional upon excerising faith, ie doing the will of God.
Phil.
|
1107.38 | | USAT05::BENSON | Eternal Weltanschauung | Thu Jul 13 1995 10:26 | 34 |
|
> The whole purpose of the protestant reformation was to take back the
> responsibility of reading and interpreting scripture from the Catholic
> Church and let every believer read and interpret scripture for
> <himself>.
This is not true as stated, Patricia. The Reformation was to reform
the doctrines of the Catholic Church to the actual Bible. It was not
successful in reforming the Catholic Church so split with them. One
emphasis was certainly to put the Bible in the hands of the masses.
However, as the Westminster Confession makes clear, the biblical
authority of the clergy remained an important aspect of biblical
Christianity.
>This proposal to use the commentary, is counter
>reformatory. Why not just take away everybodies bible and produce a
>catecism from the documentary and tell everyone what to memorize!
The Westminster Confession (and shorter and larger catechisms) are
simply helpful tools from our perspective. However, at the time they
were of much greater import (considering the turmoil of the Reformation
and its aftermath) and invaluable in educating the masses concerning
biblical doctrine. It is a summary of biblical doctrines with
Scripture proofs. And as I mentioned earlier the men who summarized were
exceptionally superior both spiritually and intellectually. However,
it does not claim infallibility.
It is appropriate to hold this as a standard of Protestant orthodoxy.
However, as I said, I wouldn't object to a shorter, finer list of
fundamental beliefs as a measure of orthodoxy. UU and other modern
ideas about God could be measured against what is properly called
biblical Christianity.
jeff
|
1107.39 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Jul 13 1995 10:28 | 23 |
| Phil:
Your analogy is a good one and is worthy of remembering. I believe the
emphasis on Holy living is there but I am still trying to reconcile
the issue of faithlessness in a walk with God with fallen grace. I
would like your comments on 1st Corinthians 3 which I posted
yesterday...particularly of the verse that says "...He too shall be saved
yet as one escaping through the flames."
ZZ Revelation 2:10, Jesus was pointing out that their prize was
ZZ conditional upon excerising faith even unto death.
You most likely disagree on this point; however, I believe this would
apply to the judgement seat of Christ as mentioned in 1st Corinthians
3. I believe this judgement applies to believers...the elect of Jesus
Christ. The Great White Throne Judgement in Revelation 20 is a
judgement for those who are not written in the lambs Book of Life.
Smyrna would not be suseptible to this judgement but they, as believers
would have to give account for the talents God gave them. The
Judgement seat of Christ is to receive rewards such as the Crown of
Life. The Great White Throne is a judgement for unbelievers.
-Jack
|
1107.40 | | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Thu Jul 13 1995 10:32 | 7 |
| .39
Jack,
OK, I'll do a little study on 1st Corinthians 3 and get back to you.
Phil.
|
1107.41 | | USAT05::BENSON | Eternal Weltanschauung | Thu Jul 13 1995 10:34 | 38 |
|
< Jeff's posture is papal in nature. It doesn't matter if every
> bit of doctrine in the 'confession' be truth,
And this is where you stumble, Tony. Truth, in your eyes, is not
paramount. Especially if there is an authoritative basis for it.
>the more signi-
> ficant point is that it is bandied about like some universal
> catechism (and thus) a church like Calvary Chapel finds itself
> under a less than attractive label.
And the SDA is probably sunk by the measure of the Confession, more
important to you.
> I think catechisms are detrimental. They suppress the receptive-
> ness of fresh light because, by very nature of the fact that
> fresh light is fresh, it cannot find itself in the "confession."
There is no "fresh" light. The Scriptures are closed, the revelation
of Jesus Christ complete. The Bible is adequate for all faith and
life. Of course, this truth leaves no room for false prophets and
ear-ticklers such Ellen White and other SDA "prophets".
> And if its not in the Confession...
If its not in the confession it's not a major doctrine in the Bible.
> Well, embracing it just might be heretical.
> Yeah, its no spirit I want to partake in.
> Tony
Having known you for a long time now Tony I understand that orthodoxy
is anathema to you for it destroys your beliefs.
jeff
|
1107.42 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Thu Jul 13 1995 11:33 | 23 |
| Jeff,
well at least I now know where you are coming from.
You want to asign some group of men the responsibility of defining
orthordoxy and then measure everyone else's faith against your
standard.
So what do you propose to do with those who don't meet your test.
i.e. the catholics, the SDA's, the UU's the Church of Calvary, the
UCC's etc,etc,
So instead of us liberals complaining, let's not worship the Bible
let's worship the living God will be added.
Let's not worship the Westminister Confession, let's not worship the
Bible, let's worship the living God.
Patricia
opposed forever to every human orthordoxy!
|
1107.43 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Jul 13 1995 11:42 | 6 |
| ZZ opposed forever to every human orthordoxy!
Does this include feminism? Seriously asking because orthodoxy isn't
restricted to matters of faith.
-Jack
|
1107.44 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Thu Jul 13 1995 14:54 | 12 |
| <<< Note 1107.42 by POWDML::FLANAGAN "let your light shine" >>>
> You want to asign some group of men the responsibility of defining
> orthordoxy
Though I'd prefer not to trivialize it as just "some group of
men", yes, I'd prefer to have a doctrine formulated by a
prayerful collective over time, than to have each individual
creating dogma willy-nilly. Be that the Bible, and/or the
Catechism, and/or the Westminster Confession, and/or the
Torah, and/or etc., I think people are better off following
established religion.
|
1107.45 | | TINCUP::BITTROLFF | Gardeners Creed: Weed 'em and Reap | Thu Jul 13 1995 18:01 | 14 |
| .23 POWDML::FLANAGAN "let your light shine"
now we have bible believers banging at each other.
Patricia,
The one comfort I have if this country does become a Christian nation
is that the true believers will spend most of their time beating on
variations of themselves before they come after me!
My non-belief has never gotten anyone in this conference as angry or
excited as another believer with a different point of view...
Steve
|
1107.46 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Thu Jul 13 1995 18:07 | 13 |
|
I personally have little or no desire to see this become a Christian nation.
I'd love to see it become a nations of Christians, however. No amount of
legislation will take people to Heaven, nor do away with the sin that is
in people's hearts. Only Jesus Christ can do that.
Jim
|
1107.47 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Thu Jul 13 1995 18:31 | 4 |
| A general rule of thumb that applies here:
If it wasn't practiced by the early church in Acts and taught by the
apostles in their letters - it's not of God.
|
1107.48 | | TINCUP::BITTROLFF | Gardeners Creed: Weed 'em and Reap | Thu Jul 13 1995 20:19 | 10 |
| .46 CSLALL::HENDERSON "Learning to lean"
Jim,
Do you have a desire to see legislation passed that would have the
same affect, such as mandatory prayer in schools? Or mandatory
closings of business on Sundays? Or to illegalize abortion? This is
what I mean by an officially Christian nation.
Steve
|
1107.49 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Thu Jul 13 1995 23:26 | 16 |
|
I'm not in favor of mandatory prayer
It wouldn't bother me to see mandatory closing of businesses on Sundays,
nor would it bother me to see abortion become illegal. I would like to see
more Christians sharing the gospel of Christ with their neighbors and
family (I include myself in this desire) and many of these things that
plague our society (not that businesses open on Sundays is a plague)
will simply become minor issues.
Jim
|
1107.50 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Fri Jul 14 1995 09:54 | 6 |
|
RE: .46
GREAT note!
|
1107.51 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Fri Jul 14 1995 10:39 | 7 |
| .47
Again Mike,
You allow God no creativity "to do a new thing".
Patricia
|
1107.52 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Jul 14 1995 11:18 | 28 |
| Steve:
ZZZ now we have bible believers banging at each other.
There is a biblical principle in the Old Testament that iron sharpens
iron. Call it banging if you want to, I find alot of value in these
types of discourses. Alot more value in the substance of discussing
doctrinal issues than the symbolic gestures of singing Kumbaya around
the campsfire when you know you aren't in likemindedness.
Mike, your statement is a valid one, but there is more to it. There
are practices the churches in the book of Acts practiced that are not
practiced today. Does your church proclaim Jesus death and
resurrection by partaking of communion every day? Do your church members
fast day and night frequently over matters of importance? Does your
church meet daily at all for prayer? Does your church witness in the
towns of your local area...openly proclaiming the gospel of Jesus
Christ amongst large groups of citizens? These were the common
practices of the church in Antioch in the Book of Acts.
I would still be interested in what you have found out about the
sealing of the Holy Spirit in the New Testament vs. the Old Testament.
Does your belief based on scripture concur with mine on this matter?
When we are born again our dead spirit becomes alive through the power
of Jesus Christ. It is not I who live but Christ who lives in me. How
can a reborn spirit die in sin when it dwells with the Holy Spirit?
-Jack
|
1107.53 | | TINCUP::BITTROLFF | Gardeners Creed: Weed 'em and Reap | Fri Jul 14 1995 11:50 | 20 |
| .49 CSLALL::HENDERSON "Learning to lean"
It wouldn't bother me to see mandatory closing of businesses on Sundays,
Jim,
Why wouldn't it bother you? This is simply legislating the customs of a
religion, it has no secular reason, and it is restrictive of freedom.
Would you be OK with mandatory closings on Friday and Saturday also, as
some other religions mandate?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
.52 MKOTS3::JMARTIN "I press on toward the goal"
I don't disagree, I always find value in debate. I was just making an
observation that it seems that the most, uh, spirited debate is with
someone that agrees with you in principal but not in the details, while
those that disagree with you completely are considered somewhat less
dangerous.
Steve
|
1107.54 | Build with fire resistent materials | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Fri Jul 14 1995 12:28 | 95 |
| re .39
Jack,
Due to working late last night, I was only able to do a quick study of the
verses in 1 Corintians 3. Even so, a quick look at a Watchtower article
from July 15th 1984 "Building With Fire-Resistant Materials" gave me an
understanding of what Paul was saying. Now I think verses 1-15 are all
relevant and should be viewed together....
"And so, brothers, I was not able to speak to YOU as to spiritual men, but
as to fleshly men, as to babes in Christ. I fed YOU milk, not something
to eat, for YOU were not yet strong enough. In fact, neither are YOU
strong enough now, for YOU are yet fleshly. For whereas there are
jealously and strife among YOU, are YOU not fleshly and are YOU not
walking as men do? For when one says: 'I belong to Paul,' but another
says: 'I to Apollos,' are YOU not simply men?. What, then, is Apollos?
Yes, what is Paul? Ministers through whom YOU became believers, even as
the Lord granted each one. I planted, Apollos watered, but God kept
making [it] grow, so that neither is he that plants anything nor is he
that waters, but God who makes [it] grow. Now he that plants and he that
waters are one, but each [person] will receive his own reward according to
his own labor. For we are God's fellow workers. YOU people are God's field
under cultivation, God's building. According to the undeserved kindness of
God that was given to me, as a wise director of works I laid a foundation,
but someone else is building on it. But let each one keep watching how he
is building on it. For no man can lay any other foundation than what is
laid, which is Jesus Christ. Now if anyone builds on the foundation of
gold, silver, precious stones, wood materials, hay, stubble, each one's
work will become manifest, for day will show it up, because it will be
revealed by means of fire, and the fire itself will prove what sort of
work each one's is. If anyone's work that he has built on it remains, he
will receive a reward, if anyone's work is burned up, he will suffer loss,
but he himself will be saved, yet, if so, [it will be] as through fire."
1 Corinthians 3:1-15 NWT.
You have a strong foundation, but imagine your distress if your house burns
down due to using materials such as stubble or hay in building it. One would
want to build it so that it would have some resistance to fire.
What building was Paul alluding to that should be built with fire resistant
materials? "YOU people are God's field under cultivation, God's building".
So he is likening the Christian minister to a builder. He reminds the
wayward Corinthian congregation that the foundation to build on is Jesus,
but then goes onto to reason with them what sort of materials they should
use to build in a symbolic sense. If they build with stubble then the
result is all to clear. But in what sense does the Christian minister
build? He builds people to become a genuine Christians, (verse 16 "You
people are God's temple." also compare the great commision with the command
to teach and make disciples Matthew 28:19,20) Now to lay the foundation
the teaching must be based on the teachings of Jesus Christ.
Some translations when mentioning the building materials put this verse in
a different way "Some will use gold or silver or precious stones in building
on the foundation others will use wood or grass or straw." TEV "On this
foundation you can build in gold, silver and jewels, or in wood, grass and
straw." The Jerusalem Bible. So Paul was contrasting two types of
buildings. So what Paul is asking the Corinthian brothers is when teaching
others and making disciples are you building "palaces" or "huts". For
example, in building a "palace" the pupil will have learnt to put his trust
in Jesus and shown how to develop a close relationship with Jehovah.
However, in building a "hut" the pupil would have learnt to follow men
(such as Paul, Apollos or Cephas).
What will the fire entail, well it would be in the pupil keeping their
Christian integrity in the face of adversity. Satan has many burning
missiles at his disposal. How will the pupil fare? will they be like a
beautiful palace with fire resistant gold, silver and precious stones and
stand firm? or will they be a like hut made with wood, straw and stubble
and burn up?.
So what Paul was admontioning was that the Corinthian congregation build
each other so as to stand firm and keep their integrity intact.
What was Paul reward, well it wasn't everlasting life for the building was
God's temple. His reward was the joy of seeing others become genuine
Christians.
A different interpretation on these verses, Paul's concern was to overcome
the dissensions in the Corinth congregation illustrating the need to build
each other up.
My own understanding on verse 15, is that all Christians have to keep
their integrity that is faithful unto death. What you quoted in reply
.39 "....He too shall be saved yet as one escaping through the flames."
is different to the kJV which reads "If any man's work shall be burned,
he shall suffer loss;" and this is it "but he himself shall be saved;
yet so as by fire." . Some that are taught will be unfaithful, which would
be sad to see, but even so one will be be saved that is if one stays fire
resistant. Christian integrity is a personal thing, well that's my take
on it with the help of the Watchtower article.
Phil.
|
1107.55 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Jul 14 1995 12:53 | 22 |
| Z "If any man's work shall be burned,
Z he shall suffer loss;" and this is it "but he himself shall be saved;
Z yet so as by fire." . Some that are taught will be unfaithful, which would
Z be sad to see, but even so one will be be saved that is if one stays fire
Z resistant. Christian integrity is a personal thing, well that's my
Z take on it with the help of the Watchtower article.
I would like to focus on this section of your entry above...
"but even so one will be be saved that is if one stays fire"
At this point, you seem to have made being saved
conditional...conditional contrary to what Paul was saying in the
preceding sentence. "IF ONE MAN'S WORK IS BURNED, Then he shall also
be saved. If a man's work is burned, this would infer that the work
was not fire resistant. I do agree with you that that which we build
upon the foundation is the ministry. But I still see a
non-reconciliation between what is saved being non fire resistant. The
passage in discussion here still infers salvation although your
ministry was built of wood, hay, and stubble.
-Jack
|
1107.56 | it's really very simple | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Fri Jul 14 1995 15:08 | 7 |
| | You allow God no creativity "to do a new thing".
Patricia, your focus and perspective limits God. God renews me every
morning. He's always doing new things in our lives. Christians are
new creations. He also doesn't contradict His Word.
Mike
|
1107.57 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Fri Jul 14 1995 15:20 | 48 |
| > There is a biblical principle in the Old Testament that iron sharpens
> iron. Call it banging if you want to, I find alot of value in these
Amen!
> practiced today. Does your church proclaim Jesus death and
> resurrection by partaking of communion every day?
Not all of them, but several of them do. We have a morning watch at
our church. The sanctuary is open from 6am-9am for those that want to
have devotions/worship/communion/prayer/etc. in the sanctuary of the
Lord.
>Do your church members
> fast day and night frequently over matters of importance?
Yes. And it's always announced to the congregation when these matters
are approaching. It happened recently when Michael L. Brown (a
Messianic Jew) came to debate a local Rabbi at Arizona State. Univ.
>Does your church meet daily at all for prayer?
Yes, see above.
>Does your church witness in the towns of your local area...openly
>proclaiming the gospel of Jesus Christ amongst large groups of citizens?
Yes, once a month we hold services at a local ampitheatre that holds
over 20K people. We also have our Resurrection Sunday services there.
We also hold city-wide outreaches there, in conjunction with the other
Calvary Chapels in the metro area, complete with street evangelism.
Due to God providing where God is guiding, we are currently planning to
use a larger stadium.
> I would still be interested in what you have found out about the
> sealing of the Holy Spirit in the New Testament vs. the Old Testament.
> Does your belief based on scripture concur with mine on this matter?
> When we are born again our dead spirit becomes alive through the power
> of Jesus Christ. It is not I who live but Christ who lives in me. How
> can a reborn spirit die in sin when it dwells with the Holy Spirit?
I'll try to look into this weekend. I've placed myself into a position
where I'm defending Arminianism, which I don't 100% agree with.
Neither do I agree 100% with Calvinism. There are partial truths in
both, but the Bible clearly indicates to me that both extremes have
their problems.
Mike
|
1107.58 | | USAT05::BENSON | Eternal Weltanschauung | Fri Jul 14 1995 15:29 | 46 |
|
Steve made a comment a few replies back concerning how disagreement seems
greater between those agreeing in principle than between those disagreeing
in principle. This makes good sense when you think about the nature of the
debate and what is at stake.
Steve, for example, being an admitted agnostic (who was only recently an
atheist ;) is less dangerous to a debate on Christianity by virtue of his
relative ignorance of the subject. Even though Steve does not presume that
he can participate meaningfully in such a debate, if he did, his comments
would be almost meaningless and easily dismissed because of his disbelief
and obvious indifference. Patricia, on the other hand, presumes to represent
Christianity using Christian language and symbols yet contradicting in
principle both herself and the clear teaching of the standard of Christianity,
the Scriptures. She is more dangerous than Steve due to the simple fact of the
confusion created when equivocation is the rule. However, she too is less
threatening to truth than the actual Christian who is strongly convicted but
ignorant of the Scriptures who ends up spreading error among the church and
causing real pain for real Christians. No less a threat is the nonChristian
who adheres to orthodoxy in words and outward lifestyle, and is highly
opinionated.
The Bible is full of warnings and admonitions about false teachers. Many of
the epistles have significant portions devoted to the subject. And always the
greatest threat came from those closest to the church, those actually
considered a part of her but who were actually imposters - "wolves in sheeps
clothing".
Now, having said all of that, there is another matter and that is the manner
in which error is addressed and troublemakers warned. It is easy to be harsh
and sparse in this medium. It is difficult to express gentleness and
liberality. And I have failed many, many times to accurately express myself
fully. It's pretty easy to get a raw point across. It's infinitely harder to
both get the point across and add all of the words which would express feeling
and intent. This, at least in my case and I suspect in many others', also
gives the impression that debate is less healthy and productive than it might
actually be. Nevertheless, I personally will continue to try to express in
notes more gentleness.
I'll also take this opportunity to apologize to Mike Heiser for the way I
responded to a recent entry (to which I am building a suitable reply, in case
you were wondering, Mike) and to Patricia for the manner in which I have
responded to many of your notes. I am in fervent disagreement with you,
Patricia. But I must treat you better. I'm sure you'll give me a chance.
jeff
|
1107.59 | this occurs after salvation | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Fri Jul 14 1995 15:30 | 6 |
| Re: Paul's fire in 1 Corinthians
being saved through the fire is talking of our heavenly rewards being
tried by God's fire at the Bema Seat Judgment of Christ.
Mike
|
1107.60 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Fri Jul 14 1995 15:34 | 5 |
| Jeff, thanks for the apology - the feeling is mutual. I apologize if
you felt I was antagonizing you.
in Christ,
Mike
|
1107.61 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Jul 14 1995 19:25 | 6 |
| Mike:
The scripture specifically states that a man's work will be tested by
fire, not the reward.
-Jack
|
1107.62 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Fri Jul 14 1995 20:00 | 5 |
| Jack, thanks for the clarification. The works that are being tested
(or what is left of them) is what the rewards are based on.
sorry,
Mike
|
1107.63 | No Catechisms...Just The Word | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Mon Jul 17 1995 10:08 | 41 |
| Hi Jeff,
Ya know, your words just don't ring a bell with me. You say
I'm rejecting this or that, but one thing I know is that
wine (doctrine) accompanies the latter rain. Mike said
(to which I'll assume you probably agree) the apostles
basically had it right. Well, if they had it right, why did
Ephesus lose her first love?
If they had it right, why didn't they finish the work and
Isaiah 5 clearly says that God has done all that He can to
finish the work. He cannot FORCE us to receive.
And I am well aware of your propensity for critiquing SDA
and Ellen White. Well, I believe she said that she was given
to lead people to the Bible and I can attest to that in my
own experience.
This morning, on my ride to work, I did not quote a single
line of Ellen White, but I did recite, by memory, Hebrews
Chapters 1 through 8. It is my hope to memorize all of Hebrews
and after that, my desire is not to memorize some text of Ellen
White, it is to memorize Romans.
I'm not saying this to pat myself on the back, I am saying this
to defend what Ellen White's writings and what some of SDA has
done for me. As a generalization, I know Christians from several
denominations, but I have never known any that thirst for the word
as SOME Adventists I know. (And I emphasize *some*.)
I reject the confession from the standpoint of it being the
'end-all' of all Christian thought. I don't believe in
'catechisms' because (as I said) they too easily become the
means by which fresh truth is rejected.
I have offered what I consider to be scriptural support for
an endtime transition of covenant.
And like it or not, it will be accompanied with fresh light.
Tony
|
1107.64 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Jul 17 1995 10:33 | 5 |
| If Ellen White is a prophet, then her writings have to be infallable.
If they are not infallable, then Ellen White must be put in the company
with theologians and not prophets.
-Jack
|
1107.65 | Her Writings Can Bless | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Mon Jul 17 1995 13:11 | 19 |
| Hi Jack,
This isn't about Ellen White, but I did interject a little
bit about her because she was attacked all the while she
had not been brought up until then.
My wife is a nondenominational Christian who happens to believe
in the 7th day Sabbath and in the conditional immortality of
man. She had always believed in the 7th day Sabbath (she recently
told me) and as a young Catholic always wondered why anyone went
to church on the 1st day.
Anyway, Carol is being much blessed by a book by Ellen White
titled 'Steps to Christ' and I asked her to simply read it for
the content and to consider the possibility that she was a
godly woman; no more no less. Thats about what you said Jack
when you said theologian.
Tony
|
1107.66 | Paul's admonition is not to be mislead with false reasoning. | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Mon Jul 17 1995 13:13 | 70 |
|
re .55
Jack,
It would be really helpful if you can tell me which translation you are
using and if you could give the full verse, this would help me comment
further on the point your making in 1 Corithians 3.
However, salvation is conditional, as Paul put it "What! Do YOU not know that
unrighteous persons will not inherit God's kingdom? Do not be misled. Neither
fornicators, nor idolaters, nor men kept for unnatural purposes, nor men who
lie with men, nor thieves, nor greedy persons, nor drunkards, nor revilers,
nor extortioners will inherit God's kingdom. And yet that is what some of YOU
were. But YOU have been washed clean, but YOU have been sanctified, but YOU
have been declared righteous in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ and with the
spirit of God." 1 Corithinans 6:9-11 NWT Here Paul warns those anointed with
holy spirit NOT to be misled with false reasoning, for fornicators etc
*whomever* they are will NOT inherit God's kingdom.
One of the major parts where we differ is that salvation is not instantaneous:
"Consequently, my beloved ones, in the way that YOU have always obeyed, not
during my presence only, but now much more readily during my absence, keep
working out YOUR own salvation with fear and trembling;" Philippians 2:12 NWT
"Not that I have already received it or am already made perfect, but I am
pursuing to see if I may also lay hold on that for which I have also been
hold on by Christ Jesus. Brothers, I do not consider myself as having laid
hold on [it]; but there is one thing about it: Forgetting the things behind
and strecting forward to the things ahead, I am pursuing down toward the
goal for the prize of the upward call of God by means of Crist Jesus."
Philippians 3:12-14 NWT
"And YOU will be objects of hatred by all people on account of my name, but
he that has endured to the end is the one that will be saved." Matthew 10:22
NWT
As pointed out in other notes, partakers of the holy spirit can fall:
"For it is impossible as regards those who have once for all been enlightened,
and who have tasted the heavenly free gift, and who have become partakers of
holy spirit, and who have tasted the fine word of God and the powers of the
coming system of things, but who have fallen away, to revive them again to
repentance, because they impale the Son of God afresh for themselves and expose
him to public shame. For example, the ground that drinks in the rain which
often comes upon it, and that the brings forth vegetation suitable to those
for whom it is also cultivated, receives in return a blessing from God. But if
it produces thorns and thistles, it is rejected and is near to being cursed,
and it ends up being burned." Hebrews 6:4-8 NWT
"But I pummel my body and lead it as a slave, that, after I have preached to
others, I myself should not become disapproved somehow." 1 Corinthians 9:27 NWT
Peter, mentions that those who turn back are considered worse than if they
had not heard the good news at all.
"Certainly if, after having escaped from the defilements of the world by an
accurate knowledge of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, they get involved
again with these very things and are overcome, the final conditions have
become worse for them than the first." 1 Peter 2:20,21 NWT
To me Jehovah is a righteous judge and will pay accordingly to those who
willfully practice wrong doing especially those who have had an accurate
knowledge of the truth.
Phil.
|
1107.67 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Jul 17 1995 13:32 | 22 |
| Phil:
You bring up these viable passages as a precondition to being the
elect. In the context that you are using them, I would assume you
believe that one would have to maintain their own righteousness before
a Holy God. This begs the question, By what measure can we maintain
this righteousness in order to be of the elect of God? When we accept
Jesus as savior, we die to our old selves and take upon us a new
creation...old things are past away and all things become new. By the
way you present this, one would have to maintain perpetual
righteousness on their own merits. This contradicts Romans chapter 3.
In order to inherit eternal life, sinless perfection must be obtained.
Since there is a constant battle between the flesh and the Spirit,
sinless perfection of our own merits would be impossible. This is why
the grace we receive as mentioned in Ephesians 2 is of the utmost
importance. Without it, we are stripped of any righteousness
whatsoever. Any work done in order to maintain salvation was done on
Calvary 2000 years ago. I could provide a multitude of New Testament
passages to support this.
-Jack
|
1107.68 | gift or a program? | HBAHBA::HAAS | time compressed | Mon Jul 17 1995 13:35 | 5 |
| > In order to inherit eternal life, sinless perfection must be obtained.
I thought it was a gift and that there was no way to "earn" it?
TTom
|
1107.69 | Sanctification Is By _God's_ Merits | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Mon Jul 17 1995 13:48 | 22 |
| Hi Jack,
"sinless perfection of our own merits."
You aren't suggesting that sanctification is "of our own merits"
are you? Acts says we are sanctified by faith.
I'm just trying to point to something you inferred.
1)Sinless perfection in Christ.
2)Sinless perfection by our own merits, i.e. which we agree is
an impossibility.
3)Inferred. No other sinless perfection conceivable.
To which my response is, what about sanctification?
Didn't Jesus say, "Be ye therefore perfect EVEN as your Father in
heaven is perfect"?
Tony
|
1107.70 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Jul 17 1995 13:50 | 12 |
| ZZ I thought it was a gift and that there was no way to "earn" it?
Correct...and as I wrote in a later sentence, sinless perfection on our
own intervention. Romans 3 clearly states that in our own humanity,
there is none righteous. However, when accepting Jesus as Lord and
Savior, we take upon ourselves his righteousness...his sinlessness.
To lose ones salvation presupposes one would have to maintain it
through works. This is contrary to Old and New testament passages and
themes.
-Jack
|
1107.71 | We Must Have Faith | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Mon Jul 17 1995 14:20 | 10 |
| Hi Jack,
To lose one's salvation can presuppose that one simply is
required to continue to desire the gift.
People can throw away free gifts - even after receiving them.
We must have faith.
Tony
|
1107.72 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Mon Jul 17 1995 14:22 | 4 |
| > -< Her Writings Can Bless >-
Problem is that you don't know if they're hers or stuff she
plagiarized.
|
1107.73 | On Judging Others | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Mon Jul 17 1995 14:35 | 28 |
| re: .41
I read .41 again and have more to say about it.
First, truth is extremely important to me. Jeff, you erred
when you stated what you did after I said "even if it be truth."
My point was not to place truth as less important than anything,
but to uphold yet unrevealed truth and for that reason I care
not for 'catechisms' (as I believe they suppress).
Secondly, I do not believe in OSAS. So I guess I don't agree
with all of the Westminster Confession.
Jeff, much of what you wrote is based on misconceptions you have
about me. There is much I believe that SDA _does not_.
But, you have stated that I have a problem with the confession
because it doesn't agree with SDA. You have stated something
about myself that isn't true. (How can it be true if I already
hold to things SDA does not?)
Now, how could you have done that? How can you criticize a
person about things that aren't even true?
Thats why only God should judge for only He really knows the
heart.
Tony
|
1107.74 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Jul 17 1995 14:37 | 24 |
| ZZZ People can throw away free gifts - even after receiving them.
Agreed...the sower and the seed comes into play here. Any seed
scattered that is received joyously and then is dryed up in parched
soil or is choked to death by thorns and thistles...dies. It is only
seed planted on good soil that takes root.
If you are, as it says in Psalm 1, like a tree firmly planted by rivers
of water, then you are firmly rooted in Jesus Christ. Colossians 2:7
also refers to being built up and rooted in Him...strengthened in the
faith as you were taught and overflowing with thankfulness.
I believe one can make an intellectual decision to accept Christ, and
yet never have eternal life. A true conversion must stem from the
heart of an individual and not from the intellect.
Consider John the Baptist, the greatest of all the prophets. And yet
while in prison, he sent one of his disciples to Jesus to ask that
faithless question, "Are you the one or should we look for another?"
Jesus answered appropriately, the lame walk, the deaf hear, and the
blind see. Now had John continued to inquire, at what point would he
lose the Holy Spirit?
-Jack
|
1107.75 | Be Consistent Then: Don't Read Luke | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Mon Jul 17 1995 14:39 | 15 |
| re: .72
Mike,
I listened to all of the tapes you sent me and I believe I
can succesfully refute most, but not all, of it. I don't
have all the answers.
But, if you want to attack plagiarists, WHY DON'T YOU START
WITH LUKE? I don't see him crediting Mark or Matthew.
The content of Steps to Christ blesses...whether or not its
plagiarized (although in this case I don't think it is).
Tony
|
1107.76 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Mon Jul 17 1995 16:50 | 8 |
| > I believe one can make an intellectual decision to accept Christ, and
> yet never have eternal life. A true conversion must stem from the
> heart of an individual and not from the intellect.
Jack, if this is what you mean by OSAS then we may be closer to
agreement. Neither do I believe a true heart change can turn from God.
Mike
|
1107.77 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Mon Jul 17 1995 16:52 | 7 |
| > I listened to all of the tapes you sent me and I believe I
> can succesfully refute most, but not all, of it. I don't
> have all the answers.
I didn't send you any tapes. However, I do think you would be interested
in the EGW testimony that is supressed by the SDA church.
|
1107.78 | Mike: Our Main Differences Are Not With White | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Mon Jul 17 1995 17:29 | 60 |
| Well, Mike, I think you know the tapes I mean. Perhaps the
church sent them?
I don't really see the need Mike. When a group fully comes
to the truth of the endtime transition of covenant, they will
look back on her and it'll be like she was in diapers.
Its all in the Bible. When a group comes to the fulness of the
gospel, she'll not be needed. It will be seen in its entirety
in the scriptures.
She merely scratches the surface.
We've discussed things before. But, the more I learn, for myself,
the less scriptural much of your positions become. I'll give you
two examples. You have kept on quoting Romans 6:23. Now, given
that verse and assuming condemnation is to something above and
beyond that which is inherent to sin, the only ones to die the
wages of sin can be Christ and the lost.
Do you follow?
What I mean is this. Assuming this belief system, the saved do
not die that death for they are exempted from it on the basis of
receiving the gift of Christ dying that death for them.
So read Romans 7. It speaks of the same theme. It mentions the
law OF SIN AND DEATH. It mentions the body OF SIN AND DEATH.
But, notice another thing...
WHO IS DYING????
PAUL!!!
Paul is the one that is dying the death of Romans 6:23 and that is
unacceptable for your position.
One other example. Where does scripture explicitly give the
*reasons* for a Christian's right standing before God when one
first has faith?
If you are willing to supply the scriptures, I think they would
tell us much regarding just what we are delivered from.
Mike, we can agree to disagree, BUT, without scripture to show
me otherwise, I believe all the condemnation is inherent to sin.
And I believe that is a fundamental part of the transition in
covenant.
Its a wide fork and its one that (I believe) Ellen White only
scratched the surface of. Though if one looks, they can see it
in her writings.
But, I got it from the Bible (and AFTER, I looked for it in
White).
After I saw it in the Bible.
Tony
|
1107.79 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Jul 17 1995 17:57 | 10 |
| ZZ Neither do I believe a true heart change can turn from God.
Bingo. I believe somebody could have prayed to receive Christ
intellectually without the slightest idea of what they were truly
doing...or had done it for the wrong reasons. It is those who
may continue to live in sin, thinking grace may abound when they never
had grace in the first place...simply because they didn't really have
faith!
-Jack
|
1107.80 | Granted, Not A Human Being, But... | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Mon Jul 17 1995 18:02 | 14 |
| re: -1
Did Lucifer have grace in his heart before he fell?
Granted, he was not a human being, but he was a creature
whose reason for service to God must have been "the love
of Christ constraineth me."
It must have been faith working through love.
And yet Lucifer fell.
How could that be?
Tony
|
1107.81 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Jul 17 1995 18:21 | 19 |
| Well, this is my take on it mind you...
Lucifer was a perfect angelic being; therefore one may conclude he was
set apart from sin just as Adam was set apart from sin.
Since he was in a condition of holiness just as Adam was, then I would
conclude that he did not have grace in his heart since he had not
needed redemption at that time...nor had he transgressed any law before
the fall.
To reiterate, as believers we become children of God through
inheritence, not by right. We are an adopted son of God and all we
receive is by grace. We inherit righteousness as well...we take upon
ourselves God's righteousness. Lucifer did not need to take on anybody
elses righteousness before the fall.
Just an opinion. Never thought of that one before!
-Jack
|
1107.82 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Mon Jul 17 1995 19:50 | 23 |
| > -< Mike: Our Main Differences Are Not With White >-
sure they are. It's the Investigative Judgment that forces you to
defend your position as you do.
> Well, Mike, I think you know the tapes I mean. Perhaps the
> church sent them?
I posted the address and number, you called for your own copy.
> I don't really see the need Mike. When a group fully comes
> to the truth of the endtime transition of covenant, they will
> look back on her and it'll be like she was in diapers.
That's an awfully condescending way to look at it.
> Mike, we can agree to disagree, BUT, without scripture to show
> me otherwise, I believe all the condemnation is inherent to sin.
One of these days...
sigh,
Mike
|
1107.83 | The broad road can only lead to one place | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Tue Jul 18 1995 06:15 | 53 |
| re .67
Jack,
Ofcourse one is declared righteous by faith, so that no man can boast.
However, as you are well aware James tells us that faith without works
is like a lifeless corpse....
"YOU see that a man is to be declared righteous by works, and not by
faith alone. In the same manner was not also Rahab the harlot declared
righteous by works, after she had received the messengers hospitably
and sent them away? Indeed, as the body without spirit is dead, also
faith without works is dead." James 2:24-26 NWT
For this reason, Jesus said that his disciples would be identified by
their fruit (John 13:34,35). For they would be excerising faith in
their Chief Agent of salvation.
In contrast, in "the last days" there would be those "having a form of
godly devotion but proving false to its power," 2 Timothy 3:1,5 NWT.
Jesus warned about such ones "Not every saying to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will
enter into the kingdom of the heavens, but the one doing the will of
my Father who is in heaven will." Matthew 7:21 NWT Many will identify
themselves as Christians but Jesus here tell us only those doing the
will of my Father will be acceptable. It's that important, one who
professed to be Christian wouldn't want to be rejected by Jesus would
they?.
Jesus likens the opportunity to become a Christian to that of a
journey....
"Go through the narrow gate, because broad and spacious is the road
leading off into destruction, and many are the ones going in through
it, whereas narrow is the gate and cramped the road leading off into
life, and few are the ones finding it." Matthew 7:13,14 NWT
Now what I get from this illustration is that one must take the
opportunity of service to God in being a dedicated Christian, that is
go through the narrow gate which would take effort. In turn, one has
to walk the path that leads to life, that is continue to put on the
Christ like personality. Now what if at sometime, a Christian strays
and takes the broad road, that is willfully goes back to his old
personality discarding the Christlike one. Well Jesus' illustration
leaves us in no doubt of where this journey will lead him to.
Jack, regarding 1 Corinthians 3:15 please could you let me know which
translation your are using. Also could you cite the full verse.
Thanks
Phil.
|
1107.84 | Investigative Judgment - Summarized | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Tue Jul 18 1995 09:30 | 55 |
| Investigative Judgment (in a nutshell)...
God's love searches the heart. (For the word of God is living
and powerful and sharper than any two-edged sword piercing even
to the division of soul and spirit and of joints and marrow and
is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.)
In the endtimes, there are two groups.
One group will have allowed that WORD in their hearts. That word,
progressively, will have investigated ("search my heart and see if
there be any evil thing within me") their hearts and this group will
have let go of sin in this process. The time eventually comes when
this group has been enabled to view the WORD unveiled and to let go
of all sin (which sin that word has fully revealed).
The other group refused to behold the mirror (perfect law of liberty
- same thing). Eventually God forces them to behold it. It is the
exact same WORD that searched out the hearts of the above group.
But, because the word was not received in the heart, the word will
arouse a full revelation of their sin which will destroy them.
Thats why Jesus says that in the last days He will not judge, but the
WORD would judge. That is, there is no condemnation in the heart of
God. This is a reality He cannot circumvent. Sin destroys in the
presence of an unveiled revelation of God's love (the word).
This is the investigative judgment. And I have no problem with it
because it is entirely scriptural. (For example, check out PSALM
7:8-16. What do you think the sword is that is sharpened? Why
is it an instrument of death? "For the commandment came, sin revived
and I died." Notice that what befalls the unsaved is 100% INHERENT.)
By the way Mike, I don't see how what I wrote was condescending. I
don't claim to be part of the last generation. Its not conceit to
believe that the last generation will come to such a fulness of truth
that previous persons, from their perspective, will be as spiritual
children.
Knowledge will increase. The final scenes will be rapid ones. The
latter rain which is a revelation of truth will be like the flood
of Noah. The light will be like a fiery furnace made 7 times hotter.
I don't place myself in this category and its not conceit to believe
the last generation will be blessed with this exp. for the path of
the just is like a shining light that shines brighter and brighter
unto the perfect day.
And finally, Paul is the one in Romans to be dying the death of 6:23.
That is, if you want to be true to context. So what does that make
of a position whose main support is a scriptural verse wrested from
its immediate context?
Tony
|
1107.85 | Should Remove Some Surmising | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Tue Jul 18 1995 10:21 | 35 |
| re: .81
Hi Jack,
My point was to remove the support that our reasoning might
give.
I think we might differ on what it means to have grace in
the heart. The Bible speaks of Christ in you, of being filled
with the Spirit, of receiving the word, of being washed by the
word.
I believe that the result of the grace within us is simply
a revelation of God's character. In matters of the heart, the
entire process is perceptual. His grace is His character.
Given that, Lucifer certainly had God's grace in his heart.
Within his consciousness, he was filled with a revelation of
God's love and it is this which motivates one to serve for "the
goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance" and "the love of
Christ constraineth us" and by beholding we are changed.
Lucifer beheld. He saw. He perceived. He was a covering cherub.
He saw so much love that when Isaiah had a taste of it (ch. 6), he
fell as a dead man and said "Woe is me!"
Lucifer beheld the glory of God and yet he (somehow) departed.
Because of the above, I think it should eliminate any surmising
that if we have his love in our hearts, we cannot possibly choose
to leave God.
Lucifer stands as a testimony of one who did just that.
Tony
|
1107.86 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Jul 18 1995 21:07 | 8 |
| > Ofcourse one is declared righteous by faith, so that no man can boast.
> However, as you are well aware James tells us that faith without works
> is like a lifeless corpse....
funny how people forget James wrote that to Christians who were already
saved (i.e., past tense).
Mike
|
1107.87 | Jesus tells us that endurance is a vital quality for hristians | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Wed Jul 19 1995 05:29 | 22 |
| re .86
Mike,
It's also funny that persons ignore Jesus' words on the need to display
the quality of endurance to be saved.... "And YOU will be objects of
hatred by all people on account of my name, but he that has endured to
the end is the one that will be saved." Matthew 10:22 NWT
Though Christians are in a "saved" state, they need to endure and
continue excercising faith, and therefore James' admonition to his
brothers and sisters.
Also Jude 20-23 NWT reads "But YOU, beloved ones, by building yourselves,
on YOUR most holy faith, and praying with holy spirit, keep yourselves
in God's love, while YOU are awaiting for the mercy of our Lord Jesus
Christ with everlasting life in view. Also, continue showing mercy to
some that have doubts, save [them] by snatching [them] out of the fire.
But continue showing mercy to others, doing so with fear, while YOU
hate even the inner garment that has been stained by the flesh."
Phil.
|
1107.88 | ???? | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Wed Jul 19 1995 09:43 | 9 |
| Hi Mike,
I'm just curious. How did you come to the conclusion that
"its the investigative judgment that forces me to defend the
position as I do"?
Where did this 'insight' come from?
Tony
|
1107.89 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 19 1995 11:06 | 12 |
| ZZ funny how people forget James wrote that to Christians who were
ZZ already saved (i.e., past tense).
I have seen many a married couple told them that marriage without works
is dead....in which case the couple is still married!
Phil, where do you fit in scripture to the equation equating our works
of righteousness as filthy rags? The Isaiah passage can apply to
Christians as well...considering it was directed toward apostate Jews
in Exile yet they were still God's chosen people.
-Jack
|
1107.90 | | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Wed Jul 19 1995 11:44 | 9 |
| re .89
Jack,
Sorry but you'll have to be a bit more specific for me to make a comment.
Which Isaiah passage would you like me to comment on?, ie chapter and
verse(s).
Phil.
|
1107.91 | James Text | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Wed Jul 19 1995 11:54 | 8 |
| "Faith without works is dead."
I think its just a way of saying that true faith is a faith which
cannot but produce good works. So good works can testify to the
existence of true faith.
So, if there's no works, there isn't really true faith. A dead
faith is actually not a real faith.
|
1107.92 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 19 1995 12:07 | 21 |
| Isaiah 64:6
"But we are all as an unclean thing, and all our works are as a filthy
rag. We do fade as the leaf, and our iniquity like the wind, has swept
us away."
Works of righteouness are a fruit of true love for the savior. Works
of righteousness compelled by motive to maintain ones salvation would
require a mindset to maintain ones own righteousness...which is as a
filthy rag. This is the bottom line as to what I am pointing out.
A good tree cannot produce bad fruit and a bad tree cannot produce good
fruit....so in that case, I agree that one who is saved cannot live in
sin that grace may abound. Keep in mind the words of 1st John 2:1
which says, "My dear children, my prayer for you as that you do not
sin. But if you do sin, you have an advocate with the Father which is
Jesus Christ." This clearly says to me that the motive for no sin must
be to please God as a spouse pleases another; not as one hoping to
maintain their electship! (Is there such a word?)
-Jack
|
1107.93 | You must love Jehovah your God with your whole heart - Matthew 22:37NWT | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Wed Jul 19 1995 12:36 | 16 |
|
Well Jack, this may surprise you but I'm in full agreement with what
you have written. You mention 1 John 2:1, Jesus the high priest knows
exactly how a Christian's heart is inclined. If rightly disposed and
repentent, he will intercede for a Christian who sins. Notice Paul's
warning of a Christian hardening his or her heart .... "Beware, brothers,
for fear there should ever develop in any one of YOU a wicked heart
lacking faith by drawing away from the living God, but keep on exhorting
one another each day, as long as it may be called 'Today,' for fear any
one of YOU should become hardened by the deceptive power of sin. For we
actually become partakers of the Christ only if we make fast hold on
the confidence we had at the beginning firm to the end," Hebrews
3:12-14 NWT The end for an anointed one, would be the end of his earthly
life course.
Phil.
|
1107.94 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 19 1995 12:57 | 16 |
| Well, it would seem that you, Mike, myself, and I believe Tony agree on
this point.
I would like to get into the elect issue since I believe it ties in
with this. I do not believe that one is of the elect one day then the
next day is not. I believe God in His foreknowledge knows who the
elect are. I believe when one accepts Jesus as savior, then one IS of
the elect. If one does not accept Jesus as savior in their heart, then
one IS NOT of the elect, at least not yet anyway. I believe each saved
individual has an appointed time when they become part of the elect but
I draw a line between the ones who accept intellectually and the ones
who accept as a heart condition. In other words, one may not lose
their salvation but by their fruit, one may not have really accepted
Jesus in the first place.
-Jack
|
1107.95 | How I Presently See It | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Wed Jul 19 1995 14:31 | 28 |
| I understand what you are saying Jack. I presently believe
that it is possible to have true faith and to choose to leave
God some time afterwards.
I am not convinced by the argument that it is all God's choice.
The question (to me) is not what God's choice is, but what our
choice is. We have a choice. God does not deny us our choice.
I understand that you might respond by saying that though we
have our choice, we just won't make the choice. I believe that
the day will come when all of those that have chosen God will
never choose to leave Him because they will have been sealed with
a revelation of how good God is and how bad sin is such that they
will never choose sin again (or choose complete rebellion, i.e.
a full and final surrender to the ways of sin).
But, outside of a scriptural argument, I believe God wanted Lucifer
to not reject Him. But, reject Him he did.
"Many are called, but few are chosen."
This to me means that from God's perspective the entire world is
called to salvation. But, few are chosen and really the choice is
ours.
Anyway, thats how I presently see it.
Tony
|
1107.96 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 19 1995 16:28 | 6 |
| Tony:
I'm still grappling with the sin of the world as you stated it...
or did Jesus just die for the elect.
-Jack
|
1107.97 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Jul 19 1995 17:11 | 7 |
| > I'm just curious. How did you come to the conclusion that
> "its the investigative judgment that forces me to defend the
> position as I do"?
>
> Where did this 'insight' come from?
both of you negate the finished work of Christ on the cross.
|
1107.98 | Where'd I Say That??? | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Wed Jul 19 1995 17:14 | 9 |
| Hi Jack,
Can you give me a pointer to where I said "sin of the world"?
I don't believe Jesus just died for the elect. Boy, does
such a concept ever mar a right conception of His character!
(To think that He would foreordain some for eternal loss!)
Tony
|
1107.99 | The Word Only | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Wed Jul 19 1995 17:22 | 35 |
| re: .97
Hi Mike,
"both of you"...whats' that mean? Me and who else?
How is the work negated?
I believe its a finished work, but I also believe Christ is
still working. Certainly His sacrificial work is 100%
finished and is perfect. Nothing can be added to it.
He is presently interceding, no? Is not that a work?
There is not a scripture in the world that states that the
cross is the sum total of the work involved in the plan of
redemption. Not one.
The only way to claim as such is to be INCREDIBLY EISEGETICAL
and to add meaning, outside of any kind of context, to the
word IT in "It is finished."
I just won't partake in that kind of study of the word of
God. I've challenged the entire Christian Conference to show
me with context how the word IT is inclusive of the entire
plan of redemption. I have NEVER received a reply from a single
person.
I will base my conclusions on the word and not on orthodoxy whose
only basis is tradition and nonexegetical/noncontextual
conclusions.
Just show me out of the word Mike. Be true to the word.
Tony
|
1107.100 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 19 1995 17:23 | 4 |
| Actually, you didn't say it. I've just heard of it and am not
concluded on that matter.
-Jack
|
1107.101 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Jul 19 1995 17:24 | 3 |
| Tony:
you made me miss the redemptive snarf!!!! :-)
|
1107.102 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Jul 19 1995 17:30 | 23 |
| > "both of you"...whats' that mean? Me and who else?
Ellen White.
> How is the work negated?
>
> I believe its a finished work, but I also believe Christ is
> still working. Certainly His sacrificial work is 100%
> finished and is perfect. Nothing can be added to it.
The work of atonement is done.
> He is presently interceding, no? Is not that a work?
Intercession <> atonement.
> There is not a scripture in the world that states that the
> cross is the sum total of the work involved in the plan of
> redemption. Not one.
If you understood Yom Kippur, you'd feel differently.
Mike
|
1107.103 | We Know Where The Fork Is | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Wed Jul 19 1995 18:09 | 49 |
| Atonement means at-one-ment.
I agree that the atonement is not yet finished. And yes,
Ellen White and I are agreed on that.
What is the atonement Mike?
I believe atonement is reconciliation. I don't believe it
will be finished until the lost are destroyed. After this,
all of the universe that chose God will have seen two things
to a certain fulness.
1)They will have seen how good agape is.
2)They will have seen how bad sin is (when they see sin destroy
the lost in the presence of God's unveiled love.)
These two revelations will have the effect of sealing the
saved universe, i.e. they will know how good love is so much and
how bad sin is so much that they will never choose sin again.
The universe will be eternally safeguarded from sin.
But, I agree that we disagree on when the atonement is finished.
Where does scripture say the atonement is already finished?
(And please don't tell me that context shows that the IT in "It
is finished" refers to the atonement - without scriptural proof
that is.)
Atonement is reconciliation and reconciliation certainly is not
complete until after sin is removed.
Look at the sequence of the O.T. feasts. Atonement way at the
end AFTER Pentecost for example (which is after the cross).
Mike, we understand our differences.
You believe we are delivered from God. Hence the cross equates
to satisfying the payment He requires.
I believe we are delivered from sin. Hence the cross equates to
the love revealed which when the High Priest sprinkles it into
the conscience, cleanses the heart from sin.
We know where the fork is.
God Bless,
Tony
|
1107.104 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Wed Jul 19 1995 18:54 | 12 |
| <<< Note 1107.103 by LUDWIG::BARBIERI >>>
> Atonement means at-one-ment.
I've seen this in several different places. It seems to me like
a cute play on words, but that's about it.
Does the French (for example) translation of atonement equate
to the French translation of at-one-ment? How about Hebrew.
Greek. Latin.
Maybe it does. I'd like to know.
|
1107.105 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Jul 19 1995 23:17 | 1 |
| Joe, I don't even think it's in the Bible.
|
1107.106 | At-one-ment/Reconciliation | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Thu Jul 20 1995 09:53 | 24 |
| Well, Romans (in the KJV) has a place where it says "we have now
received the atonement" and the NKJV says (instead) _reconciliation_.
Reconciliation sounds good to me. Thats what I mean anyway. I
just happen to believe that the thing that needs reconciliation
is our hearts and if we sin, then we demonstrate that some enmity
still exists between our hearts and God. We are not entirely one
with God.
Mike, your last several replies have been essentially one-liners
criticizing things I believe. I have, at times, offered scriptural
support, but you seem to prefer to avoid the scriptural tack.
A good example are the psalmist texts I offered on inv. judgment.
Instead of meeting the scripture head-on, you seemed to drop your
'critique' of the investigative judgment, and go on to different
areas for which you can launch your critical one-liners.
Such dialogue doesn't do much for me. Is there a reason why it
should especially as the use of scripture doesn't seem to be to
your liking?
Tony
|
1107.107 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Thu Jul 20 1995 14:08 | 6 |
| Those who support justification by faith also have a play on words:
"just-as-if-I'd never sinned."
Tony, you'll get what you're looking for when the time is right.
Mike
|
1107.108 | ??? | LUDWIG::BARBIERI | | Thu Jul 20 1995 14:21 | 8 |
| re: -1
OK Mike. Whatever that means. But, you do realize the source
of the fork, do you not? That would be the starting point.
Addressing the source of condemnation and going from there.
Tony
|
1107.109 | an apology | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Sep 27 1995 13:12 | 25 |
| Re: .27
>II Peter 2:20-21
>For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the
>knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, they are again entangled
>therein, and overcome, the latter end is worse with them than the beginning.
>For it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness,
>than, after they have known it, to turn from the holy commandment delivered
>unto them.
I've been doing some further study on this passage and I feel I need to
apologize to the brethren for improperly applying the context of this
passage. God's Holy Word is precious to me and I don't want to
misrepresent Him. After much prayer and examination, I feel that the
"them" above doesn't refer to believers, but to the false teachers
mentioned early in chapter 2.
Something new that I feel God is working with me on is this whole idea
of OSAS. I believe that God is showing me that 5-point Calvinsim is
still unscriptural, but there is a point where OSAS still applies to
the true believer. There is a spiritual growth pattern that, once
established, provides tremendous assurance of salvation.
God Bless,
Mike
|
1107.110 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Sep 27 1995 16:13 | 9 |
| It is kind of neat when God reveals a portion of scripture that is
misused.
For years I misused Revelation 3:20 I believe...(Behold, I stand at the
door and knock..." Always used that verse as an invitation to receive
Christ as savior. Finally dawned on me this invitation was to a church
inviting them for fellowship...derrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!!!
-Jack
|
1107.111 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Sep 27 1995 17:12 | 16 |
| Jack, there are still other verses that I need to look further at in
.27.
Revelation 3:20 can still have the application for salvation as well as
fellowship - after all that is what receiving the Savior is: a
relationship. Not everyone in Laodicea was saved - most were obviously
far from fellowship with Christ.
Another interesting study/application is the use of the "door" in
Revelation 3-4. The door is open for Philadelphia, closed for
Laodicea, and open again in 4:1. Since Philadelpha appears to be the
cream of the crop and is promised a way of escape, I think (and many
scholars agree) that the door is a reference to the rapture of the
church through Christ.
Mike
|