Did Jesus Die on The Cross for The Just/Elect/Saved Whose Names Are Written in The Book of Life OR

  • Christian Chat is a moderated online Christian community allowing Christians around the world to fellowship with each other in real time chat via webcam, voice, and text, with the Christian Chat app. You can also start or participate in a Bible-based discussion here in the Christian Chat Forums, where members can also share with each other their own videos, pictures, or favorite Christian music.

    If you are a Christian and need encouragement and fellowship, we're here for you! If you are not a Christian but interested in knowing more about Jesus our Lord, you're also welcome! Want to know what the Bible says, and how you can apply it to your life? Join us!

    To make new Christian friends now around the world, click here to join Christian Chat.

MerSee

Active member
Jan 13, 2024
558
68
28
It seems you're just playing games now. What's your point? None of us was born again the "whole time". What are you even talking about?
Hebrews 10:26-30
26 For if we sin wilfully after having the knowledge of the truth, there is now left no sacrifice for sins. 27 But a certain dreadful expectation of judgment, and the rage of a fire which shall consume the adversaries. 28 A man making void the law of Moses, dieth without any mercy under two or three witnesses: 29 How much more, do you think he deserveth worse punishments, who hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath esteemed the blood of the testament unclean, by which he was sanctified, and hath offered an affront to the Spirit of grace? 30 For we know him that hath said: Vengeance belongeth to me, and I will repay. And again: The Lord shall judge his people.
 

PaulThomson

Well-known member
Oct 29, 2023
1,809
234
63
You ignore the fact that God put this condition onto the Jews of Jesus day.
What your son does has no connection to what God did to the Jews. Your son actually doesn't want to obey you from his own free will.
You keep removing "in part" from the bible? Why?
 

FollowerofShiloh

Well-known member
Jan 24, 2024
2,617
416
83
You keep removing "in part" from the bible? Why?
There is no in part in the verses I used.

7 What then? That which Israel seeks for, this he did not obtain, but the election obtained it, and the rest were hardened,

8 as it is written: God gave them a spirit of stupor, eyes that they should not see, and ears that they should not hear, till this day.
 

Rufus

Active member
Feb 17, 2024
935
88
28
When my Dad was alive and preaching he had a man who came in during church service one Sunday night he was the guest speaker. He walked in and ran to the altar and screamed begging my Dad to help him find Jesus. My Dad led him to the Lord right there in that moment. Afterward, my Dad asked the man, can you tell me what was happening in your life that brought you to this point now? The man said, he grew up in an atheist home, from generations of atheist. They never talked about God or had God on their minds.

He said that afternoon, Sunday, some men he owed money to came to collect. He said he didn't have it and was completely in the belief they would kill him. And when they found him and caught and beat him and tied him and taped his mouth shut and they were in the middle of mixing cement to hold his feet and they planned to throw him alive overboard a boat later that evening into a nearby lake. His mind was racing and he did not know who he could imagine would help or what he should do.

He said he remembered a guy once he saw talking about this Jesus character. So he said, I just kept thinking Jesus if you are real and help me I will serve you and do whatever you want. For hours he kept thinking this. Then it was starting to get dark and then men grabbed him, put him on the boat, and was on their way to drop him over into the water.

He said this bright light appeared and spoke. It scared the men where they jumped off the boat. The light stayed with the man tied up until a boat full of men fishing came near him. They saw he was tied up with duct tape on his mouth and some got into the boat and untied him and helped him to shore and busted the cement off his feet. After thanking those men he went to the first church in that immediate area. It just happened to be where my Dad was preaching.

This man had no idea who God was, his family never believed in God nor talked about the existence of God. But this man remember seeing this guy talking about Jesus. He had no other options. So he tried to talk to this Jesus character and plead with Him. The guy ended up being a Pastor and having one of the biggest AoG churches in his area after that.


That is Proof of how the DEAD can seek God.
But apparently God had a very good idea who this man was; for He knew him in eternity and predestined him to be one of his adopted children. Your anecdotal "Proof" (so-called) is based on the assumption that this man was dead unto God right up to his encounter with his would-be murderers; but as pointed out in my New Birth Analogy in my 1665, spiritual life very likely mirrors physical life in that in both cases life begins prior to birth! Sounds to me like this chap had his own fantastic on-the-road-to-Damascus conversion experience. And it was no accident or coincidence that this fellow had a prior encounter some Christian who had talked about Jesus.

For whatever it's worth, this fellow's skeptical prayer to God was very similar to my own when God found this lost soul. I didn't exactly pray a faith-filled prayer, if you get my drift.
 

Rufus

Active member
Feb 17, 2024
935
88
28
If someone showed you chocolate was milk and coco you would say not at all if it disagreed with your precious false doctrine.
I'm saying Rom3:7 doesn't say what you say it does. It's another one of your non sequiturs.
 

Rufus

Active member
Feb 17, 2024
935
88
28
1 Corinthians 15:1-5
1 Now I make known unto you, brethren, the gospel which I preached to you, which also you have received, and wherein you stand; 2 By which also you are saved, if you hold fast after what manner I preached unto you, unless you have believed in vain. 3 For I delivered unto you first of all, which I also received: how that Christ died for our sins, according to the scriptures: 4 And that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day, according to the scriptures: 5 And that he was seen by Cephas; and after that by the eleven.
Was there a point you were trying to make by posting this passage?
 

FollowerofShiloh

Well-known member
Jan 24, 2024
2,617
416
83
But apparently God had a very good idea who this man was; for He knew him in eternity and predestined him to be one of his adopted children. Your anecdotal "Proof" (so-called) is based on the assumption that this man was dead unto God right up to his encounter with his would-be murderers; but as pointed out in my New Birth Analogy in my 1665, spiritual life very likely mirrors physical life in that in both cases life begins prior to birth! Sounds to me like this chap had his own fantastic on-the-road-to-Damascus conversion experience. And it was no accident or coincidence that this fellow had a prior encounter some Christian who had talked about Jesus.

For whatever it's worth, this fellow's skeptical prayer to God was very similar to my own when God found this lost soul. I didn't exactly pray a faith-filled prayer, if you get my drift.
You must apply what you say ^ in this quoted post of yours in order to fit your doctrine.

In reality, the man came from generations of atheist. So what you say has no way to connect to what your doctrine teaches. The guy never heard the Gospel, never been in Church, never had reason to even consider any type of thoughts about God. It was a last ditch effort and he had already exhausted everything else he knew. He had no real reason to ever consider God let alone asking for His help.

Bottom line, nothing you post connects to what happened in this man's life, NOTHING!
 

Rufus

Active member
Feb 17, 2024
935
88
28
Well people have been repenting since the beginning of time.

And he told Israel he would give them a new heart.. as they repent and come to him, and he proves to them how trustworthy he is[/QUOTE]

"As they repent"? So if they didn't need a new heart to repent, why would Israel (or anyone else for that matter) need one after they repented? If their old heart of stone was sufficient for them to be saved, who needs a heart of flesh?

And, yes, a very small number of people have been repenting since the beginning of time. And that probably has something to do with God's empowering grace!

2 Tim 2:24-26
25 Those who oppose him [the Lord's servant] he must gently instruct, in the hope that God will grant them repentance leading them to a knowledge of the truth, 26 and that they will come to their senses and escape from the trap of the devil, who has taken them captive to do his will.
NIV
 

Rufus

Active member
Feb 17, 2024
935
88
28
You must apply what you say ^ in this quoted post of yours in order to fit your doctrine.

In reality, the man came from generations of atheist. So what you say has no way to connect to what your doctrine teaches. The guy never heard the Gospel, never been in Church, never had reason to even consider any type of thoughts about God. It was a last ditch effort and he had already exhausted everything else he knew. He had no real reason to ever consider God let alone asking for His help.

Bottom line, nothing you post connects to what happened in this man's life, NOTHING!
Nothing you say connects either. In fact, it wrecks the metaphor of the new birth.

This guy sounds a lot like me. So what is your point?

And this chap's "last ditch effort" reminds me of the repentant thief on his cross who had his version of a last minute deathbed conversion. Did he not?

It's utterly amazing how you keep God out of this story -- as though He had absolutely nothing to do with this guy except at the very last minute. Evidently you don't have very much faith in the providence of God, do you? For all you know, God could have been working on this guy for months or years even -- long before this guy cried out to him.

Your anecdote, while fascinating, is a big nothingburger; for it does not prove your NR theology. May I suggest that you commit to memory Isa 55:8-9, for starters? And then get over yourself -- and your "proof". :coffee:
 

FollowerofShiloh

Well-known member
Jan 24, 2024
2,617
416
83
Nothing you say connects either. In fact, it wrecks the metaphor of the new birth.

This guy sounds a lot like me. So what is your point?

And this chap's "last ditch effort" reminds me of the repentant thief on his cross who had his version of a last minute deathbed conversion. Did he not?

It's utterly amazing how you keep God out of this story -- as though He had absolutely nothing to do with this guy except at the very last minute. Evidently you don't have very much faith in the providence of God, do you? For all you know, God could have been working on this guy for months or years even -- long before this guy cried out to him.

Your anecdote, while fascinating, is a big nothingburger; for it does not prove your NR theology. May I suggest that you commit to memory Isa 55:8-9, for starters? And then get over yourself -- and your "proof". :coffee:
I am saying there's nothing any of us present that explains how this guy chose to do something that he did not believe in.
Most of us heard the Gospel and believed.
When he did it he had no faith, no belief, and truly believed it would not work but he had nothing else to try.
 

PaulThomson

Well-known member
Oct 29, 2023
1,809
234
63
There is no in part in the verses I used.

7 What then? That which Israel seeks for, this he did not obtain, but the election obtained it, and the rest were hardened,

8 as it is written: God gave them a spirit of stupor, eyes that they should not see, and ears that they should not hear, till this day.
The election are those not hardened. The rest were hardened. Rom. 11:25 says "blindness in part has happened to Israel."
 

FollowerofShiloh

Well-known member
Jan 24, 2024
2,617
416
83
The election are those not hardened. The rest were hardened. Rom. 11:25 says "blindness in part has happened to Israel."
I've always said the Jews were the ones hardened and blinded by God. Where do you believe I said otherwise to be on this assumption?
 

PaulThomson

Well-known member
Oct 29, 2023
1,809
234
63
I've always said the Jews were the ones hardened and blinded by God. Where do you believe I said otherwise to be on this assumption?
God's hardening of hearts is not a direct action by God. What God does in any moment in dealing with individuals is responded to by the individual with either hardening or softening. What God did is an indirect cause of the response, and so we can say that God hardened or opened the heart, in the same way as I can make someone angry, or make someone happy. The idea that a whole nation is intentionally and directly hardened into unbelief by God, while individuals in other nations are never hardened, contradicts the biblical revelation IMHO.
 

Rufus

Active member
Feb 17, 2024
935
88
28
I am saying there's nothing any of us present that explains how this guy chose to do something that he did not believe in.
Most of us heard the Gospel and believed.
When he did it he had no faith, no belief, and truly believed it would not work but he had nothing else to try.
My Analogy of the New Birth is more than a plausible explanation. You look at this man's salvation experience as though God got involved with him only at the last minute when the fellow cried out to him. I look at the bigger picture because I believe in the providence of God. As stated earlier, God was very likely working in this man's life for months or years to bring him into the very set of desperate circumstances in which he found himself. Romans 8 teaches that God foreknew this man in eternity, and because he did, he called him [in temporal reality], and because he called him he justified him [in time and space], and because he justified him, he also glorified him ( which will happen at the resurrection). How can God NOT be intimately and lovingly involved in the lives of all those whom he has predestined to save in eternity? Do you think God only decrees the ends and not the means, as well? What good would it be to decree an end in eternity if the means were left to "random chance" in temporal reality? If every decision of the roll of the dice is determined by the Sovereign Lord (Prov 16:33), then how much more are the lives of God's chosen ones determined by Him (Prov 16:9)?
 

Rufus

Active member
Feb 17, 2024
935
88
28
God's hardening of hearts is not a direct action by God. What God does in any moment in dealing with individuals is responded to by the individual with either hardening or softening. What God did is an indirect cause of the response, and so we can say that God hardened or opened the heart, in the same way as I can make someone angry, or make someone happy. The idea that a whole nation is intentionally and directly hardened into unbelief by God, while individuals in other nations are never hardened, contradicts the biblical revelation IMHO.
And just what "biblical revelation" would be contradictged specifically?
 

FollowerofShiloh

Well-known member
Jan 24, 2024
2,617
416
83
God's hardening of hearts is not a direct action by God. What God does in any moment in dealing with individuals is responded to by the individual with either hardening or softening. What God did is an indirect cause of the response, and so we can say that God hardened or opened the heart, in the same way as I can make someone angry, or make someone happy. The idea that a whole nation is intentionally and directly hardened into unbelief by God, while individuals in other nations are never hardened, contradicts the biblical revelation IMHO.
The verses I presented to you have "no mention" of a hardened heart. Not sure why you continue with that specific phrase. The verses I present say that God gave to the Jews:

“God gave them a spirit of stupor,
eyes that would not see
and ears that would not hear,
down to this very day.”
 

FollowerofShiloh

Well-known member
Jan 24, 2024
2,617
416
83
My Analogy of the New Birth is more than a plausible explanation. You look at this man's salvation experience as though God got involved with him only at the last minute when the fellow cried out to him. I look at the bigger picture because I believe in the providence of God. As stated earlier, God was very likely working in this man's life for months or years to bring him into the very set of desperate circumstances in which he found himself. Romans 8 teaches that God foreknew this man in eternity, and because he did, he called him [in temporal reality], and because he called him he justified him [in time and space], and because he justified him, he also glorified him ( which will happen at the resurrection). How can God NOT be intimately and lovingly involved in the lives of all those whom he has predestined to save in eternity? Do you think God only decrees the ends and not the means, as well? What good would it be to decree an end in eternity if the means were left to "random chance" in temporal reality? If every decision of the roll of the dice is determined by the Sovereign Lord (Prov 16:33), then how much more are the lives of God's chosen ones determined by Him (Prov 16:9)?
I know the man. He said he never ever thought about God nor did his family. So what you say doesn't seem to fit because your explanation suggests there was a time where he would have considered God. But I know for a fact that he never did.

But, for the sake of argument, God did as you suggest. It would make sense then that God does this to every human because this man describes all non-elects to the exact definition. And "we/you and myself" know you don't believe in that. But if it did happen to him it will have happened to anyone like him.
 

Rufus

Active member
Feb 17, 2024
935
88
28
New Birth Analogy (Pt 2)
This morning when I opened my bible to have my devotions, God providentially had me open to 1Peter 1. In this kind of situation when I don't intentionally open to a specific place in scripture where I have a ribbon or marker, I pay attention to God's leading; for more often than not this has proven to be an indication that the Lord wants to bless me by teaching me something that previously has gone unnoticed by me. And indeed, I was blessed greatly this morning for doing so; for the Lord had something very special to reveal to me this day. And this is what I would like to share with everyone.

There are three passages in chapter 1 that I'd like to briefly discuss and I'll quote each passage. We'll look at each in their order.

1 Peter 1:1a-2
1:1 Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ,

To God's elect, strangers in the world... 2 who have been chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through the sanctifying work of the Spirit, for obedience to Jesus Christ and sprinkling by his blood...

NIV

This one short passage is bursting at the seams with soteriology! If we look carefully, we'll find this one passage affirms my earlier New Birth Analogy. Let's briefly break it down.

1. Peter is obviously writing to the saints -- primarily Jewish believers at that.

2. Order of Words or Phrases in Scripture are Usually Important Logically and/or Chronologically for Right Understanding.

A. In fact, the same must be said for how writers of scripture present their arguments, i.e. logical flow.
B. In the first part of v. 2, Peter speaks of the "forknowledge" of God in eternity. God's eternal PURPOSE for his elect.
C. The second part of v. 2 talks of the MEANS of achieiving the Father's Purpose through the agency of the Holy Spirit.
D. The third part of v.2 speaks to the ultimate OBJECTIVE of the Purpose and the Means, which is Obedience to Christ.
E. And the final thing we learn is that all three Persons of the Godhead are involved in the elect's salvation.

So, we can easily see the logical and chronological order of events here. Peter starts out with the Father's purpose in eternity, how the Father achieives that purpose in temporal reality by his Spirit, and the what the ultimate object of his purpose was in eternity past, which is obedience to his Son.

What I really want focus on here in this passage is the MEANS to obedience to obedience to Christ and he sprinkling of is blood. But first, the obedience to Christ is nothing less than obdience to Christ's Gospel. This is the obeidence of faith (Rom 16:26) at which time the elect are "sprinkled by his blood". That is to say, the elect are forgiven their sins, for their sins have been washed away by the precious blood of the Lamb. So, this part of the passage teaches us that obedience to the Gospel, obedience to the Truth is absolutely necessary for salvation.

But so is the "sanctifying work" of the Holy Spirit! What Peter is saying here is that Spirit of God was actively, intimately, personally and lovingly involved in every aspect of the elect's salvation. The Spirit actively worked to bring the elect to a state of holiness, which ultimately was achieved when they obeyed the Gospel of Jesus. The Holy Spirit was actively working IN the lives of Peter's audience (the chosen ones) to achieve the goal of THEIR obedience to the Son. And this work is ongoing! It's not just a one-time work! The Holy Spirit was in their lives from the very beginning -- before they even reached the point of obedience to the Gospel. His sanctifying work was nothing less than the indispensable means to achieve this ultimate goal, i.e. to bring them to obedience -- at which point they became new creatures in Christ, i.e. born again!

So, since the Holy Spirit was in the lives of Peter's audience from the very beginning of their salvation, it must be asked: Did the Holy Spirit quicken the spiritually dead elect to enable them to move toward Son? Was the Spirit of the Living God moving live people toward obedience to the Gospel or was he was he merely nudging spiritual zombies, hoping they would positively respond to his work so that He could finally impart life to them? Or is the Holy Spirit so impotent that He could only hope the Father's elect would respond as the Father planned in eternity? Since this passage teaches that this ministry of the Spirit was his sanctifying work -- then this tells me that he quickened the Father's elect so that they could and would willingly and freely move toward the Son. And at this point -- become born again! Otherwise, how would the dead be able to move unless they had already been made alive? And since alive, then this means they were spiritually reunited, reconnected to the Author of Life -- through the agency of the Holy Spirit. Remember: Adam came into this world as a living soul because God had breathed into the him the Breath of Life!

And this brings us to the next passage, which further nails down Peter's statement and my earlier analogy.

1 Peter 1:3
3 Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In his great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead,
NIV

Peter in contemplating what God has just revealed to him, cannot help but break out in praise to God the Father and his Son. Then he succinctly sums up what he just finished saying in the first two verses by telling his audience that "he has given us NEW BIRTH....through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead." Can we not all see now the logical and chronological flow to Peter's words? Peter doesn't mention the New Birth until after he speaks of God's foreknowledge, the Spirit's work of sanctification and the elect's obedience to the Son.

And then finally...

1 Peter 1:22-23
22 Now that you have purified yourselves by obeying the truth so that you have sincere love for your brothers, love one another deeply, from the heart. 23 For you have been born again, not of perishable seed, but of imperishable, through the living and enduring word of God.
NIV

Here Peter confirms what I said ealier about what obeidence to the Son is about: It's obedience to His Gospel! The Gospel Truth! And obedience to this Truth, through faith, is always the final stage in a believer's regenerated soul, for it is the manifestation of Life that heretofore was concealed in the womb, in a manner speaking. It is at this stage that the believer himself becomes consicous of his new life in Christ when he cries out to the Lord to save him. (Does a living infant cry out before or after he exits his mother's womb?) And when this new life makes its entrance into the world, don't others acknowldge it, witness it and rejoice over it? And so it it is with everyone's New Birth in the Lord. There is even much rejoicing in heaven in the presence of God's angels over every such birth (Lk 15:10).
 

Rufus

Active member
Feb 17, 2024
935
88
28
I know the man. He said he never ever thought about God nor did his family. So what you say doesn't seem to fit because your explanation suggests there was a time where he would have considered God. But I know for a fact that he never did.

But, for the sake of argument, God did as you suggest. It would make sense then that God does this to every human because this man describes all non-elects to the exact definition. And "we/you and myself" know you don't believe in that. But if it did happen to him it will have happened to anyone like him.
No, it does not follow logically. Why would God have to do for every single human being what he did for that man? Don' you know that in Romans 9 it teaches us that God sovereignly took from ONE lump of dead, non-elect humanity and made them into a second lump for noble purposes? The text does not say he made the entire first lump into a second lump! There is very clearly TWO lumps of clay.

P.S. God did not do for Adam what he did for Eve, did he?