The Kerygma - God's Requirement for Salvation

  • 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.

GWH

Groovy
Oct 19, 2024
2,994
680
113
Someone unfamiliar with the OT might ask, “Why did God’s plan of salvation include the gruesome death of Messiah?” The answer is that Jesus’ death not only fulfilled OT prophecies of a “prophet” like Moses (DT 18:15) and a “suffering servant” (IS 53), but it also completed and ended the Mosaic sacrificial system, as explained in Hebrews 7:18-10:1. It is logical to believe that an all-loving God’s plan of salvation would be just, the best and save the most. Paul taught (in RM 5:6-11) that the crucifixion of Jesus not only manifested God’s love but also provided the way for Him to forgive sins justly without abrogating free will and abetting sin.

Jesus bore the just consequences of the sins of all humanity (called “atonement”) so that those who truly repent can receive forgiveness rather than having to experience those consequences or hell. We must underline the word “truly”, however, because God’s free grace is not cheap or unjust, allowing evil to go unpunished (cf. MT 7:21, 2TM 2:19, TIT 1:16). A person cannot play games with God, who knows the heart (GL 6:7-10, HB 4:12-13). Jesus is the only person qualified to be Messiah and atone for others’ sins, because he was innocent of sin even though tempted like every human (HB 4:15, 5:7-9 & 6:26-28).

Anyone who thinks God should punish each individual for his/her own sins thinks too highly of himself and too little of the holiness of God. Even though some sins, such as murder, seem worse than others quantitatively, because they cause more obvious harm, all sin—even that of omission (JM 4:17)—is evil qualitatively and equivalent to murder for being diametrically opposed to the perfect will of God (JM 2:10-11). Thus, while it might seem that the just consequence for your own sins would be a hell much less horrible than for someone like Hitler, all ungodly souls are on Satan’s side and cannot earn heaven by trying to be good without cooperating with God. So instead of seeking salvation our own way, it is wise to be grateful for grace and ask for clarification of one’s (mis)understandings in heaven.

Because perfect justice is not attained during this earthly existence, there is a resurrection and judgment (HB 9:27-28), when those who serve the Spirit of love (although imperfectly, PHP 3:12) are separated from demonic souls who do not even want to try to cooperate with the Holy Spirit (MT 25:31-46). Otherwise, there would be no ultimate justice and the entire biblical revelation would make no sense (1CR 15:14&19). If atheists/evil-doers remained unconscious after death, such ignorance would be relative bliss and morality would be nullified (ECC 2:12-17). Thus, hell (as a potential destiny) as well as heaven is good (part of the DOD)!

The horror of self-condemnation for serving Satan is this: apparently the misery of hell does not motivate genuine repentance. Thus, God abandons people assigned to hell or second death (RV 20:6, RM 1:28-32), because they are hopelessly corrupt (JN 6:44). This destiny is eternal for anyone whose sins are infinite. For the rest, after justice is accomplished hell will end in destruction or non-existence per the following passages:

JN 17:12, “None has been lost except the one doomed to destruction so that Scripture would be fulfilled.”

RM 9:22, “What if God, although choosing to show his wrath and make his power known, bore with great patience the objects of his wrath—prepared for destruction?”

GL 6:8a, “Whoever sows to please their flesh, from the flesh will reap destruction.”

PHP 3:19a, “Their destiny is destruction.”

2THS 1:9a, “They will be punished with everlasting destruction.”

2PT 3:7, “By the same word the present heavens and earth are reserved for fire, being kept for the day of judgment and destruction of the ungodly.”
 
Oct 19, 2024
2,994
680
113
The good news (Gospel) is that God has provided a Way for sinners to be saved from suffering and destruction and to be resurrected to eternal life in heaven. The desire for eternal joy is not selfish but rather the proper motivation for attaining immortality the right way. What hope is more credible than the Christian Gospel? None! And who is a better candidate for Christ/Messiah than Jesus of Nazareth? No one! (CL 1:15-20) If history evolved in a way that produced a false gospel and pseudo-Christ, all truthseekers want to know, but why choose to doubt the reality of a loving God, revealed by Jesus, who provides eternal joy in heaven until this hope is disproved or discredited? I prefer to doubt such doubts, because if Christianity is true, then life is not a farce.

This concludes my explanation of the Christian creed and related topics (the Gospel, kerygma, GRFS, etc.). I have tried to be succinct so that busy readers who are investing valuable time in mining for spiritual gold will be rewarded with a rich vein. My hope is that truthseekers who are working the puzzle of reality will find many truisms that will elicit shouts of “Eureka!” An obvious truism that needs to be mentioned is that the happy ending has not happened yet! In between conversion and heaven, God allows our journey to go through various places we would rather not visit: the ghost town of job loss, the quarantined ghetto of disease, the burning village of divided families. History can be viewed as a long “King of the Hill” struggle (KOTH).

But let us take heart from the words of Paul (in PHP 4:12-13: “I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation… I can do everything through him who gives me strength.” I think Paul’s secret is to treat every negative experience as an opportunity for learning some truth that will help us to become stronger persons and better witnesses for Christ. Financial problems teach us to value spiritual riches and to rely on God (1TM 5:6-10), physical ailments teach us to appreciate a healthy immortal life in heaven (2CR 12:7-10), and unhappy relationships motivate us to resist the devil, even though we feel as if God has forsaken us (JM 4:7-10, MT 27:46).
 
Oct 19, 2024
2,994
680
113
2 Timothy 3:7 - always learning but never able to come to a knowledge of the truth.
Yes, which is why when Paul went “every Sabbath to the synagogue, trying to persuade Jews and Greeks” (ACTS 18:4)! “He witnessed to them from morning till evening, explaining about the kingdom of God, and from the Law of Moses and from the Prophets he tried to persuade them about Jesus.” (ACTS 28:23b)...

“Some were convinced by what he said, but others would not believe. (ACTS 28:24) They disagreed among themselves and began to leave..."

So Paul made this final statement: The Holy Spirit spoke the truth to your ancestors when he said through Isaiah the prophet, “You will be ever hearing but never understanding; you will be ever seeing but never perceiving, for this people’s heart has become calloused.” (ACTS 28:25-27a)

I had not realized the connection between Acts 28:23-27 and 2 TM 3:7 before, so thanks.
(I will add that to my website :^).... Done (to the Creed lesson, third paragraph).
 
Oct 19, 2024
2,994
680
113
The paradoxical truth is that Believers experience joy despite KOTH or suffering (1PT 4:13). While not desiring to suffer or praying for problems, mature Christians have a Christ-like attitude so that tribulations only make them merely joyful rather than overjoyed! Christians are joyous because they realize that suffering is only for a season and for good reason:
  1. Pain and sickness due to mortality teach us to center our lives on God and the hope of immortality,
2. Pain resulting from sinful behavior leads the wise to conform to the character of Christ (HB 12:4-11, RM 8:29),

3. Relying on God’s grace and truth in the midst of undeserved troubles glorifies Christ (2CR 4:7-11) and shows the value of LGW,

4. Troubles serve to keep mature saints humble (2CR 12:7-12), and

5. God’s Holy Spirit comforts those who suffer and thereby demonstrates His love (MT 5:4, 2CR 1:3-4).

As Paul wrote (in RM 5:3-4), “We also rejoice in our sufferings (KOTH), because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.

Our hope is that we gain heaven (PHP 1:21), which is worth any grief occasioned by Faith (1PT 1:6-9, 2CR 4:16-18, HB 12:2).
Yes, this life is not heaven yet, although our continual prayer is for God’s will to be done on earth in our lives, but I encourage you to keep on believing God and resisting evil (JM 4:7) until God’s kingdom comes.
Do not be discouraged, but rather relax and rest in God’s love as you remember what is really important in life.
Have joy despite adversity because of hope!