i havent read too many of the responses on this thread so forgive me if anything i say was brought up before . ive studied this subject thoroughly years ago and came to a lot of conclusions about it that go against both what people are taught and believe about the subject in todays churches. i didnt like the conclusions i had to come to but scripture demands them. to be honest, ive forgotten alot about this subject since i studied it because of health issues but without getting too involved with this discussion , i will say a few things that you need to think about.
when studying any biblical subject , first and foremost , ask yourself what you WANT the truth to be . almost always, the truth will be the opposite of what you WANT it to be. at least that has been my experience . we cant allow our own WANTS (lusts) to dictate what the truth is especially when it comes to scripture. if we do that , we are letting our lusts dictate what god's word says which can lead to a myriad of problems and we are in danger of being deceived by teachers who tell us what we want to hear instead of what we need to hear. 2timothy1-4
i hope you all use exegesis instead of eisegesis when you try to interpret the bible . as a general guide , exegesis is interpreting scripture by letting scripture say what it says and using scripture to interpret scripture . this doesnt allow your personal beliefs or presuppositions influence your interpretations. eisegesis is when you put your own bias and presuppositions into your interpretations. this is letting your WANTS/LUSTS influence your interpretations . which seems more likely the interpretive process that will lead you to the truth ?
ask yourself if you are asking the right questions . you may be asking the wrong questions which will inevitably lead you no where but more confusion on the matter and not get you to the truth.
after asking what you WANT the truth to be , ask what salvation means , when it happens , how we come to be saved , and what the sign or seal is of our salvation . those are starting questions . these questions alone will keep you busy for quite awhile. i speak from experience , lol.
then ask , are we literally saved when we come to the faith or only figuratively saved ? are we literally saved while on our walk with the lord or are we just figuratively saved ? are we literally saved on judgement day or are we figuratively saved ?
as we all should know there are no contradictions in the bible , otherwise god's word would be fallible . with that being said , how do you overcome the apparent contradiction when the word saved is used ? ie. has saved (past tense) 1timpthy1:9 titus3:5. we are saved (present tense) 2corinthians2:15 1corinthians1:1:18 we will/shall be saved (future tense) romans5:9-10 1corinthians3:15 . has been saved(meaning we have been saved already) we are saved (meaning we are presently saved) and we will/shall be saved(meaning we havent been saved yet) would all contradict each other. so when are we saved? if the word saved meant the same thing in all the above examples , there would be a contradiction .
for this apparent contradiction , if the word saved was always meant to be literal , then the contradiction stands . if its not always meant to be literal , but figurative in some instances when its used , we can answer the contradiction and clear it up.
another thing to consider is when the teaching of how we get "saved" to begin with started .(asking the lord into your heart and the sinners prayer etc). you will find it is only about 500 yrs old and has no examples whatsoever in scripture of anyone coming to the faith in that way . it doesnt explain the salvation of the thief on the cross at all . this does play a role in finding the truth on this subject.
also , ask when the once saved always saved theology started . it too is only about 500 yrs old .
those two facts alone should have you second guessing whether osas is biblical truth or not.
i havent gone too far into this subject here as im not sure i will be able to come back to this thread too often but i will try if need be .
i hope i havent confused you all more than you were already . i hope i have given you some things to think about and to ponder on the subject . i hope and pray that you all come to the knowledge of the truth on this and all biblical subjects . i will try to respond when i can . god bless !
when studying any biblical subject , first and foremost , ask yourself what you WANT the truth to be . almost always, the truth will be the opposite of what you WANT it to be. at least that has been my experience . we cant allow our own WANTS (lusts) to dictate what the truth is especially when it comes to scripture. if we do that , we are letting our lusts dictate what god's word says which can lead to a myriad of problems and we are in danger of being deceived by teachers who tell us what we want to hear instead of what we need to hear. 2timothy1-4
i hope you all use exegesis instead of eisegesis when you try to interpret the bible . as a general guide , exegesis is interpreting scripture by letting scripture say what it says and using scripture to interpret scripture . this doesnt allow your personal beliefs or presuppositions influence your interpretations. eisegesis is when you put your own bias and presuppositions into your interpretations. this is letting your WANTS/LUSTS influence your interpretations . which seems more likely the interpretive process that will lead you to the truth ?
ask yourself if you are asking the right questions . you may be asking the wrong questions which will inevitably lead you no where but more confusion on the matter and not get you to the truth.
after asking what you WANT the truth to be , ask what salvation means , when it happens , how we come to be saved , and what the sign or seal is of our salvation . those are starting questions . these questions alone will keep you busy for quite awhile. i speak from experience , lol.
then ask , are we literally saved when we come to the faith or only figuratively saved ? are we literally saved while on our walk with the lord or are we just figuratively saved ? are we literally saved on judgement day or are we figuratively saved ?
as we all should know there are no contradictions in the bible , otherwise god's word would be fallible . with that being said , how do you overcome the apparent contradiction when the word saved is used ? ie. has saved (past tense) 1timpthy1:9 titus3:5. we are saved (present tense) 2corinthians2:15 1corinthians1:1:18 we will/shall be saved (future tense) romans5:9-10 1corinthians3:15 . has been saved(meaning we have been saved already) we are saved (meaning we are presently saved) and we will/shall be saved(meaning we havent been saved yet) would all contradict each other. so when are we saved? if the word saved meant the same thing in all the above examples , there would be a contradiction .
for this apparent contradiction , if the word saved was always meant to be literal , then the contradiction stands . if its not always meant to be literal , but figurative in some instances when its used , we can answer the contradiction and clear it up.
another thing to consider is when the teaching of how we get "saved" to begin with started .(asking the lord into your heart and the sinners prayer etc). you will find it is only about 500 yrs old and has no examples whatsoever in scripture of anyone coming to the faith in that way . it doesnt explain the salvation of the thief on the cross at all . this does play a role in finding the truth on this subject.
also , ask when the once saved always saved theology started . it too is only about 500 yrs old .
those two facts alone should have you second guessing whether osas is biblical truth or not.
i havent gone too far into this subject here as im not sure i will be able to come back to this thread too often but i will try if need be .
i hope i havent confused you all more than you were already . i hope i have given you some things to think about and to ponder on the subject . i hope and pray that you all come to the knowledge of the truth on this and all biblical subjects . i will try to respond when i can . god bless !
Such a funny avatar for such a serious person!
I know everything you're talking about. What you say above has been one of my main reasoning points forever.
CHURCH HISTORY. Calvin coming about in the 1,500's. Accepting Jesus - when did this all start?
As you said, none of this is from the original church. The O.C. DID speak of believing in Jesus (the Greek Believing) and FOLLOWING Jesus and living to please God. The O.C. was VERY WORKS oriented. We don't like to hear about this today. It's rather scary to think that we have TO DO something to be saved or to continue being saved or to be saved in the end - which is when it counts.
Your post was very good and very thoughtful and very true.
I'd like to add that I don't object to all these modern versions of explaining the truth as long as the truth is within the explanation. I do object to those that call "works" a dirty word and treat it as such. To this I respond. Jesus clearly said we had to live a different life as evidenced in Mathew 5, just as an example. Paul also made this clear. Just believing (English believing) is not enough...
Thanks for such a refreshing post.
Fran