I agree that we need to repent ongoingly as Christians - often - but not because our salvation is at risk.
If your initial salvation required repentance (a change of mind) then your ongoing salvation requires continued repentance (a change of mind). Look back at post 346. Look at the contract. You say you are saved, ok. You say you have mercy, ok. Have you confessed and forsaken your sins? uhmmm.....
The ministries of John the Baptist and Jesus Christ are not the same - not by a long shot.
The baptism for repentance that John offered by no means gave salvation.
All salvation was in Christ. From Abraham to present.
The work of Jesus Christ stands alone.
If we are Christians then committing a sin does not cancel our salvation.
It doesn't cancel our salvation. Not confessing and forsaking them will. 2 Peter 3v9 [SUP]9 [/SUP]The Lord is not slack concerning His promise, as some count slackness, but is longsuffering toward us,[SUP][b][/SUP] not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance.
The unmistakable conclusion of what you are saying is that we have to repent in order to get our salvation back.
You have to repent in order to eat from the tree of life Revelation 2v7
Obviously, it seems you do not believe in assurance of salvation (and please do not come back at me with any nonsense about a license to sin).
Assurance of salvation is only available through faith. The walk of faith is victorious. Hebrews 3v18,19
I put it to you that either the work that Jesus Christ did on the cross is sufficient - or it is not.
It is sufficient to save, agreed. Do you understand the cross and His resurrection? Read Romans 6
If it is sufficient then it covers all sin.
All except the unforgivable sin
If it is not sufficient then we are all dead in our sins with no hope.
You are only without hope if you have rejected Christ, after having once believed (Hebrews 6v4-6)
There cannot be a situation as a Christian where only past sin is forgiven but future not.
I never said so. Future sin requires future confession and forsaking.
Yes, we are to forsake our sins and a lifestyle of sin, and yes, we are to repent as Christians, not because we will lose our salvation but because we seek a closer relationship with God.
Read post #346. No mercy otherwise.
No born again Christian is without sin at any time. Sin lives with us whether we like it or not - a lot of the behaviour on this forum rather proves the point!
Sanctification is the process that a Christian undergoes once born-again in order to become more Christ-like - it is not complete in this lifetime.
That's why we have Paul writing as he did in Philippians 3v12-16. Read it to understand.
And for this reason
we should never consider ourselves free of sin from the point of view of actually sinning.
Scripturally incorrect. See Romans 6
[SUP]6 [/SUP]knowing this, that our old man was crucified with Him, that the body of sin might be done away with, that we should no longer be slaves of sin.
[SUP]11 [/SUP]Likewise you also, reckon yourselves to be dead indeed to sin, but alive to God in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Salvation does free us from the consequences of sin but does not guarantee that we will not sin.