Not By Works

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mailmandan

Senior Member
Apr 7, 2014
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Same writer, same people, same subject, and same letter, in which 'partakers of Christ' means saved people in the first passage but all of a sudden 'partakers of the Holy Spirit' means not really saved people in the second passage?
As I already shared with you in post #116,551, in regards to partakers of the Holy Spirit, the word translated “partaker” can certainly refer to a saving partaking in Christ, as we read in Hebrews 3:14, yet it can also refer to a less than saving association or participation. See Luke 5:7 and Hebrews 1:9 - "comrades, companions," which describes one who shares with someone else as an associate in an undertaking. These Hebrews who fell away had obviously in some aspect shared in the ministry of the Holy Spirit, but in what way? There are other ministries of the Holy Spirit which precede receiving the indwelling and sealing of the Holy Spirit, who is the guarantee of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession. (Ephesians 1:13-14) Believers are sealed unto the day of redemption. (Ephesians 4:30) So if these Hebrews who fell away were previously saved, then why didn't the writer of Hebrews use conclusive terms that these individuals were "indwelled by the Holy Spirit" or "sealed by the Holy Spirit" or have "received the Spirit's pledge which is the guarantee of future inheritance?" That would certainly settle the issue.

Those who fall away absolutely could have been affiliated closely with the fellowship of the church. Such people certainly may have experienced sorrow for sin, heard and understood the gospel and have given some level of assent to it and have become associated with the work of the Holy Spirit while around believers and have tasted the heavenly gift and the powers of the age to come. The Holy Spirit convicts the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment. (John 16:8) Such people obviously have been exposed to the true preaching of the word of God, yet have simply tasted and stopped there. Just as in Matthew 27:34 we see that those crucifying Jesus "offered Him wine to drink, mingled with gall; but when he tasted it, he would not drink it." *Do we merely "tase" into one Spirit or drink into one Spirit? (1 Corinthians 12:13). Think about it.

People who have experienced all of these factors may be genuine Christians, yet these factors alone are not enough to give conclusive evidence that the beginning stages of the Christian life (repentance unto life, regeneration, salvation, justification, adoption etc..) have taken place for those who fell away. The experiences in Hebrews 6:4-6 are all preliminary to those decisive beginning stages of becoming a Christian, yet are still at a crossroad in which some draw back to perdition after receiving the 'knowledge' of the truth and do not believe to the saving of the soul, as we see in (Hebrews 10:26-39)

*Also see Hebrews 4:1 - Therefore, since a promise remains of entering His rest, let us fear lest any of you seem to have come short of it. (compare with Hebrews 12:15 - ..comes short of the grace of God) 2 For indeed the gospel was preached to US as well as to THEM; but the word which THEY heard did not profit THEM, not being mixed with faith in those who heard it. 3 For WE who have believed do enter that rest..

*Hebrews 6:9 sums it up for me. The writer is speaking to those truly saved (the BELOVED). He says that even though he speaks like this concerning THOSE types of people, He is convinced of better things concerning YOU. Things that ACCOMPANY SALVATION. Thorns and briars and falling away permanently do not accompany salvation and are not fruits worthy of authentic repentance. In this metaphor relating to agriculture, those who receive final judgment are compared to land that bears no vegetation or useful fruit, but rather bears thorns and thistles. (Jesus makes a connection with wolves in sheep clothing and thorn bushes and thistles in Matthew 7:16). We see in scripture where good fruit is a sign of true spiritual life and a lack of good fruit is a sign of false believers (Matthew 3:8-10; 7:15-20; 12:33-35) so we have an indication that the evidence of one's spiritual condition is the fruit they bear.

These certain individuals who fall short of obtaining salvation certainly may have become partakers of the Holy Spirit in His pre-salvation ministry, convicting of sin and righteousness and judgment to come by tasting the good word of God and temporarily responding to His drawing power which is intended to ultimately lead sinners to Christ, yet Genuine believers who have believed the gospel are sealed in Him with the Holy Spirit who is the guarantee of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession/unto the day of redemption. (Ephesians 1:13-14; 4:30) Losing salvation would contradict that.

Take care, brethren, that there not be in any one of you an evil, unbelieving heart that falls away from the living God. 13But encourage one another day after day, as long as it is still called “Today,” so that none of you will be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin. 14For we have become partakers of Christ, if we hold fast the beginning of our assurance firm until the end - Hebrews 3:12-14 NAS
4For in the case of those who have once been enlightened and have tasted of the heavenly gift and have been made partakers of the Holy Spirit, 5and have tasted the good word of God and the powers of the age to come, 6and then have fallen away, it is impossible to renew them again to repentance - Hebrews 6:4-6 NAS
Again, partakers can have less than saving association or participation, as in Hebrews 6:4-6, as I already thoroughly explained in post #116,551 but you have your agenda and simply ignore the context and give it a broad brushed application in order to suit what your itching ears want to hear. I've seen people do the same thing with the word, "sanctified." They give it a broad brushed application of "saved" and apply that to Hebrews 10:29, yet after reading this verse in context, we see a different picture, as I already explained to Ralph in post #112 from this thread. - https://christianchat.com/bible-discussion-forum/osas-house-built-on-sand.178412/page-6#post-3670271

I've heard more than one person refer to you as "Ralph." Are you the previous member "Ralph" who has returned to Christian Chat with a different avatar name? :unsure: Anyway, I've seen people give the word "justified" a broad brushed application and erroneously teach that "justified by works" in James 2:24 means "saved by works." It's critical that we rightly divide the word of truth and properly harmonize scripture with scripture before reaching our conclusion on doctrine. Otherwise, we end up with contradictions in scripture and false doctrine.

I know we are in the end of the end times and the leaven has worked it's way far into the dough, but we need to come back to the simplicity of the plain words in the Bible. We have these latter times theologians telling us what these plain words really mean, not what they plainly say and mean.
There have been good and bad theologians from the beginning and in these latter times.

Reminds me of what the Scribes and the Pharisees did to the word of God in their day. They interpreted it for the common man so that in the end you came away with it not really meaning what it said (to the comfort of many), and so it lost it's original meaning, practicality, and application and in the end drew the people of God away in the opposite direction God was drawing them in. And in this case it's drawing people away into the false comfort of unbelieving, godless, disobedient lives--totally unprepared for the return of Christ. And now this latter day teaching of Calvin has changed into the belief that you do not have to die a believer to be saved when Jesus returns. You personally, mailmandan, may not have taken Calvin's already heretical teaching to this new level of heresy, but countless others have.
So you blame everything on Calvin. As I said before, I find it interesting that ALL false religions and cults teach salvation by works AND strongly oppose OSAS, which has always been a red flag for me.
 
Dec 6, 2019
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That is exactly what I believe.
The difference between me and you, perhaps, is I believe that we are to keep ourselves in the grace and ministry of Jesus that keeps us. And we do that through the exact same believing and trusting in Christ that got us there in the first place.


Calling the requirement to continue to believe in the grace of God a work of the flesh is what I completely and totally resist in the once saved always saved doctrine.

And, of course, I resist the latest trend in once saved always saved circles that says you can even stop believing altogether and literally go back to unbelief and you are still saved.
As you can see from my posts, I do not believe a believer will die in a state of unbelief. Hebrews 3:6 and Hebrews 3:14 would be two texts that support believers keep believing.
 
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Actually, that's not true.
A little study in church history will show you that once saved always saved was not embraced by the generations immediately following the Apostles. What happened is the Apostles teaching has been over time interpreted as once saved always saved. It's a later intrusion into the doctrine of the church. It took 1500 years for it to be an official part of the church, and that happened only because there was a split in the church.

Sorry to burden anyone with long videos, but I think this (and other videos) is worth watching if you really want to know the truth about the church we live in today, and which we think believes and behaves exactly the way God wants us to.


I came to the conclusion that once saved always saved was at the very least a suspect doctrine by simply starting out my journey with God as a Christian largely in the scriptures themselves and not on the popular doctrinal teachers and their teachings of the day, and so I could see that what it taught did not line up with what the Bible actually taught in it's totality regarding this subject.
I was being sarcastic when I said the apostles taught OSAS every time they preach. My point was, osas was not preached as something you were required to believe to be saved. What they did was preach repentance towards God and faith in Jesus, and teaching of doctrine came afterwards to the convert. So salvation is instant, but learning of correct doctrine takes years.
 
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As you can see from my posts, I do not believe a believer will die in a state of unbelief. Hebrews 3:6 and Hebrews 3:14 would be two texts that support believers keep believing.
I will add to this "despite the fact that a believer MAY fall for a season, but I believe that God has and uses means to restore the backslider in heart and life. If he didn't, I wouldn't be here today."
 
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eternally-gratefull

Guest
I see the mindset of the Pharisees saying, I thank God, I am not like others. :(
You must have looked in the mirror then

this is what we all see every time you start falsely accusing people of loving sin, having a gospel that excuses sin, and every other false accusation you have made against us.
 
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eternally-gratefull

Guest
I will add to this "despite the fact that a believer MAY fall for a season, but I believe that God has and uses means to restore the backslider in heart and life. If he didn't, I wouldn't be here today."
I was a prodigal son for 5 years,

I never doubted God was my father.

in fact I felt him those whole 5 years begging me to come home.

i lost faith in my life and the church, not God
 
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I was a prodigal son for 5 years,

I never doubted God was my father.

in fact I felt him those whole 5 years begging me to come home.

i lost faith in my life and the church, not God
The fact that a person does not lose faith in God is because they are one of Jesus' sheep. The prodigal is the same as the one of 99 that wandered away, and the Shepherd went out and recovered him.
 
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That is exactly what I believe.
The difference between me and you, perhaps, is I believe that we are to keep ourselves in the grace and ministry of Jesus that keeps us. And we do that through the exact same believing and trusting in Christ that got us there in the first place.


Calling the requirement to continue to believe in the grace of God a work of the flesh is what I completely and totally resist in the once saved always saved doctrine.

And, of course, I resist the latest trend in once saved always saved circles that says you can even stop believing altogether and literally go back to unbelief and you are still saved.
The apostles themselves called us to continue in faith. Acts 14:22. I do not disagree with you that we are called to continue in the faith. I do disagree with you on some things, one being the statement that Christ stops mediating for you if you don't keep believing. I believe we are kept by the mediation of Christ, not that we keep the mediation of Christ by continued belief.

I was a prodigal son for years. Jesus did not stop interceding for me. The fact that Jesus continued to intercede for me is the reason that my fall was not permanent.
 
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Not a bad argument.
But I'm fairly certain that Calvinism says that God purposely creates you as one who will love God, and purposely creates others who won't love God. You're saying Calvinism says God simply moves the blocks out of the way for some people to love God and doesn't move them out of the way for others, but if he did, they would love Him too.
I would use the word "recreates" not creates. We do not naturally love God. As I said in an earlier post, it comes supernaturally. We love, because He first loved us.
 
Nov 16, 2019
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was wondering what you thought of Discern's post -

'holding fast the confidence' -- what confidence is this? certainly not 'confidence in the flesh' ((Philippians 3:1-4))
It's the confidence in the surety of Christ's ministry, as opposed to the ministry of the Levites. This is all detailed in the book of Hebrews. I don't have time to post references right now. But maybe you can scan my old posts where I have.

- whatever this is in Philippians 3:9 'a righteousness not of my own' that 'is through faith' it is the opposite of vv. 5-6.
is this something '
self-maintained' ?
The 'faith' part itself (the ability to know what you can't see is true - Heb. 11:1) is the gracious gift of God. Without it no one can know the gospel is true for them to even do anything with it. It is through that gift of faith--that gift of knowing--that the righteousness of God apart from the righteousness of the law is bestowed on a person.

The believing part--the trusting part--is your part. We place our trust in that which God has proven to us is true through the supernatural gift of 'knowing' he has given u;s. He does the proving part through the testimony of the Holy Spirit. We do the trusting part in response to the testimony he has given. God does not do the believing part for us. He encourages it, but he does not actually do the trusting part. That is what it means for the righteousness you receive from God comes to you through faith.

...is it the same confidence as expressed in Philippians 1:6, "being confident of this very thing" -- that "He who began a good work in you is faithful to complete it" ?
Yes.
Christ's ministry is able to stay the course and do for you what it claims it will do for you. So don't abandon it.

i thought when you replied to that post you went off track a bit griping about whatever 'calvinism' is, instead of talking about the scripture that was brought up. i don't want to talk about -isms and -ologies, but about Christ, and the Bible.
Continuance of faith without any input from you IS Calvinism. You can't talk about this subject without invariably examining the 'automatic' nature of faith and salvation, and the person who invented it, in it's present 'Calvinistic' form.

There are too many admonitions in the Bible for YOU to keep believing for it to be someone else, or something else doing that believing and persevering for you. Encouraging you to do it, yes. Actually doing it for you, no.

If this isn't sinking in just yet, consider this: Is simply knowing about the gospel sufficient to save a person? No. But that is the very definition of 'faith'--the conviction and assurance of something you can't see (Hebrews 11:1). Just knowing if the gospel is true is not what saves you. What saves you is believing and trusting in the gospel you now know to be true through God's gift of faith. See the difference?

By definition, faith 'alone' is 'knowledge alone'. That will not save you. But faith that is not alone but has the footsteps commensurate with believing in what that faith has shown you, THAT is the 'faith' that saves.

Can't be late for work....gotta run....
 
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eternally-gratefull

Guest
The fact that a person does not lose faith in God is because they are one of Jesus' sheep. The prodigal is the same as the one of 99 that wandered away, and the Shepherd went out and recovered him.
i doubt most people even think about osas or this argument.
 
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eternally-gratefull

Guest
The apostles themselves called us to continue in faith. Acts 14:22. I do not disagree with you that we are called to continue in the faith. I do disagree with you on some things, one being the statement that Christ stops mediating for you if you don't keep believing. I believe we are kept by the mediation of Christ, not that we keep the mediation of Christ by continued belief.

I was a prodigal son for years. Jesus did not stop interceding for me. The fact that Jesus continued to intercede for me is the reason that my fall was not permanent.
I am sure you were also chastened also, I know I was
 

Melach

Well-known member
Mar 28, 2019
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The 'faith' part itself (the ability to know what you can't see is true - Heb. 11:1) is the gracious gift of God. Without it no one can know the gospel is true for them to even do anything with it. It is through that gift of faith--that gift of knowing--that the righteousness of God apart from the righteousness of the law is bestowed on a person.

The believing part--the trusting part--is your part. We place our trust in that which God has proven to us is true through the supernatural gift of 'knowing' he has given u;s. He does the proving part through the testimony of the Holy Spirit. We do the trusting part in response to the testimony he has given. God does not do the believing part for us. He encourages it, but he does not actually do the trusting part. That is what it means for the righteousness you receive from God comes to you through faith.
lolz ok. so faith is the gift of God but the believing part is your part then you end with "that is what it means for the righteousness you receive from God comes to you through faith."

:eek::eek::eek:
 
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I about fell out of my chair recently when I heard John McArthur say believing couldn't possibly be how you stay saved because that would be works (or something along that line). I had listened to him for years back when I first got saved and had a lot of respect for him. Not anymore. I can't listen to him anymore.
You're most likely taking him out of context. If you're going to accuse, you should provide the persons actual statement, in context, instead of the ambiguous remarks above. :)
 
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EleventhHour

Guest
I will add to this "despite the fact that a believer MAY fall for a season, but I believe that God has and uses means to restore the backslider in heart and life. If he didn't, I wouldn't be here today."
He didn't do that for Ananias and Sapphira.
 
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EleventhHour

Guest
As you can see from my posts, I do not believe a believer will die in a state of unbelief. Hebrews 3:6 and Hebrews 3:14 would be two texts that support believers keep believing.
Believers are saved and stayed saved because they have been declared innocent/justified by God which he does not revoke based on a one time belief in the sufficiency of Christ's one time work...not by their behavior after being saved.