Requirements of Salvation

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Jan 12, 2019
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The entire bible is inspired by God. Study of all of it is necessary to get a correct understanding. (2 Timothy 3:16)
Yes, but you obviously ignore certain instructions because you know they are not directed to you correct?
 
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The healing of lepers -- salvation from certain death. This is the redemption from Miriam's judgment; no one but Naaman - the gentile Syrian - had ever been healed of leprosy before.
So how does one get saved at that time?
 

hornetguy

Senior Member
Jan 18, 2016
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These Gentiles in Acts 10:43-47 had already believed, received the gift of the Holy Spirit and spoke in tongues (spiritual gift which is only for the body of Christ - 1 Corinthians 12) BEFORE they were baptized in verse 48.
as we have discussed before.... this is a "one time only" event... the gentiles were given the Holy Spirit to PROVE to the Jews that they were acceptable to God. They were not allowed to be baptized before this. Once it was proven to the Jews that God accepted them, Paul insisted they should be baptized. In water, by the way.... this is not the normal "sequence" of events.... as you know.
 

hornetguy

Senior Member
Jan 18, 2016
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as we have discussed before.... this is a "one time only" event... the gentiles were given the Holy Spirit to PROVE to the Jews that they were acceptable to God. They were not allowed to be baptized before this. Once it was proven to the Jews that God accepted them, Paul insisted they should be baptized. In water, by the way.... this is not the normal "sequence" of events.... as you know.
sorry... edit... it was Peter, not Paul. too many things on my mind right now.
 

hornetguy

Senior Member
Jan 18, 2016
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proves nothing...the resurrection was a 'one time only event' yet quite pertinent.
well, of COURSE it's pertinent, but it does not establish how the process works. This one time event was an anomaly. You cannot claim that's how it will work for everyone, because this was a singular, special purpose event.
 
Jan 12, 2019
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as we have discussed before.... this is a "one time only" event... the gentiles were given the Holy Spirit to PROVE to the Jews that they were acceptable to God. They were not allowed to be baptized before this. Once it was proven to the Jews that God accepted them, Paul insisted they should be baptized. In water, by the way.... this is not the normal "sequence" of events.... as you know.
I agree with you it was a one time only event. After this incident, Peter had no scriptural record of him ever going to the Gentiles to preach again.

What do you think was the Holy Spirit's objective in prompting him three times to go to the unclean Gentiles then?
 

BlessedCreator

Active member
Apr 22, 2020
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what about my question - why does He ask if He will find faith, rather than if He will find "strict obedience" ?
Because faith is ultimately what He is looking for. Without obedience you can't have it.
 
Jan 12, 2019
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Because faith is ultimately what He is looking for. Without obedience you can't have it.
You are correct there. Putting your faith in God requires you to obey what God says to you (Hebrews 11)

Under the Law of Moses, God told all the Jews they needed to follow the Law (Exodus 19:4–6). If they don't obey his instructions, they cannot be said to have faith in God.

But do you think its the same for us in the Body of Christ now?
 

EternalFire

Well-known member
Jan 3, 2019
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So you are just going to ignore, "your money perish with you, because you thought that the gift of God could be purchased with money! and you have neither part nor portion in this matter, for your heart is not right in the sight of God.” Simon needed to repent of his wickedness and was poisoned by bitterness and bound by iniquity. This wickedness that Simon committed was from a heart that was not right with God. So the answer to your question is NO. I have not committed any wickedness from a heart that was not right with God since I believed and was baptized because I truly believe the gospel and my heart has been right with God ever since based on believing in Christ and receiving forgiveness of sins. That doesn't mean that I have never sinned at all since then, which is not the same thing as committing wickedness while bound by iniquity from a heart that is not right with God.
This conversation has moved way beyond whether belief and baptism are required for salvation. I am by no means excusing Simon’s wickedness. It is exactly as Peter describes it.

I didn’t ask you to compare yourself with Simon. I asked you whether you committed any wickedness after believing and being baptized.
 

BlessedCreator

Active member
Apr 22, 2020
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You are correct there. Putting your faith in God requires you to obey what God says to you (Hebrews 11)

Under the Law of Moses, God told all the Jews they needed to follow the Law (Exodus 19:4–6). If they don't obey his instructions, they cannot be said to have faith in God.

But do you think its the same for us in the Body of Christ now?
Yes we are are under the law, though a different law than what the Israelites were.

James 2:12 KJB
"So speak ye, and so do, as they that shall be judged by the law of liberty."

The law of liberty is the law we are under.
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"On the phrase, "the law of liberty," see the notes at James 1:25. Compare the notes at James 4:11. The meaning is, that in all our conduct we are to act under the constant impression of the truth that we are soon to be brought into judgment, and that the law by which we are to be judged is that by which it is contemplated that we shall be set free from the dominion of sin. In the rule which God has laid down in his word, called "the law of liberty," or the rule by which true freedom is to be secured, a system of religion is revealed by which it is designed that man shall be emancipated not only from one sin, but from all. Now, it is with reference to such a law that we are to be judged; that is, we shall not be able to plead on our trial that we were under a necessity of sinning, but we shall be judged under that law by which the arrangement was made that we might be free from sin. If we might be free from sin; if an arrangement was made by which we could have led holy lives, then it will be proper that we shall be judged and condemned if we are not righteous. The sense is, "In all your conduct, whatever you do or say, remember that you are to be judged, or that you are to give an impartial account; and remember also that the rule by which you are to be judged is that by which provision is made for being delivered from the dominion of sin, and brought into the freedom of the gospel." The argument here seems to be, that he who habitually feels that he is soon to be judged by a law under which it was contemplated that he might be, and should be, free from the bondage of sin, has one of the strongest of all inducements to lead a holy life."‐ Barnes commentary on James 2:12
 
Jan 12, 2019
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Yes we are are under the law, though a different law than what the Israelites were.

James 2:12 KJB
"So speak ye, and so do, as they that shall be judged by the law of liberty."

The law of liberty is the law we are under.
___________________________
"On the phrase, "the law of liberty," see the notes at James 1:25. Compare the notes at James 4:11. The meaning is, that in all our conduct we are to act under the constant impression of the truth that we are soon to be brought into judgment, and that the law by which we are to be judged is that by which it is contemplated that we shall be set free from the dominion of sin. In the rule which God has laid down in his word, called "the law of liberty," or the rule by which true freedom is to be secured, a system of religion is revealed by which it is designed that man shall be emancipated not only from one sin, but from all. Now, it is with reference to such a law that we are to be judged; that is, we shall not be able to plead on our trial that we were under a necessity of sinning, but we shall be judged under that law by which the arrangement was made that we might be free from sin. If we might be free from sin; if an arrangement was made by which we could have led holy lives, then it will be proper that we shall be judged and condemned if we are not righteous. The sense is, "In all your conduct, whatever you do or say, remember that you are to be judged, or that you are to give an impartial account; and remember also that the rule by which you are to be judged is that by which provision is made for being delivered from the dominion of sin, and brought into the freedom of the gospel." The argument here seems to be, that he who habitually feels that he is soon to be judged by a law under which it was contemplated that he might be, and should be, free from the bondage of sin, has one of the strongest of all inducements to lead a holy life."‐ Barnes commentary on James 2:12
You said we, and distinguished us from the Israelites, but then you use James.

Isn't James directing his letter to the 12 tribes scattered abroad in the very first verse of his epistle?

Aren't the 12 tribes Jews too? You regard James as writing to the Body of Christ?

Why not used Paul's letters?
 

crossnote

Senior Member
Nov 24, 2012
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___________________________
"On the phrase, "the law of liberty," see the notes at James 1:25. Compare the notes at James 4:11. The meaning is, that in all our conduct we are to act under the constant impression of the truth that we are soon to be brought into judgment, and that the law by which we are to be judged is that by which it is contemplated that we shall be set free from the dominion of sin. In the rule which God has laid down in his word, called "the law of liberty," or the rule by which true freedom is to be secured, a system of religion is revealed by which it is designed that man shall be emancipated not only from one sin, but from all. Now, it is with reference to such a law that we are to be judged; that is, we shall not be able to plead on our trial that we were under a necessity of sinning, but we shall be judged under that law by which the arrangement was made that we might be free from sin. If we might be free from sin; if an arrangement was made by which we could have led holy lives, then it will be proper that we shall be judged and condemned if we are not righteous. The sense is, "In all your conduct, whatever you do or say, remember that you are to be judged, or that you are to give an impartial account; and remember also that the rule by which you are to be judged is that by which provision is made for being delivered from the dominion of sin, and brought into the freedom of the gospel." The argument here seems to be, that he who habitually feels that he is soon to be judged by a law under which it was contemplated that he might be, and should be, free from the bondage of sin, has one of the strongest of all inducements to lead a holy life."‐ Barnes commentary on James 2:12
Interesting, Alexander MacLaren states this...

An old tradition tells us that James, who was probably the writer of this letter, continued in the practice of Jewish piety all his life. He was surnamed 'the Just.' He lived the life of a Nazarite. He was even admitted into the sanctuary of the Temple, and there spent so much of his time in praying for the forgiveness of the people that, in the vivid language of the old writer, his ' knees were hard and worn like a camel's.' To such a man the Gospel would naturally present itself as 'a law,' which word expressed the highest form of revelation with which he was familiar; and to him the glory of Christ's message would be that it was the perfecting of an earlier utterance, moving on the same plane as it did, but infinitely greater.

Now that, of course, is somewhat different from the point of view from which, for instance, Paul regards the relation of the Gospel and the Law. To him they are rather antitheses. He conceived mainly of the law as a system of outward observances, incapable of fulfilment, and valuable as impressing upon men the consciousness of sin.

But, though there is diversity, there is no contradiction, any more than there is between the two pictures in a stereoscope, which, united, represent one solid reality. The two men simply regard the subject from slightly different angles. Paul would have said that the gospel was the perfection of the law, as indeed he does say that by faith we do not make void, but establish, the law. And James would have said that the law, in Paul's sense, was a yoke of bondage, as indeed he does say in my text, that the gospel, in contrast with the earlier revelation, is the law of liberty.

And so the two men complement and do not contradict each other. In like manner, the earnest urging of work and insisting upon conduct, which are the keynote of this letter, are no contradiction of Paul. The one writer begins at a later point than the other. Paul is a preacher of faith, but of faith which works by love. James is the preacher of works, but of works which are the fruit of faith.
 
Jan 12, 2019
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Interesting, Alexander MacLaren states this...

An old tradition tells us that James, who was probably the writer of this letter, continued in the practice of Jewish piety all his life. He was surnamed 'the Just.' He lived the life of a Nazarite. He was even admitted into the sanctuary of the Temple, and there spent so much of his time in praying for the forgiveness of the people that, in the vivid language of the old writer, his ' knees were hard and worn like a camel's.' To such a man the Gospel would naturally present itself as 'a law,' which word expressed the highest form of revelation with which he was familiar; and to him the glory of Christ's message would be that it was the perfecting of an earlier utterance, moving on the same plane as it did, but infinitely greater.

Now that, of course, is somewhat different from the point of view from which, for instance, Paul regards the relation of the Gospel and the Law. To him they are rather antitheses. He conceived mainly of the law as a system of outward observances, incapable of fulfilment, and valuable as impressing upon men the consciousness of sin.

But, though there is diversity, there is no contradiction, any more than there is between the two pictures in a stereoscope, which, united, represent one solid reality. The two men simply regard the subject from slightly different angles. Paul would have said that the gospel was the perfection of the law, as indeed he does say that by faith we do not make void, but establish, the law. And James would have said that the law, in Paul's sense, was a yoke of bondage, as indeed he does say in my text, that the gospel, in contrast with the earlier revelation, is the law of liberty.

And so the two men complement and do not contradict each other. In like manner, the earnest urging of work and insisting upon conduct, which are the keynote of this letter, are no contradiction of Paul. The one writer begins at a later point than the other. Paul is a preacher of faith, but of faith which works by love. James is the preacher of works, but of works which are the fruit of faith.
Actually Acts 21:20-25 clearly stated that James disagree with Paul about law-keeping, for Jews who believed. To James, its straightforward, Jews who believe must continue to keep the Law, faith without works for them is dead. The Book of James was written years before that event.

But he is very willing to excuse Gentiles who believed, from the Law of Moses, as established in the conclusion of Acts 15.
 

BlessedCreator

Active member
Apr 22, 2020
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The epistle of James is clearly meant to reach Christians.

James 2:1 KJB
"My brethren, have not the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Lord of glory, with respect of persons."

To claim that James taught that Jews were to keep the law is unscriptural and contrary to the the will of God. Of which the Holy Bible is all the inspired words of God (66 books in the KJB). God taught no such thing. God is the author of the Bible, not man.
 

crossnote

Senior Member
Nov 24, 2012
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Actually Acts 21:20-25 clearly stated that James disagree with Paul about law-keeping, for Jews who believed. To James, its straightforward, Jews who believe must continue to keep the Law, faith without works for them is dead. The Book of James was written years before that event.

But he is very willing to excuse Gentiles who believed, from the Law of Moses, as established in the conclusion of Acts 15.
Well if you believe Paul wrote the Letter to the Hebrews (now why would an Apostle to the Gentiles write such a letter?). It would be a scathing attack on what you consider James position. Personally, I have my doubts that James preached keeping the law to new Jewish converts. That would require him to circumcise the males in his congregation and continue with animal sacrifices etc. I see no contradiction between James' teachings and Paul's. Do you?
 
Jan 12, 2019
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Well if you believe Paul wrote the Letter to the Hebrews (now why would an Apostle to the Gentiles write such a letter?). It would be a scathing attack on what you consider James position. Personally, I have my doubts that James preached keeping the law to new Jewish converts. That would require him to circumcise the males in his congregation and continue with animal sacrifices etc. I see no contradiction between James' teachings and Paul's. Do you?
Paul stated clearly in Galatians 5:2 that "Indeed I, Paul, say to you that if you become circumcised, Christ will profit you nothing."

So if you believe that Paul was preaching the same gospel as James, and both Jews and Gentiles are to follow that same gospel, then the point made in Acts 21:21 must be correct

21 And they are informed of thee, that thou teachest all the Jews which are among the Gentiles to forsake Moses, saying that they ought not to circumcise their children, neither to walk after the customs.

Obviously James still believed in circumcision having value to the Jews, otherwise, the elders and him would not have mentioned vs21.
 
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So there was no need for Jews to keep the Law of Moses during the time where Jesus was in the flesh?
Keeping the Law never saved them to begin with. Keeping the Law never saved anyone my friend. What you are asking is a non-sequitur. :)