I just searched does the bible teach you can lose your salvation and this is what I got
No, the Bible does not teach that you can lose your salvation. The Bible's doctrine of eternal security teaches that those who are truly saved will persevere until the end. This is also known as "once saved, always saved" or "the security of the believer
Some reasons why the Bible teaches that you cannot lose your salvation include:
- You didn't earn it: Salvation is not earned, and it's not earned back.
- God will preserve you: If you have true saving faith, God will preserve you.
- The Good Shepherd searches for the lost: The Good Shepherd will find the lost sheep and bring it home safely.
If I may, I would like to supplement what you said:
Ephesians 1:13 In whom ye also trusted, after that ye
heard the word of truth,
the gospel of your salvation: in whom also after that ye
believed,
ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise...
Ephesians 4:30 And grieve not the holy Spirit of God,
whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption.
To say that one can lose salvation, that lays down a false foundation of understanding that the
seal of Holy Spirit is weak, and therefore subject to breakage to the point of loss. That clearly is an invention of man to try and paint a portrait of a weak god who is incapable of holding into to those who have placed their faith in his works for them. That system of thought makes salvation a works-based process rather than the instantaneous and permanent reality that it is within scripture.
When a permanent seal is placed on one by Deity, what can possibly break or weaken it from the strength of human effort? We both agree that there is no such power on earth or in Heaven.
I have yet for any of the defenders for the alleged loss of salvation to point out one person who has ever lost his or her salvation. It's like shadow boxing...never being hit by your own punches.
One fella some months ago claimed that HE had lost his salvation at some point in the past. When I asked him how he knew he had lost it, he pointed only to his moral conduct and attitudes during that stretch of his life...with his never once realizing that he was STILL making salvation a matter of personal effort and works for not only acquiring it, but to also maintaining it through self-effort. He even went so far as to claim that the Lord has to empower one to maintain it through effort. Asking him to show scriptural proof of all that was a fruitless endeavor in the face of all his references from the Bible that, in context, and the intended audience, simply did not at all support his presuppositions.
MM