Did Jesus Die on The Cross for The Just/Elect/Saved Whose Names Are Written in The Book of Life OR

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Rufus

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Feb 17, 2024
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After we received His PERFECT justice?
How does God then view us?
As his undeserving children upon whom he lavished his precious love which motivated him to be merciful, compassionate and gracious to us for the sake of his Beloved Son. I have been born of God for over 40 years and to this day I still haven't found a text that says God saves any for their own sake! God does all things for his glory and for his Name's sake!
 

2ndTimothyGroup

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Feb 20, 2021
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Great OT passage! One of my favorites. I think, generally, there is a big assumption in the Church today that God didn't work effectually with his OT saints to bring them to faith and repentance. But that isn't the sense I get from the OT scriptures, generally, and certainly not from the passage you quoted. And there is a very intriguing and interesting passage in the Gospel of John that adds weight to and justifies my beliefs in this area.

John 14:16-17
16 And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Counselor to be with you forever— 17 the Spirit of truth. The world cannot accept him, because it neither sees him nor knows him.
But you know him, for he lives with you and will be in you.
NIV

I think many of us gloss over this kind of passage, forgetting that Christ and his disciples up until the Cross were under the Old Covenant. Jesus very plainly told his Old Covenant disciples that they KNEW the Holy Spirit because He lives WITH you -- which in some sense (that I admittedly don't understand) must differ from the Holy Spirit actually indwelling them. But the point remains: His Old Covenant disciples were still under the influence of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit of God was actively working among Christ's disciples and very likely all God-fearing Jews.

Whaddya think <g>?
Hello Rufus,

In my opinion, I believe that you understand things very well. I would offer you these questions that you may likely have already asked yourself:

How could Abel be the first true Prophet of God?
How could Job be considered Pure, Upright, and Blameless?
How could Abraham be our Father of Faith?
How could David repeatedly write and sing of his Righteousness and Purity? And more on David, why is Jesus said to be the Son of David, the Son of Abraham? What is the significance of this short genealogy of Christ? Is it relatively meaningless, or is Matt 1:1 incredibly significant in a deep and complicated Spiritual sense?

Of course, we could ask the same for all men and women considered to be examples of Faith. Hebrews 11 is the "Great Hall of Faith" chapter, all of whom are listed as genuine children of the Lord. How is this possible if Jesus had yet to live, die, and be raised from the dead?

Until about 7 years ago, I admittedly did not study the Old Testament, nor had I ever read it (completely), let alone read it in an timeline, chronological order, thus making it 100% impossible to know and understand the Story of God. But after finding myself in the restricted presence of the Lord (which nearly took my life - SO WONDERFUL!!), I realized that I needed to turn to our Bible so that I could know who this unbelievable God is that found and chose me. So, I began asking myself these questions and set out to discover the answers, and as I found over many thousands of hours of study, these questions, if answered, point us to the Saving Plan of Jesus Christ.

I believe that you are right, which is that God worked differently with people in the Old Testament, as He did in the New. But what about those in the New Testament who were clearly Indwelt by the Spirit before Jesus was born? For example, Zechariah and Elizabeth. In a sense, the NT stories before Christ should be viewed in the same circumstance as those of the Old Testament. But upon strong searching, there are plenty of Scriptures that state that humans were Indwelt by the Holy Spirit (in the OT). I would say that most people who do not study the OT, nor care to study it in a timeline, chronological order, will fight against the idea that the Saints were not Indwelt by the Holy Spirit. The evidence just doesn't allow for that belief.

One difference between the saints of the OT and the NT, is that after the Resurrection of Christ, we find that a Promise is made, which is that the Holy Spirit would [never] leave a person, which is a guarantee of what is to come. The significance of the guarantee is that the Holy Spirit, if a person has TRULY been given "Him," the Spirit will intercede, pray for, and even cause change within the Spiritually purchase believer that will cause them to never turn and fall away. There is no such guarantee in the Old Testament, and king Saul is the proof of this principle, for God takes responsibility for giving him this Spirit, but also takes responsibility for taking the Heavenly Spirit away and replacing it with an evil Spirit. As you suggested, people think that our God is different between the OT and NT, but I don't see any difference in His way at all, other than the OT does not have this Promise, while this Promise of the Spirit staying with the Elect does.

The Old Covenant has nothing to do with why Abraham is our Father of Faith. Absolutely nothing. The Law was given to those who had not received Abraham's Faith, thus the Law protected them until they could and would obtain this Faith. The Law was a worldly guardian that would protect them until Christ lived, died, and was Resurrected. The dead (their spirits) would be given a chance to put their Faith into Christ, which Scripture clarifies. But the Law of Moses has nothing to do with the Abrahamic Covenant. This Covenant is also called the Covenant of Circumcision, and it is the terms of this Covenant which the Lord had already been exercising in the Life of Abel, the first true Prophet of God. These terms were already being exercised in the lives of Abraham, Moses, Eldad and Medad, Caleb and Joshua, Samuel, David, Rahab the prostitute, and on and on. As Paul said in Ephesians Chapters 1 and 3, these details were kept hidden and remained "mysterious" until his day, when the Lord revealed these details to him so that he could unpack them. However, these things have been recorded by him, and other Holy men, in a way that they remain hidden today and only available to those who diligently ask, seek, and knock.

This Covenant of Circumcision points directly to Christ and the New Covenant. For, the terms of the Covenant of Circumcision are the EXACT same terms of the New Covenant, except for the fact that the Spirit will remain with the Elect and never depart. As far as I have been able to determine, this is the only difference between the Covenant of Circumcision established in Abraham in Genesis 17, and the New Covenant in Christ. Yes, it is the same Covenant! Again, the Old Covenant was a temporary Covenant that appeared in the middle of the Covenant of Circumcision, which never stopped . . . it has been in process from the very beginning, a beginning with Abel.

This explains why Abraham is our Father of Faith. This explains why all mentioned in Heb 11 are our examples of Faith. When these things make sense, all of a sudden, we realize that physical circumcision and water baptism are only symbols of something greater . . . and yes, that would be the symbol of a Circumcised heart. Circumcision is not only the fulcrum of our Faith, but it is also the fulcrum of the entire Bible. If we are Spiritually alive, it is because of the Circumcision of the Father, Son, and Spirit. If we are Spiritually dead, is because of the [lack] of this Spiritual Circumcision. This explains nearly all of Scripture. How can we Love according to 1 Cor Chapter 13, the Love Chapter, if our hearts have not been Circumcised of the Sinful Nature? How can we Love this way if we have not been released from the Curse, which is what it means to be released from Satan's captivity?

This is an EXTREMELY short summary of what the Bible says about what is required to be saved. So, have I offered anything that strikes a chord with you? Do these things resonate within your heart? My guess is that they do, otherwise I don't think that you would ask as you humbly have. But what about you? What do you think? Can you add anything to what I have offered? If so, I wouldn't be surprise, for as Jesus said, "The Scriptures point to me!"
 
Feb 10, 2024
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Hello Rufus,

In my opinion, I believe that you understand things very well. I would offer you these questions that you may likely have already asked yourself:

How could Abel be the first true Prophet of God?
How could Job be considered Pure, Upright, and Blameless?
How could Abraham be our Father of Faith?
How could David repeatedly write and sing of his Righteousness and Purity? And more on David, why is Jesus said to be the Son of David, the Son of Abraham? What is the significance of this short genealogy of Christ? Is it relatively meaningless, or is Matt 1:1 incredibly significant in a deep and complicated Spiritual sense?

Of course, we could ask the same for all men and women considered to be examples of Faith. Hebrews 11 is the "Great Hall of Faith" chapter, all of whom are listed as genuine children of the Lord. How is this possible if Jesus had yet to live, die, and be raised from the dead?

Until about 7 years ago, I admittedly did not study the Old Testament, nor had I ever read it (completely), let alone read it in an timeline, chronological order, thus making it 100% impossible to know and understand the Story of God. But after finding myself in the restricted presence of the Lord (which nearly took my life - SO WONDERFUL!!), I realized that I needed to turn to our Bible so that I could know who this unbelievable God is that found and chose me. So, I began asking myself these questions and set out to discover the answers, and as I found over many thousands of hours of study, these questions, if answered, point us to the Saving Plan of Jesus Christ.

I believe that you are right, which is that God worked differently with people in the Old Testament, as He did in the New. But what about those in the New Testament who were clearly Indwelt by the Spirit before Jesus was born? For example, Zechariah and Elizabeth. In a sense, the NT stories before Christ should be viewed in the same circumstance as those of the Old Testament. But upon strong searching, there are plenty of Scriptures that state that humans were Indwelt by the Holy Spirit (in the OT). I would say that most people who do not study the OT, nor care to study it in a timeline, chronological order, will fight against the idea that the Saints were not Indwelt by the Holy Spirit. The evidence just doesn't allow for that belief.

One difference between the saints of the OT and the NT, is that after the Resurrection of Christ, we find that a Promise is made, which is that the Holy Spirit would [never] leave a person, which is a guarantee of what is to come. The significance of the guarantee is that the Holy Spirit, if a person has TRULY been given "Him," the Spirit will intercede, pray for, and even cause change within the Spiritually purchase believer that will cause them to never turn and fall away. There is no such guarantee in the Old Testament, and king Saul is the proof of this principle, for God takes responsibility for giving him this Spirit, but also takes responsibility for taking the Heavenly Spirit away and replacing it with an evil Spirit. As you suggested, people think that our God is different between the OT and NT, but I don't see any difference in His way at all, other than the OT does not have this Promise, while this Promise of the Spirit staying with the Elect does.

The Old Covenant has nothing to do with why Abraham is our Father of Faith. Absolutely nothing. The Law was given to those who had not received Abraham's Faith, thus the Law protected them until they could and would obtain this Faith. The Law was a worldly guardian that would protect them until Christ lived, died, and was Resurrected. The dead (their spirits) would be given a chance to put their Faith into Christ, which Scripture clarifies. But the Law of Moses has nothing to do with the Abrahamic Covenant. This Covenant is also called the Covenant of Circumcision, and it is the terms of this Covenant which the Lord had already been exercising in the Life of Abel, the first true Prophet of God. These terms were already being exercised in the lives of Abraham, Moses, Eldad and Medad, Caleb and Joshua, Samuel, David, Rahab the prostitute, and on and on. As Paul said in Ephesians Chapters 1 and 3, these details were kept hidden and remained "mysterious" until his day, when the Lord revealed these details to him so that he could unpack them. However, these things have been recorded by him, and other Holy men, in a way that they remain hidden today and only available to those who diligently ask, seek, and knock.

This Covenant of Circumcision points directly to Christ and the New Covenant. For, the terms of the Covenant of Circumcision are the EXACT same terms of the New Covenant, except for the fact that the Spirit will remain with the Elect and never depart. As far as I have been able to determine, this is the only difference between the Covenant of Circumcision established in Abraham in Genesis 17, and the New Covenant in Christ. Yes, it is the same Covenant! Again, the Old Covenant was a temporary Covenant that appeared in the middle of the Covenant of Circumcision, which never stopped . . . it has been in process from the very beginning, a beginning with Abel.

This explains why Abraham is our Father of Faith. This explains why all mentioned in Heb 11 are our examples of Faith. When these things make sense, all of a sudden, we realize that physical circumcision and water baptism are only symbols of something greater . . . and yes, that would be the symbol of a Circumcised heart. Circumcision is not only the fulcrum of our Faith, but it is also the fulcrum of the entire Bible. If we are Spiritually alive, it is because of the Circumcision of the Father, Son, and Spirit. If we are Spiritually dead, is because of the [lack] of this Spiritual Circumcision. This explains nearly all of Scripture. How can we Love according to 1 Cor Chapter 13, the Love Chapter, if our hearts have not been Circumcised of the Sinful Nature? How can we Love this way if we have not been released from the Curse, which is what it means to be released from Satan's captivity?

This is an EXTREMELY short summary of what the Bible says about what is required to be saved. So, have I offered anything that strikes a chord with you? Do these things resonate within your heart? My guess is that they do, otherwise I don't think that you would ask as you humbly have. But what about you? What do you think? Can you add anything to what I have offered? If so, I wouldn't be surprise, for as Jesus said, "The Scriptures point to me!"
i applaude your candidness about the OT and it’s a great thing that you dug into it because everything in the OT is relevent to the NT and you cannot interpret the NT without understanding the OT. All that was and is still yet to be fulfilled was spoke by God through the prophets, the apostles understood the importance of the law and the prophets and i fear that most of todays christians misunderstand what they believe because they don’t hold to the law and the prophets for interpretation.

When the new covenant is mentioned by believers today, it is confusing to me as to how they interpret the promise spoken by jeremiah 31:

“Behold, the days come, saith the LORD, that I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah: 32Not according to the covenant that I made with their fathers in the day that I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt; which my covenant they brake, although I was an husband unto them, saith the LORD: 33But this shall be the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel; After those days, saith the LORD, I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts; and will be their God, and they shall be my people.”
Jeremiah 31:31-33

the hope of this covenant rests with israel, according to the flesh, Jesus being not only the one who fulfilled it but also the one who spoke it in the days of jeremiah, this hope being believed by the apostles who wrote the NT epistles. If we intend to keep the posterity of the scripture in tact then we would have to interpret the NT in the context of jeremiah 31

“For I could wish that myself were accursed from Christ for my brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh: 4Who are Israelites; to whom pertaineth the adoption, and the glory, and the covenants, and the giving of the law, and the service of God, and the promises; 5Whose are the fathers, and of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came,”
Romans 9:3-5

Considering this topic is so scripturally dense lets just start with reconciling how these scriptures can remain upheld by adding people who were not promised a new covenant or any covenant for that matter?
 

2ndTimothyGroup

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Feb 20, 2021
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i applaude your candidness about the OT and it’s a great thing that you dug into it because everything in the OT is relevent to the NT and you cannot interpret the NT without understanding the OT.
Oh, how I understand what you are saying! The first 49 years of my life I thought I was really something when it came to the Bible. And then . . . I was permanently humbled. No longer am I a "master" of anything, for being in the Presence of the Lord is a humbling thing and I realize that as a mere human, I could always be wrong, even when I think I am right. That said, I really do relate to your saying that the New Testament cannot properly be interpreted unless a person really studies and strongly desires to understand how the Scriptures point to Jesus.

i fear that most of todays christians misunderstand what they believe because they don’t hold to the law and the prophets for interpretation.
I believe that I understand what you're saying. And if I am correct, oh, how I agree with you! It seems that when a person is given the strong desire to fully understand the Law of Moses, and how it interfaces between the Old Testament and the New Testament is absolutely vital to understanding the full and complete Story of God. It . . . is . . . so . . . unbelievable! How our Powerful, Almighty God could ever come up with such a mind-boggling Plan is nothing short of a Miracle!

I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts; and will be their God, and they shall be my people.”
Jeremiah 31:31-33
Yes! What seems to escape nearly everyone is that this Promise as you pointed out in Jer 31:31-33, is the same Promise that God had already given to Abraham . . . including the Spirit!

Galatians 3:14 NLT - Through Christ Jesus, God has blessed the Gentiles with the same blessing he promised to Abraham, so that we who are believers might receive the promised Holy Spirit through faith.

Abraham received the Holy Spirit and that is the Promise made to the Gentiles, which occurred as of the Day of Pentecost.

If we intend to keep the posterity of the scripture in tact then we would have to interpret the NT in the context of jeremiah 31
You seem so wise! Thank you for these teachings, and I couldn't agree more!

Considering this topic is so scripturally dense lets just start with reconciling how these scriptures can remain upheld by adding people who were not promised a new covenant or any covenant for that matter?
Do you mean the Gentiles? If you do, I would say that they [were] indeed given this Promise. The below Scripture is difficult to understand, but when we grasp it, this too will help us to understand the Path to Salvation. It is not by the Law, meaning it is not by human works, but by the Promise of God. Just as God promised Abraham and Sarah a son through a Promise alone, so too, is Salvation for those outside of the Law. It is not by the works of man that we are saved, but it is by the Holy Works of the Son in whom we are Saved. Our Bible is so shocking and stunning!

Galatians 4:22-31 NLT - 22 The Scriptures say that Abraham had two sons, one from his slave wife and one from his freeborn wife. 23 The son of the slave wife was born in a human attempt to bring about the fulfillment of God's promise. But the son of the freeborn wife was born as God's own fulfillment of his promise. 24 These two women serve as an illustration of God's two covenants. The first woman, Hagar, represents Mount Sinai where people received the law that enslaved them. 25 And now Jerusalem is just like Mount Sinai in Arabia, because she and her children live in slavery to the law. 26 But the other woman, Sarah, represents the heavenly Jerusalem. She is the free woman, and she is our mother. 27 As Isaiah said, "Rejoice, O childless woman, you who have never given birth! Break into a joyful shout, you who have never been in labor! For the desolate woman now has more children than the woman who lives with her husband!" 28 And you, dear brothers and sisters, are children of the promise, just like Isaac. 29 But you are now being persecuted by those who want you to keep the law, just as Ishmael, the child born by human effort, persecuted Isaac, the child born by the power of the Spirit. 30 But what do the Scriptures say about that? "Get rid of the slave and her son, for the son of the slave woman will not share the inheritance with the free woman's son." 31 So, dear brothers and sisters, we are not children of the slave woman; we are children of the free woman.
 

Magenta

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Jul 3, 2015
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There is a reality that attends salvation. If you have been saved, you know it. You have become
a new creation. God has come to you personally and directly and you are not the same.
Do you mean that tyrant God who kidnaps people against their free will? The
one of some people's vile and wicked imaginations? Such strange folks in here.


You can only do, what you can only do! The rest is out of our hands.....
So true! I will continue to extol the love of the Father and be grateful for the loving kindness He extended toward me.
I understand more fully now how those who disparage Him while elevating the natural man do so at their own peril.



Psalm 145:20-21

Praise the Lord
:)
 

Genez

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Oct 12, 2017
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As his undeserving children upon whom he lavished his precious love which motivated him to be merciful, compassionate and gracious to us for the sake of his Beloved Son. I have been born of God for over 40 years and to this day I still haven't found a text that says God saves any for their own sake! God does all things for his glory and for his Name's sake!
"God saves any for their own sake! "

What does that mean to you? For their own sake???
 

PaulThomson

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Oct 29, 2023
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It's not unbiblical at all. First, you deny a well established law of logic -- The Law of Excluded Middle. If someone is dead, then they cannot be alive. If someone is in pain, then they cannot be painless. And in either of these cases, there is no middle! There is no third option. A person is either dead or alive. Or one feels pain or not. Period.
In logic, the law of excluded middle or the principle of excluded middle states that for every proposition, either this proposition or its negation is true.

This means something is either dead (by some definition), or not dead (by the same definition). Or something is alive (by some definition) , or not alive (by the same definition).

It does not mean something is either dead (by some definition), or alive (by some definition), unless one chooses to define dead as not alive. However, dead can have a range of meanings some of which are not diametrically opposed to alive. Being dead to the world does not mean one is not alive biologically.

Red is not blue. Something that is red cannot be also blue. Saying that it therefore follows that something that is not red must be blue, is the fallacy of the excluded middle/false dichotomy.

In common language. to qualify as bad, someone or something does not need to be completely bad: it can be partially damaged, but unsuitable for some particular function as it is. And to qualify as good, they may be partially damaged, but of sufficient use to do a job sufficiently well. It is the case that something being bad (in some sense), means it cannot be not bad (in the same sense). And something that is good (in some sense), cannot be not good (in the same sense).

But something bad (in some sense", can be partially good. And something good, can be partially bad. That's just how language is used. Jesus was speaking to ordinary human beings, not nit-picky theologians and philosophers. What did He expect His commoner audience to understand His words to mean? That is the meaning I am looking for to understand His statement. You seem o be looking for confirmation of the foundational theological premises of your system.
 

PaulThomson

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I'm not referring to people who have heard the Gospel, heard of Jesus, or heard of God. I asked about the large number of people throughout history who never did. How about them?
So, what does the Bible say about them? Citations are required.
 

PaulThomson

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Oct 29, 2023
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By the way, Mr. PT, here's a thought to stick in your bonnet and ruminate on with respect to the presence of sin in the eternal order:. Since ONE sin was enough to ruin and spoil the entire creation and impel God to put his three-fold curse upon all creation, then what would make heaven or the visible kingdom such a blessed hope if it were possible for any of God's elect angels or saints to once again ruin the new created order? Really? You really believe there is a possibility that sin could once again enter the universe, and that we'd all have to experience its pain, miseries, sorrows and even death again!? Since DEATH was the penalty of Adam's first sin, then what would make you think anything less than death would be the penalty for anyone's sin in the new order?

I don't know what kind of church you attend, or what your reading/study habits are but you are extremely weak in biblical orthodoxy! The numerous blessings and benefits of The Cross of Christ and his resurrection do indeed carry all the way through to eternity but not in a way you think. Rather, each of the three aspects of Salvation (Justification, Sanctification and Glorification) builds upon the previous ones -- with Glorification being the culmination and ultimate goal of salvation and truly being the blessed hope of all born again believers; for we know we'll be FREE FROM the presence of sin forever and ever. That's when we''ll finally and truly be FREE! From from all evil influences and controls from within and without -- just like Christ has always been!

You might also want to meditate on Rom 8:18-24.
I'm a Christian free-thinker. I let the Bible teach me, not the systematised claims devised by fallible men and designated by them as orthodoxy. Calling something orthodoxy does not make it truly orthodox. Orthodox means "right teaching".

As I mentioned earlier, there are different opinions on what sin causes. Does it cause God to recoil and withdraw from the sinner, because He is so holy that He will not allow Himself to be contaminated by contact with sin? In this regard, did Jesus keep His distance from unclean sinners and lepers, lest His perfection be spoiled? No. His holiness was more powerful than men's diseases and sins. Or does sin cause sinners to feel guilty and ashamed, so that they distance themselves and hide themselves from the Holy and Perfect One, mistakenly believing that God is rejecting them? That appears to be the case in the garden. Adam and Eve hid. God knew they had sinned, but was still coming near to them to meet with them to fellowship with them.

From my reading, I believe that eastern orthodoxy leans more toward the latter view; but western orthodoxy toward the former. Can they both be orthodox? Maybe both are only partly orthodox. I don't ask, "What does so-called orthodoxy prescribe?" I ask, "What do the scriptures say?

If the latter is the case, an occasional stumble by one saint from faith in heaven, in the light of the perpetual sacrifice, once for all (creatures and time) is not likely to infect and destroy the holiness of God and the other saints, and is not outside of the reach of the cross for the stumbler. We will not need to be enslaved to sin and destroyed by it any more. But that does not mean there will be no possibility of sin any more. My God is quite able to devise solutions to such problems in the ages to come. He has chosen not to give a lot of detail to us about the coming ages, but enough detail about the present age for us to navigate our way by that light into aeonous reconciliation with Him.
 

PaulThomson

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Thank you. This isn't about taking a deep breath. It is about helping others grow and mature. Further, I have cancer that "doctors" don't want to treat . . . for some reason. Their advice is strong: Eat Right and avoid all drama. Therefore, to avoid drama I put people on ignore. If people cannot understand that, well, what can I say?

Now, I'm really not all that important, so all of you can confirm this by stop talking about this crap and start loving each other.

Good grief, its as if a person needs a four-year collegiate degree to learn how to be nice when in reality, a person who possesses the Fruits of the Spirit proves that their teacher is God in Heaven.
At the risk of becoming guilty by association in the eyes of some, but with the compassion that desires your healing from cancer, I would recommend you take a look at Andrew Wommack Ministry and their freely available teachings on receiving divine healing. The Bible gives teaching on many other things besides circumcision of the heart, and give teaching on achieving victory in other issues we face by living in a fallen world, one of which is maintaining physical health..

I have received healing by applying those principles, but one does need to renew one's mind and thinking to learn and apply those principles.
 

PaulThomson

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I don't agree with you on who those verses include. But let's say you are right. What you are saying is that God loved people and never made it possible for them to get saved. He never manifested His love to them. And all they will ever know about God is His displeasure and judgment.
Salvation is reconciliation with God, which God has already shown His desire to provide, through the demonstration of His love and mercy and desire for fellowship toward sinners through the cross. In the cross, propitiation has been made for all people, whether they knowit or not. And since God reckons faith toward Him as righteousness, any person can achieve peace with God through acknowledging His invisible deity and power and trusting in His benevolence, even if they don't know the details of the mechanism for reconciliation as revealed in the gospel. They need the gospel to experience salvation from their personal lostness and anxiety, by receiving objective assurance of salvation through the revelation of the cross. They can be reconciled, without realising it, by trusting in God according to the light they have.

So, I disagree with you, God has always made it possible for people to get saved. I just think your opinions about what salvation is and how it is achieved are blinding you to that fact.
 

PaulThomson

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HeIsHere said:
Maybe you should answer this question, if God can efficaciously save one human being, why does He not save all?

Why has He chosen to create a world where some (many, most) perish, when He might have created a world where only one—or even none—perish? Why hell?

Not hard to answer. Because God is glorified in all His attributes equally. He is just as glorified in love, grace, and mercy as He is in justice, sovereignty, omnipotence, and righteousness.
God is most glorified as He is known. And the more He is made known, the greater He appears. To know only some of God is to worship Him partially. But to understand and know God in more of His true reality, is to worship Him more fully.
God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him. How are we fully satisfied in a God we only know partly. Eternal life is knowing God the Father and God the Son.
I can appreciate that people want a God who is only loving, and gracious, and merciful. But this is not the God of the Bible.
That in no way addresses the question you were asked.
 

PaulThomson

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False/heretical doctrine is the idol all heretics worship.
Heresy comes from haireO, to choose. Heretics demand people choose their sect, their doctrine, their pastor and leave other sects, doctrines and pastors, even when those other sects, doctrines and pastors are encouraging people to choose and put their trust in Christ, not their sect, their doctrine or their pastor. That sounds a lot like what calvinists do.
 

PaulThomson

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You ignore that all that natural men may know is of the existence of God. This is not experiential knowing which requires the Holy Spirit. The natural man does not have this.
The unregenerate may also consider his/her conscience as God guiding him/her in a good way, and may seek to live with as clean a conscience as possible, and may hope s/she will find mercy from God for his/her sins. But it is only through the objective facts of the gospel that one can be assured one is indeed forgiven and enter into God's rest.
 

PaulThomson

Well-known member
Oct 29, 2023
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It could have been avoided simply by God sending someone. He didn't. God isn't working in all places at all times. Where He is working, it isn't hard to discern. When God is doing what only God can do, it must be God
I find it hard to believe that everything God does is obviously God working. What scripture tells us that?
 

selahsays

Well-known member
May 31, 2023
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What about those who die before hearing? Even the phrase "witness to all the nations" qualifies the term "world"; for the text doesn't say that the gospel will be a witness to each and every person in each and every nation. Therefore, we should understand "world" as be used in the limited sense.
Matthew 24:14: And this gospel of the kingdom will be preached in all the world as a witness to all the nations, and then the end will come.

world:
οἰκουμένη

The word οἰκουμένη generally refers to the world of Hellenic culture - more or less the Roman Empire in the 1st century - and not all of mankind. It is sometimes translated as "inhabited earth", but is maybe better translated as "empire" (i.e. the Roman Empire). One verse that makes this sense of the word clear is Acts 19:27 -

... that the temple of the great goddess Diana should be despised, and her magnificence should be destroyed, whom all Asia and the world[οἰκουμένη] worshippeth (KJV)​
Perhaps what is relevant is that in ancient times people were not as cognizant of distant lands as they are today, so that the extent of the Empire was essentially the same for them as the extent of the whole world.

Other examples of οἰκουμένη in this sense from the New Testament:

Luke 2:1​
And it came to pass in those days, that there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus, that all the world [οἰκουμένη] should be taxed.

Acts 24:5​
For we have found this man a pestilent fellow, and a mover of sedition among all the Jews throughout the world [οἰκουμένη], and a ringleader of the sect of the Nazarenes:


the nations:

1484. ethnos
Strong's Concordance​
ethnos: a race, a nation, pl. the nations (as distinct from Isr.)

Original Word: ἔθνος, ους, τό
Part of Speech: Noun, Neuter
Transliteration: ethnos
Phonetic Spelling: (eth'-nos)
Definition: a race, a nation, the nations (as distinct from Israel)
Usage: a race, people, nation; the nations, heathen world, Gentiles.
HELPS Word-studies
1484 éthnos (from ethō, "forming a custom, culture") – properly, people joined by practicing similar customs or common culture; nation(s), usually referring to unbelieving Gentiles (non-Jews).​
 

TMS

Senior Member
Mar 21, 2015
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Australia
The original question....
Who did Jesus die for?

Everyone, all

His blood covers everyone, no limit to the number.
But we are only covered if we accept by faith the gift He gives.

If ever human that has ever lived are judged as saved then the blood of Jesus would save them all.
If only a few are judged as saved then the blood of Jesus will cover them.

We are judged and the blood applied or not applied depending on the verdict.

Jesus wants to save all.

If the unconverted sinner was permitted to enter heaven, with so much unselfish love around them, they would feel like an alien (out of harmony). They would be a discordant note in the melody of heaven. Heaven would be to them a place of torture; They would welcome destruction, that they might be hidden from the face of Jesus who died to redeem them.

It is our choice... Jesus has done all to save all.

2Pe 3:9 The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.
 

notmyown

Senior Member
May 26, 2016
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Can you provide us hint as to who's who?
well, my poetic sister, i'd put you in the first group, and myself in the second.

it's why i can't post day after day in a thread like this. after a while, i'd become discouraged and frustrated and my goal would shift to be more about me and less about others. until He corrects that in me, i avoid the temptation.

i believe our Lord cares about WHY we do what we do. motive matters, you know? :)