If you want to discuss them one by one, we can do that. In the scripture below, Paul was speaking to believers.
Please explain your interpretation to what he is saying.
Gal. 5: 4 You are separated from Christ, you who are trying to be justified by law; you have fallen from grace.
First let me say that "interpretation" belongs to God alone by His very Word. What we are called to do is to "study" and "rightly divide" the word of truth.
Therefore to make sense, so to speak, of scripture one must take into consideration the full counsel of God's word when forming doctrine.
So the focus in this thread is "Can a true believer turn away from the faith?" When we qualify "believer" with the word "true" it is accepted that this means one who is born of God by the Holy Spirit. It is also accepted that there are those who just "say" they are believers but have never been born of God, this is why the poster qualified "believer" with "true". The poster accepts the fact that some professors of faith are not true or born again believers. This is important to remember because many passages that the insecurity believers post as saved then lost are in fact speaking about these false professors who were never born again to begin with. James is a good example of this.
So let's look at this verse you posted,
Gal. 5: 4 You are separated from Christ, you who are trying to be justified by law; you have fallen from grace.
Paul said in Eph 2 that we are saved by grace through faith and this NOT OF YOURSELVES, it is the gift of God. Paul makes it clear that we are saved totally by grace, there is NOTHING we done to justify our receiving God's grace. Absolutely nothing!
Some legalistic Jews wanted to accept Christ and at the same time still inforce the deeds of the law
as the means to salvation. These false teachers wanted to keep these "babes in Christ" under the bondage of the law.
I have a question for you Fignar;
You have been born of God, you know Jesus Christ as your personal Saviour, your spirit testifies with His Spirit that you are indeed a child of God. You also believe that obedience to God's laws,
not perfection, but running a good race, enduring unto the end, obeying commandments, that these things also justify your soul unto salvation and
without these things you will not be saved. Does this describe yourself?
If it does, and this verse means what you think it means (a loss of salvation), then I have bad news for you. You have fallen from grace and you cannot be saved, you who started in Christ and now are trying to be justified by the law.
Maybe this does not describe you. If not, let me ask you another question.
If we are saved by grace alone through faith (as Paul says in Ehp) and we mistakenly believe that we also must obey God's laws to be saved so we add this to our faith and practice, will we then be cut off from Christ for our ignorance, trying to be justified by deeds of the law as well as by Christ and His grace?
If Gal 5:4 says what you believe it says then by the word of God we must be cut off for holding these wrong views even though we trust that Jesus Christ is the one who saves us.
We have to agree on what the verse
cannot be saying before we can conclude on what it is saying.
So answer the questions above and see if "once saved, then lost" can logically be an interpretation for this verse.
Do you believe that works of the law will justify you? If so, Paul says you
have fallen from grace. Does this then mean that even though you trust in Jesus Christ for salvation, misguided views can cancel grace and make you lost again?
:jesus: