Tom Butler
New Member
I am newer in Reformed beliefs. So I pose these questions to all of you who have been down the road with this:
Jesus says that we come to Him because the Father draws us to Him, and states that no man can come to Him unless this takes place. John 6:44.
I take it that this is referring to salvation.
Can a person approach Jesus Christ, to be saved, and in turn, be rejected, because God had not drawn them? Does this happen?
No. They will not come until and unless they are drawn. Calvinists hold that the Holy Spirit draws the elect. Non-Cals believe that the Holy Spirit draws everybody.
Or, is it just a fact that whomever comes to Christ to be saved, came to Him because he or she was drawn to Him to do so, even though they may not know what this all meant, or maybe really never felt this drawing, only that they were lost and wanted to be saved?
This is what happened to me. As a nine-year-old, I had no concept of drawing, illumination, conviction, regeneration, etc. All I knew was that I suddenly saw my sin, and understood that I deserved hell because of it. Scared me to death. Then, all those sermons of "Jesus died for sinners just like you" came home to me, where they had meant nothing before.
So, could some people have believed on Him to eternal life, attend church, show fruits of a Christian, and yet be lost in their sins, because they approached God for salvation, uninvited?
No who approaches God for salvation approaches uninvited. Uninvited, he would not approach, nor would he want to.
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