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Is God Able To regenerate sinners before their faith in Christ?

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You misunderstood.

I stated clearly that all that process takes place IN Christ. I agree that there is no life outside of the only one who is "The Life."

I did not misunderstand anything; I knew what you meant, and I disagree with your assessment. In Christ means what it says, in Christ, nothing more, nothing less. One can not be in a regenerated state and not have salvation, and one can not have salvation, and not be in a regenerated state. IOW, one is not regenerated and then given life down the road. Salvation comes in one lump sum.




Again, I don't disagree. What you state is true. The fact is that the believer is chosen long before they ever come to an intellectual awareness. That choosing isn't man generated, and there is no "sinner's prayer" that magically opens heaven's ears.


I agree with you in regards to the "sinner's prayer", such as the "repeat after me" yucky prayer. Now, I do believe in praying to God, asking Him to save them from their sins. Again, it states chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world. How can a sinner be in Christ, while being a sinner at that time? When we are saved, we are placed in Christ, and inherit His election. He was/is God's chosen vessel, and election starts and stops with Him.


Salvation isn't based upon the proclamation of man. There are those who say if you don't say a certain prayer a certain way, you aren't saved. NOT!!!! Salvation is determined by God. Man's new nature cannot help but cry out at birth, just as the believer cannot. However, does the baby cry out before actual birth? Are they any less a baby? The vocal birth of the believer doesn't mean there was no existence as a child of God from "the foundations of the world."


Salvation is of God is correct, I agree 100%. But, man isn't given a new nature until they are saved and placed in Christ. This is when the "new man" comes in, and they then walk in the newness of life. One can not walk in the newness of life w/o salvation taking place in their life.





I disagree.

Paul talks about salvation as a continual process. The baptists have long held to the condition of the believer as: Have been saved, Am saved, Will be saved.


:confused: Salvation is a continual process? Wow!! Look, I am as much saved now, as I was the very instant He saved me. You can not be placed deeper in Christ than we are now. Granted, I am stronger in faith, and by His grace, I have more knowledge, but my salvation hasn't increased one iota. If I am blessed to live another 20 years, I will not be any more saved than I am now. Granted, with His help, my faith will be stronger and my knowledge deeper, but my salvation was completed May 24th, 2007.

Certainly we do not Crucify Christ again. But, Paul said he died daily, crucified the flesh, and other such terms that showed a need to continually walk in the Spirit so as not to fulfill the lusts of the flesh. The same is as a child after birth. They don't go repeating the birth, but show by continued breathing, feeding, crying... that they are alive.


I agree with this. But this child HAS life, which is evidence of a birth taking place. This birth takes place the very instant salvation comes into a sinner's life.


The new birth doesn't mean we are grown up. Both Paul and Peter instructed that we are to add to the faith that God gave us. This doesn't mean the faith is enlarged, it means that the faith is adorned with precious character items that make us more and more Christ like.

Correct, when we are saved, we are new born babies in Christ, and not before.

Again, the regeneration and salvation are ongoing. The conception is the merely the start.


My salvation is secure in God's hand, who raised me from a dead state of sin(seperated from God) to a lively hope(being placed in Christ, therefore restoring communion with God). I do not understand what you mean by the word "ongoing", please explain.




Ah, but again there is a misunderstanding. Look at the work of the Holy spirit to the world - sin, righteousness, judgment. God doesn't have to "show us" our lost condition, it is already known. Instead, knowing we have no ability to conceive salvation nor the new life, God plants those in us, to grow and to bring us to express sinfulness and His great salvation.


God works with us through the Spirit, showing us our fallen state. Those who willfully receive Him, will be saved.

From the moment that God starts this process we are "in Christ." Remember Jesus prayer? "Father all that you have given me..." Where the disciples, disciples, before they new they were disciples? Yes. For God had given them to Christ. They just didn't know it. It was already a done deal from God to Christ.

Nope. One can not be made alive and then placed in Christ @ a later date. That is like darkness having communion with Light. It can't be done. Remember, the Spirit hadn't been given to anyone until after Jesus breathed upon them, and they received the Spirit(John 20:22). So they were given to Christ, which is correct, but they got the Spirit later, after Jesus was resurrected. Now, those who are saved, get the Spirit at that very moment, and placed in Christ.






I disagree. Every man is a sinner even after salvation. That is the waring that takes place between the old nature and the new creature created in Christ Jesus.

"Every man is a sinner"?? :confused: I am not a sinner. I am a CHRISTian saved by God's Grace, and I am no longer a sinner. That's like saying I am a CHRISTian that is still in darkness. Sorry, but I am saved by His Grace. I am not perfect, but I am not a sinner now.

The Holy Spirit has no fellowship with the old nature, that is true. But Christ lives in me and so does the old nature that still desires the things of the flesh.

Man does not have two natures. The Spirit comes in, and drives the wicked one out. Satan and his minions may buffett your flesh, but you only have one nature, and that is bent towards God.





No disagreement.
Hallelujah!!



Just asking, but when God saved you, are you sure it wasn't at the foundations of the world and you just accepted the fact on May 24th because God was impressing his claim upon your living?

Nope. If I was saved at the foundation of the world, then Christ did not die for me. Again, that's like saying that darkness has communion with Light.

The reason I ask is because some folks place the ability of accepting (and also rejecting) as their choice. But as I have looked at the Old Testament prophets, and the New Testament believers there doesn't seem to be any "ability indicators." People were chosen because God chose them.

Choose you this day whom you will serve(Joshua 24:15). I set before you a blessing and a curse. Therefore Choose life(Deut. 30:19).

Just because you were "for ordained" doesn't diminish the importance of the experience of accepting Christ. Each experience of a believer accepting Christ is unique to that believer which demonstrates at least two things.

First, that we are not clones and robots to God. He comes to us as individuals, creating in us individually, molding us to fit His purpose that others can't fit. He is the master builder with unique plans for each believer.

Second, that God wants us to know the sinfulness of sin and the graciousness of His salvation. I am convinced the deeper the conviction the more God becomes the Lord of our lives.


Christ was "foreordained", and we who are saved, are grafted into His "foreordainment". Election starts and ends with Jesus Christ. Please read John 15 and His illistration of the vine and branches. The Jews were in the Vine(Jesus), and due to there being no fruit(unbelief), those branches were cut out of that Vine. Then we(Gentiles) were grafted into the Vine.





I like your phone illustration. It shows that God does the calling.

You are also correct (in my opinion) about the many who will be lost. "Broad is the way..."

They will be lost because they are like Adam at the fall. When face to face with the very God that he before had walked, talked, and had fellowship in the cool of the evening as no man has ever done (except Christ) he blamed, excused and argued. God poured out the Holy Spirit on the whole world, and the world is without excuse.


I agree that those who die lost have no excuse. When they knew God, and did not recognize Him as God, their foolish hearts were darkened. It's those who reject God's calling that will die lost.
 
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Not at all, brother. I didn't find anything tha you have written offensive, and in any case I make point of never being offended on a discussion forum. If I got over-animated in any response I may have made, I apologize.


Good! :thumbs: No, you have been nothing but civil towards me, as well. I will bow out of a thread when the mud gets to slinging on here. I am not a politician, and I will not sling mud, nor will I have it slung at me, either.

I think you need to separate the initial workings of the Spirit from the New Birth. As I suggested above, there is an implantation of human life at conception, but a birth des not follow until nine months later. I think that if you ask around, you will find that very few people go from complete scepticism and unbelief to repentance and faith in an instant. More usually, one goes through stages of awakening, when one suddenly finds an interest in spiritual things, and conviction, when one becomes aware of one's sinful status, before one comes to the point of repentance and faith. Hearing the word of God is always crucial in conversion, of course, but as I say, people very seldom go from unbelief to conversion in one sermon.


I agree that the Spirit does this to a lost person. I agree with this 100%. But, it's the Spirit that draw us to Christ, Christ then applies His blood to our soul when He places us in Him. The Spirit then comes in and takes up His abode. Notice that the Spirit only draws at first. He doesn't take up His abode until Jesus cleanses that soul with His blood, and then the Spirit comes in takes up His abode, and then leads them unto all truths. I have stated it something like this; "The Spirit only goes as far as the blood of Jesus goes. Where the blood stops, He stops". IOW, the Spirit doesn't indwell the lost because they do not have the blood applied tp their soul. I pray that that illistration didn't lose you.


I have given a more detailed response to all this, and an answer to your question, on the Does the Holy Spirit draw the unsaved to Christ?
thread.

Steve

I read that post, and I agreed with most of it. The part you wrote about regeneration is what I disagreed with. As if you didn't know. :laugh:


i am I AM'S!!

Willis Fletcher, Jr.
 
Brother Steve,

To put what I have driving at in it's simpliest terms is this. There in not one unregenerated sinner that has the Spirit within them. The Spirit only dwells in the ones who have been cleansed by the blood of Christ. Without the Spirit, there is no Spiritual life.


I hope that this makes it easier to see where I am coming from.

Love you Brother Steve!!

Willis
 

Martin Marprelate

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Brother Steve,

To put what I have driving at in it's simpliest terms is this. There in not one unregenerated sinner that has the Spirit within them. The Spirit only dwells in the ones who have been cleansed by the blood of Christ. Without the Spirit, there is no Spiritual life.


I hope that this makes it easier to see where I am coming from.
Thank you for that, Willis. It makes it a little difficult to see where we go from here. Perhaps we shall have to agree to disagree. God will continue to save sinners in His own way, regardless of what we think about it.

My problem is that under your scheme I cannot see how people get saved. Before they are converted they do not have the Spirit in any sense. Right? But 'The natural man does not receive the things of God.' So how can such a man hear the Gospel and respond to it? God must first open their hearts, as He did Lydia's before they can believe the Good News. Under your scheme, there is no such thing as a 'seeker;' one moves from being dead in trespasses and sins to being fully converted in an instant.

I gave Zacchaeus as an example on the other thread. Consider now Nicodemus. Something is drawing Nicodemus towards Jesus. The other Pharisees are incensed by His cleansing of the Temple (John 2:13ff). The great hatred of the Jewish authorities towards our Lord has alsready started and will culminate in His arrest and execution. But something is drawing Nicodemus. He is terrified of being seen calling on Jesus, but he is being 'irresistibly drawn' so he goes by night, hoping no one will see him.

I say that God is drawing Nicodemus to Christ by His Spirit. But Nicodemus is not yet converted. He can't understand at all what Jesus is saying to him. 'How can these things be?' He cries. He hasn't got a clue, and Jesus tells him that he needs to be born again. There is a work on his heart started, but it isn't finished yet.

Or take Lydia. Here's a lady who has pesumably abandoned paganism and is now a 'God-fearer.' She attends the local synagogue whenever she's in a place where there is one, and hears the preaching. What drew her to do that? I say that it was God the Holy Spirit. But she is not yet converted; she knows nothing of Christ. God brings Paul to Philippi to bring the word to her, but notice that she can't respond to the word in her own strength, nor can Paul make her respond to is preaching, wonderful though it must have been. It was God who opened her heart so that she could respond. She was already awakened to the things of God, maybe she was already convicted of her sin (we're not told); but she still needed a further work of grace on her heart.

Well, that's all I can do. I think I shall leave this topic now unless there is any point of clarification that you would like. All I would do in closing is to refer you to the Puritans who write on this subject, like John Owen and Thomas Goodwin, or to Louis Berkhof's Systematic Theology. You may not agree with them, but at least you will see that my position is not without support.
Love you Brother Steve!!
And I you, Willis. God bless you in your work for Him.

Steve
 

quantumfaith

Active Member
Thank you for that, Willis. It makes it a little difficult to see where we go from here. Perhaps we shall have to agree to disagree. God will continue to save sinners in His own way, regardless of what we think about it.

:thumbsup::thumbsup::thumbsup:

Wonderful, what a breath of fresh air. Thank you
 

Alive in Christ

New Member
I gave Zacchaeus as an example on the other thread. Consider now Nicodemus. Something is drawing Nicodemus towards Jesus. The other Pharisees are incensed by His cleansing of the Temple (John 2:13ff). The great hatred of the Jewish authorities towards our Lord has alsready started and will culminate in His arrest and execution. But something is drawing Nicodemus. He is terrified of being seen calling on Jesus, but he is being 'irresistibly drawn' so he goes by night, hoping no one will see him.

I say that God is drawing Nicodemus to Christ by His Spirit. But Nicodemus is not yet converted. He can't understand at all what Jesus is saying to him. 'How can these things be?' He cries. He hasn't got a clue, and Jesus tells him that he needs to be born again. There is a work on his heart started, but it isn't finished yet.

Yes. Its exactally that. God has done the "drawing" part, as he does with literally everyone born into this world.

The ball is now on Nicodemus's court. Nicodemus has a decision to make.

And we know that he made the correct choice.
 

Winman

Active Member
The scriptures do not support anyone receiving the Spirit until after they believe.

Acts 19:2 He said unto them, Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed? And they said unto him, We have not so much as heard whether there be any Holy Ghost.

Paul's question here is nonsensical if he believed that a person had to receive the Holy Spirit in order to be enabled to believe.

Gal 3:2 This only would I learn of you, Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith?

Paul's question here demands the answer that these Galatians received the Spirit by hearing and believeing the gospel.

Acts 2:38 Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.

Peter told these Jews they had to repent and believe on Jesus for the forgiveness of sins and THEN they would receive the Holy Spirit.

Jn 7:38 He that believeth on me, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water.
39 (But this spake he of the Spirit, which they that believe should receive: for the Holy Ghost was not yet given; because that Jesus was not yet glorified.)

Many people believed on Jesus, but none of them received the Spirit until Jesus rose from the dead. The apostles all believed on Jesus except Judas (Jn 2:11), but they did not receive the Holy Spirit until Jesus breathed on them after the resurrection (Jn 20:22).

A person must believe on Jesus to receive the Spirit, Calvinism teaches the exact opposite of scripture.
 

percho

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
The scriptures do not support anyone receiving the Spirit until after they believe.

Acts 19:2 He said unto them, Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed? And they said unto him, We have not so much as heard whether there be any Holy Ghost.

Paul's question here is nonsensical if he believed that a person had to receive the Holy Spirit in order to be enabled to believe.

Gal 3:2 This only would I learn of you, Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith?

Paul's question here demands the answer that these Galatians received the Spirit by hearing and believeing the gospel.

Acts 2:38 Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.

Peter told these Jews they had to repent and believe on Jesus for the forgiveness of sins and THEN they would receive the Holy Spirit.

Jn 7:38 He that believeth on me, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water.
39 (But this spake he of the Spirit, which they that believe should receive: for the Holy Ghost was not yet given; because that Jesus was not yet glorified.)

Many people believed on Jesus, but none of them received the Spirit until Jesus rose from the dead. The apostles all believed on Jesus except Judas (Jn 2:11), but they did not receive the Holy Spirit until Jesus breathed on them after the resurrection (Jn 20:22).

A person must believe on Jesus to receive the Spirit, Calvinism teaches the exact opposite of scripture.

Winman I agree with you here and I believe without looking back I may have implied Spirit before belief concerning Saul/Paul. God calls and the sheep hear and believe. Take the disciples for example. Jesus called them. They believed but were not indwelt with the Spirit until after his glorification just as it says in John 7.

Jesus called Saul, Saul heard and believed and was indwelt with the Spirit three days later.

I stand corrected.
 
The scriptures do not support anyone receiving the Spirit until after they believe.

Acts 19:2 He said unto them, Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed? And they said unto him, We have not so much as heard whether there be any Holy Ghost.

Paul's question here is nonsensical if he believed that a person had to receive the Holy Spirit in order to be enabled to believe.

Gal 3:2 This only would I learn of you, Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith?

Paul's question here demands the answer that these Galatians received the Spirit by hearing and believeing the gospel.

Acts 2:38 Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.

Peter told these Jews they had to repent and believe on Jesus for the forgiveness of sins and THEN they would receive the Holy Spirit.

Jn 7:38 He that believeth on me, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water.
39 (But this spake he of the Spirit, which they that believe should receive: for the Holy Ghost was not yet given; because that Jesus was not yet glorified.)

Many people believed on Jesus, but none of them received the Spirit until Jesus rose from the dead. The apostles all believed on Jesus except Judas (Jn 2:11), but they did not receive the Holy Spirit until Jesus breathed on them after the resurrection (Jn 20:22).

A person must believe on Jesus to receive the Spirit, Calvinism teaches the exact opposite of scripture.


This right here, is the best post in this thread! :thumbs: Even better than all of mine. :tear: :laugh:
 
Thank you for that, Willis. It makes it a little difficult to see where we go from here. Perhaps we shall have to agree to disagree. God will continue to save sinners in His own way, regardless of what we think about it.

You're welcome, and I agree.

My problem is that under your scheme I cannot see how people get saved. Before they are converted they do not have the Spirit in any sense. Right? But 'The natural man does not receive the things of God.' So how can such a man hear the Gospel and respond to it? God must first open their hearts, as He did Lydia's before they can believe the Good News. Under your scheme, there is no such thing as a 'seeker;' one moves from being dead in trespasses and sins to being fully converted in an instant.

Well, when I was a sinner, the Spirit worked with me, showing me what I needed to do in order to be saved. Not a works based salvation, but what I needed to do, such as completely surrender to Him. When I quit trying to save myself such as stop doing certain things, the blood cleansed my soul, and then the Spirit came in and took up His abode.

I gave Zacchaeus as an example on the other thread. Consider now Nicodemus. Something is drawing Nicodemus towards Jesus. The other Pharisees are incensed by His cleansing of the Temple (John 2:13ff). The great hatred of the Jewish authorities towards our Lord has alsready started and will culminate in His arrest and execution. But something is drawing Nicodemus. He is terrified of being seen calling on Jesus, but he is being 'irresistibly drawn' so he goes by night, hoping no one will see him.


They saw what Jesus did, and relaized that He was the Messiah. However, the Spirit never permanently indwelt anyone until Jesus breathed upon the Disciples in John 20:22.

I say that God is drawing Nicodemus to Christ by His Spirit. But Nicodemus is not yet converted. He can't understand at all what Jesus is saying to him. 'How can these things be?' He cries. He hasn't got a clue, and Jesus tells him that he needs to be born again. There is a work on his heart started, but it isn't finished yet.

Or take Lydia. Here's a lady who has pesumably abandoned paganism and is now a 'God-fearer.' She attends the local synagogue whenever she's in a place where there is one, and hears the preaching. What drew her to do that? I say that it was God the Holy Spirit. But she is not yet converted; she knows nothing of Christ. God brings Paul to Philippi to bring the word to her, but notice that she can't respond to the word in her own strength, nor can Paul make her respond to is preaching, wonderful though it must have been. It was God who opened her heart so that she could respond. She was already awakened to the things of God, maybe she was already convicted of her sin (we're not told); but she still needed a further work of grace on her heart.

Well, that's all I can do. I think I shall leave this topic now unless there is any point of clarification that you would like. All I would do in closing is to refer you to the Puritans who write on this subject, like John Owen and Thomas Goodwin, or to Louis Berkhof's Systematic Theology. You may not agree with them, but at least you will see that my position is not without support.

And I you, Willis. God bless you in your work for Him.

Steve

I do appreciate the gracefulness of this post. The Spirit was working with them, but it never indwells anyone until Jesus saves them.
 

Martin Marprelate

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Well, when I was a sinner, the Spirit worked with me, showing me what I needed to do in order to be saved. Not a works based salvation, but what I needed to do, such as completely surrender to Him. When I quit trying to save myself such as stop doing certain things, the blood cleansed my soul, and then the Spirit came in and took up His abode.
:thumbs: I think we are making progress! We need to reconcile the verses that Winman posted earlier with the ones that I keep posting (1Cor 2:14; Eph 2:1 etc.), and I think you have seen the way. There is a work of the Spirit uopn our hearts before conversion, but at conversion the Spirit takes up permanent residence in our hearts. Is this what you are saying? I don't want to put words in your mouth.

They saw what Jesus did, and realized that He was the Messiah. However, the Spirit never permanently indwelt anyone until Jesus breathed upon the Disciples in John 20:22.
I don't quite agree with the second part of this (2Sam 7:14-15. cf. 1Sam 16:14), but that is a subject for a different thread. We agree (I hope!) that Zacchaeus and Nicodemus experienced some work of the Spirit upon their hearts prior to conversion.
The Spirit was working with them, but it never indwells anyone until Jesus saves them.
Exactly! :1_grouphug:

May I point you again to A.W. Pink's work on the Holy Spirit?
http://www.pbministries.org/books/pink/Holy_Spirit/holy_spirit.htm
Have a read through the relevant chapters on drawing and indwelling. I'm sure many will find it helpful if they will only look at it. :flower:

Steve
 

Winman

Active Member
:thumbs: I think we are making progress! We need to reconcile the verses that Winman posted earlier with the ones that I keep posting (1Cor 2:14; Eph 2:1 etc.), and I think you have seen the way. There is a work of the Spirit uopn our hearts before conversion, but at conversion the Spirit takes up permanent residence in our hearts. Is this what you are saying? I don't want to put words in your mouth.


I don't quite agree with the second part of this (2Sam 7:14-15. cf. 1Sam 16:14), but that is a subject for a different thread. We agree (I hope!) that Zacchaeus and Nicodemus experienced some work of the Spirit upon their hearts prior to conversion.
Exactly! :1_grouphug:

May I point you again to A.W. Pink's work on the Holy Spirit?
http://www.pbministries.org/books/pink/Holy_Spirit/holy_spirit.htm
Have a read through the relevant chapters on drawing and indwelling. I'm sure many will find it helpful if they will only look at it. :flower:

Steve

The Holy Spirit convicts a man of his sin. But this is not regeneration. Some men will humble themselves under this conviction, some will resist such as those men who were "cut to the heart" in Acts 8:54. These men gnashed their teeth and stopped their ears, they rushed upon Stephen, dragged him out of the city and stoned him.

A man cannot be regenerated until his sins are removed, the Holy Spirit will not enter and abide in a filthy house.

Calvinists confuse conviction and enlightenment with regeneration. You can be convicted to the point of repentance, you can be enlightened and taught by the Word, and yet turn away in stubborn unbelief.

You cannot have spiritual life until your sins are forgiven, and your sins cannot be forgiven unless you first believe.
 

marke

New Member
Can God create a rock He cannot lift Himself?

Exactly. And can God tell a lie without making it become true? I believe God can make a man born again without that man's knowledge or involvement in the slightest, but only if God could have created Adam sinlessly perfect in such a way that he would have been incapable of sinning in the first place. I believe God did not create or bring sin into the world, but Adam did by disobeying God OF HIS OWN WILL AS OPPOSED TO THE WILL OF GOD. (Emphasis not intended for anyone in particular but to all Calvinists in particular.)
 

Winman

Active Member
1 Cor 2:14 does not prove a man must be regenerated to believe. This passage is speaking of the "deep things of God" (vs. 10).

Scripture cannot contradict itself. The scriptures clearly and repeatedly say a man must believe to receive the Spirit. I have shown you several of these verses, and there are many more.

1 Cor 2:12 says these Corinthians have already received the Spirit, therefore they have already believed. Therefore, these "things" spoken of in vss. 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, and 15 are not the gospel. In vs. 9 it is the things God has prepared for them that love him. Is that the gospel? NO. In vs. 10 it is the deep things of God. Is that the gospel? NO. The gospel and believeing is not mentioned, because that is not what Paul is speaking about. You can't pull vs. 14 out of context and make it apply toward hearing the gospel and believeing.

Eph 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.

Now this verse directly discusses the order of events in salvation. It says a man first hears the gospel, secondly they believe, and thirdly they are sealed by the Spirit.

You are trying to reconcile scripture with Calvinist doctrine, it can't be done.
 

Winman

Active Member
More scripture showing you do not receive the Spirit until after believeing.

Gal 3:14 That the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Jesus Christ; that we might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith.

You are not regenerated, you are not a child of God until you first believe.

Gal 3:26 For ye are the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus.
 

OldRegular

Well-Known Member
Exactly. And can God tell a lie without making it become true? I believe God can make a man born again without that man's knowledge or involvement in the slightest, but only if God could have created Adam sinlessly perfect in such a way that he would have been incapable of sinning in the first place. I believe God did not create or bring sin into the world, but Adam did by disobeying God OF HIS OWN WILL AS OPPOSED TO THE WILL OF GOD. (Emphasis not intended for anyone in particular but to all Calvinists in particular.)

People believe a lot of things that are not true.
 

OldRegular

Well-Known Member
1 Cor 2:14 does not prove a man must be regenerated to believe. This passage is speaking of the "deep things of God" (vs. 10).

You are wrong Winman. The passage is:

1 Corinthians 2:10-14
10. But God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God.
11. For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? even so the things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God.
12. Now we have received, not the spirit of the world, but the spirit which is of God; that we might know the things that are freely given to us of God.
13. Which things also we speak, not in the words which man’s wisdom teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost teacheth; comparing spiritual things with spiritual.
14. But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned.


In verses 10-13 the Apostle is teaching the works of the Holy Spirit in the life of the believer. we have received, not the spirit of the world, but the spirit which is of God

1. that we might know the things that are freely given to us of God.

2. not in the words which man’s wisdom teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost teacheth; comparing spiritual things with spiritual.

He then contrasts the inability of the natural man to the ability of the spiritual man, one in-dwelt with the Holy Spirit, as shown above. The inability of the natural man, the unregenerate man, is graphically shown in verse 14:

14. But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned.
 

OldRegular

Well-Known Member
.

Scripture cannot contradict itself.

You are correct Winamn: "Scripture cannot contradict itself". However, man can misunderstand Scripture therefore believing there is a contradiction when none exists. You are deliberately developing a conflict in Scripture where none exists.

No one who believes in the Doctrine of Grace would downplay the role of belief and faith in salvation. It was the reformers who shed light on the Grace of God, long denied/hidden by the Roman church, who proclaimed "justification by faith alone".
 
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