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But regeneration does not equal "salvation." You have a deficient view of salvation if you think it does.
Salvation, as has been expressed here multiple times of late, includes ALL the aspects that go into the act, including regeneration, but also justification, adoption, election, effectual call, etc.
Your presupposition of external means regeneration blinds you to the glorious truth of this passage.
The passage totally blows external means regeneration out of the water, and gospel means folks are at a loss to grasp it's true import, and subsequently force the meaning that you've just espoused into it. Your's is the prevailing misinterpretation. You've plenty of company on this one.
The context of the passage is concerning THE LAW, not a moral law, or some internal knowledge that is universal to all men, and these particular Gentiles are described as doers of the law, and that by nature, because the work of the law has been written in their hearts.
These Gentiles are the true Jews of v 29, they are the children of the heavenly Zion of Ps 87 & Gal 4, the children of the desolate of Isa 54:1 and Gal 4, the “other sheep I have, which are not of this fold” of Jn 10:16.
The truths revealed in chapter 2 culminate with the question of 3:1:
“What advantage then hath the Jew? or what is the profit of circumcision?”
Don't misconstrue my argument for immediate regeneration as belittling or disparagement of the preaching of the gospel. The primacy of the preaching of the gospel is the centerpiece of Primitive Baptist worship and practice:
for the word of the cross to those indeed perishing is foolishness, and to us -- those being saved -- it is the power of God, 1 Cor 1:18
Does regeneration mean spiritually alive? Does it mean born again?
How can you be spiritually alive before your sins are forgiven?
Does regeneration mean spiritually alive? Does it mean born again?
How can you be spiritually alive before your sins are forgiven?
The ordo salutis describes the process by which the work of salvation, wrought in Christ, is subjectively realized in the hearts and lives of sinners. It aims at describing in their logical order, and also in their interrelations, the various movements of the Holy Spirit in the application of the work of redemption. The emphasis is not on what man does in appropriating the grace of God, but on what God does in applying it.
I would say the reverse, when one's sins are forgiven, then they are regenerated. They are no longer dead in sins. Justification must precede regeneration.Does it not mean that one's sins are forgiven WHEN they are regenerated?
This is what I was asking you. How can a person be spiritually alive (regenerated) until they believe and their sins forgiven? How can you be spiritually alive and spiritually dead in sins at the same time?Is one not made "spiritually alive" WHEN they are regenerated?
Yes, once they believe. We are justified by faith. Faith must precede justification, faith is the cause, justification is the effect. So, how can you be spiritually alive or regenerated before faith? Until you believe you are dead in sins.Further, is not justification an instantaneous legal decision BY GOD to remedy our standing before Him?
It makes all the difference in the world. If man has the ability to believe, all men could potentially be saved. If man does not have the ability to believe, then only those God regenerates and gives the ability to believe can be saved. HUGE difference.All this "before and after" talk does not compute except that we argue the logical order of salvation, ordo salutis, not the timing.
I'm asking you, not Berkhof. I want to know what you believe.Berkhof, in Systematic Theology offers this:
Thanks, I have seen both sites, but rarely read there.I searched for resources that show this issue and came up with this (with some work from various perspectives):
http://www.monergism.com/thethreshold/articles/onsite/twoviews.html
http://evangelicalarminians.org/files/FACTS%20vs.%20TULIP%20Chart.pdf
I would say the reverse, when one's sins are forgiven, then they are regenerated. They are no longer dead in sins. Justification must precede regeneration.
It makes all the difference in the world. If man has the ability to believe, all men could potentially be saved. If man does not have the ability to believe, then only those God regenerates and gives the ability to believe can be saved. HUGE difference.
Yes, Jesus paid for and atoned for all our sins, but we must receive it by faith. A gift can be refused. A man can ask a girl to marry him and offer her an engagement ring. The ring is fully paid for. But the girl can refuse this free offer. It is the same with salvation, in fact, salvation is compared to marriage.
Rom 7:4 Wherefore, my brethren, ye also are become dead to the law by the body of Christ; that ye should be married to another, even to him who is raised from the dead, that we should bring forth fruit unto God.
Marriage is an instantaneous transaction. The moment the preacher says "You are NOW man and wife" you are married. And this is how salvation works also. The moment you place your trust in Jesus you have passed from death to life and shall NEVER come into condemnation.
John 5:24 Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto life.
Salvation is not a prolonged process. The moment you hear the word of God and believe on Jesus you are justified from all your sins and made spiritually alive. You will never come into condemnation, you cannot lose your salvation. You are sealed by the Holy Spirit who will never leave you.
We are preserved by God, we do not persevere.
Yes, Jesus paid for and atoned for all our sins, but we must receive it by faith. A gift can be refused. A man can ask a girl to marry him and offer her an engagement ring. The ring is fully paid for. But the girl can refuse this free offer. It is the same with salvation, in fact, salvation is compared to marriage.
Rom 7:4 Wherefore, my brethren, ye also are become dead to the law by the body of Christ; that ye should be married to another, even to him who is raised from the dead, that we should bring forth fruit unto God.
Marriage is an instantaneous transaction. The moment the preacher says "You are NOW man and wife" you are married. And this is how salvation works also. The moment you place your trust in Jesus you have passed from death to life and shall NEVER come into condemnation.
John 5:24 Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto life.
Salvation is not a prolonged process. The moment you hear the word of God and believe on Jesus you are justified from all your sins and made spiritually alive. You will never come into condemnation, you cannot lose your salvation. You are sealed by the Holy Spirit who will never leave you.
We are preserved by God, we do not persevere.
I would say the reverse, when one's sins are forgiven, then they are regenerated. They are no longer dead in sins. Justification must precede regeneration.
This is what I was asking you. How can a person be spiritually alive (regenerated) until they believe and their sins forgiven? How can you be spiritually alive and spiritually dead in sins at the same time?
Yes, once they believe. We are justified by faith. Faith must precede justification, faith is the cause, justification is the effect. So, how can you be spiritually alive or regenerated before faith? Until you believe you are dead in sins.
It makes all the difference in the world. If man has the ability to believe, all men could potentially be saved. If man does not have the ability to believe, then only those God regenerates and gives the ability to believe can be saved. HUGE difference.
I'm asking you, not Berkhof. I want to know what you believe. Thanks, I have seen both sites, but rarely read there.
Who justifies? You cannot escape the fact that God acts first.
God gives faith, and God justifies. We cannot justify ourselves. As goes the familiar Sunday school refreain, God makes me "just as if I" had not sinned.
We are not spiritually alive until we are legally placed into a position to be spiritually alive. That is justification.
Faith is a gift of God. We've been through that before, and you have STILL not answered the questions I posed to you in the other thread... Let me know if you need a reminder.
Do you realize that you just argued the exact opposite of what you argued above? So, which side of that proposition do you believe. So far, you are arguing that MAN can believe if he wants, and if he does, then God reacts to that belief.
I am saying just the opposite, in fact, we cannot believe unless or until God gives us a gift of faith, and once given that gift we can be saved with all that entails (the gift of faith being one of the elements of salvation).
I believe you know precisely what I belive. I have made it abundantly clear inmultiple threads. My doctrine is coherent and cohesive, not to mention scriptural. There is no "before and after" in the instantaneous actions of God in salvation (which does not include sanctification and perseverence, which are life-long pursuits), only a logical order, which was precisely why I quoted Berkhoff who said the same thing.
James 1:18 Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth, that we should be a kind of firstfruits of his creatures.
This passage seems to definitely come down on the "means" (versus "anti-means") side of this Primitive Baptist (PB) "debate".
Not sure if "debate" is the correct word. There are (or have been) PB elders on both sides of the issue.
Officially (if there can even be an "official" Primitive Baptist position) they are "anti-means". Can a PB brother correct me if this is not so.
When you ask "born again" Christians when they were saved, most will give you a calendar date (though they may not know the specific date, they remember the specific day).
A few will say - at Calvary on the day of the crucifixion.
Others will say when their names were written in the lamb's book of life slain from the foundation of the world.
I may be wrong but I think Primitive Baptists emphasize the latter.
God created time to keep everything from happening at once (or so it seems).
The only way that I could even logically deduce a non-gospel regeneration scheme is with EXTREME hyper-Calvinism, which would have to be deterministic to a point beyond Islam.
Name calling aside, your saying you believe that the preaching of the gospel is God's ordained means of bringing eternal salvation to the sinner?
Shouldnt it be by only the direct operation of the Holy Spirit that eternal life can be brought to the dead sinner (John 3 : 6-8) .The gospel brings life and immortality to light, but doesn't produce life (llTim.1: 10).
I agree that God initiates salvation.Who justifies? You cannot escape the fact that God acts first.
I would say God enables faith. All men have the God-given innate ability to believe, but no man can believe what he does not know. Through the revelation of Jesus Christ through the reading or hearing of scripture, a man is taught and enabled to believe. I agree that God justifies, only God is able to forgive sin, but it is conditioned upon us believeing the gospel.God gives faith, and God justifies. We cannot justify ourselves. As goes the familiar Sunday school refreain, God makes me "just as if I" had not sinned.
Exactly. You cannot be spiritually alive until you are justified, and you cannot be justified until you believe, so faith precedes regeneration.We are not spiritually alive until we are legally placed into a position to be spiritually alive. That is justification.
Faith is a gift in the sense that all abilites we have are gifts from God. The ability to think, the ability to reason is a gift from God. But all men have these gifts, including the ability to believe. However, no man can believe what he does not know, and no man could believe on Jesus unless he were revealed to him. In this sense faith is a gift, for without this revelation from God, no man could possibly believe. But a man does not have to be supernaturally changed to believe, all men have this gift and ability. Even animals have faith, a dog will often trust it's owner, but fear a stranger. Jesus said a sheep knows it's shepherd's voice and will not follow another. So, even animals have faith.Faith is a gift of God. We've been through that before, and you have STILL not answered the questions I posed to you in the other thread... Let me know if you need a reminder.
God requires that we believe. Jesus said we will die in our sins unless we believe he is the Christ.Do you realize that you just argued the exact opposite of what you argued above? So, which side of that proposition do you believe. So far, you are arguing that MAN can believe if he wants, and if he does, then God reacts to that belief.
We could not believe unless Jesus was revealed to us, so God must initiate salvation. But that does not mean God has to make a man spiritually alive to believe, man already has this ability. Once a man chooses to believe the gospel, his sins are forgiven (justified) and then only is he spiritually alive. You cannot be spiritually alive while you remain under condemnation and are dead in your sins.I am saying just the opposite, in fact, we cannot believe unless or until God gives us a gift of faith, and once given that gift we can be saved with all that entails (the gift of faith being one of the elements of salvation).
Actually, I have learned you have to ask each Calvinist individually what they believe, as all seem to differ on various points, otherwise I am falsely accused of misrepresenting Calvinism, when in reality I am only misrepresenting your PERSONAL view of Calvinism. I might be accurately representing another Calvinist.I believe you know precisely what I belive. I have made it abundantly clear inmultiple threads. My doctrine is coherent and cohesive, not to mention scriptural. There is no "before and after" in the instantaneous actions of God in salvation (which does not include sanctification and perseverence, which are life-long pursuits), only a logical order, which was precisely why I quoted Berkhoff who said the same thing.