vooks
Active Member
I would prefer to believe in Unconditional Eternal Security. And I have no idea why anyone would not want to believe it. Once I put saving faith in Jesus Christ, nothing can change my eternal destiny. I can return to a life of wickedness,die in unrepentance,and I will still be saved in the end. I can even renounce my faith,die in unbelief and still enter God's kingdom. The only loss is I would have some significantly lesser heavenly rewards or no rewards at all, but heaven I am not missing for nothing.
Then of course there is Calvinist classic conundrum where God is solely charged with preserving the Elect right up to their destination. The apostates, those who fall away from their faith and salvation were never saved in the first place, they just thought they were, and they fooled everyone in the process including themselves! Their falling away prove that their conversion was spurious for the truly saved. The Elect will finally fall away.
I can understand why this latter view is repulsive; it teaches eternal INsecurity, for we have no right to call nobody Elect today lest tomorrow they depart form faith and manifest their true colors. So instead of calling the dropouts fakes while everyone can be one the next second, let's keep them in.
Again, as I said, I think this is cool and I can't see how anyone would not want to believe it. The only reason I reject the doctrine is because I believe the Word of God is clearly against it.
I wish to examine a relatively common text used by proponents of this attractive theory in the book of Hebrews;
Hebrews 10:39 (KJV)
But we are not of them who draw back unto perdition; but of them that believe to the saving of the soul.
The argument derived from this is, the writer of Hebrews acknowledges existence of some who fall away and consequently perish, but by 'we are not' he excludes his Christian subjects from this.
Conclusion?
Believers can't or will not draw back, and those who draw back can't possibly be true believers
Then of course there is Calvinist classic conundrum where God is solely charged with preserving the Elect right up to their destination. The apostates, those who fall away from their faith and salvation were never saved in the first place, they just thought they were, and they fooled everyone in the process including themselves! Their falling away prove that their conversion was spurious for the truly saved. The Elect will finally fall away.
I can understand why this latter view is repulsive; it teaches eternal INsecurity, for we have no right to call nobody Elect today lest tomorrow they depart form faith and manifest their true colors. So instead of calling the dropouts fakes while everyone can be one the next second, let's keep them in.
Again, as I said, I think this is cool and I can't see how anyone would not want to believe it. The only reason I reject the doctrine is because I believe the Word of God is clearly against it.
I wish to examine a relatively common text used by proponents of this attractive theory in the book of Hebrews;
Hebrews 10:39 (KJV)
But we are not of them who draw back unto perdition; but of them that believe to the saving of the soul.
The argument derived from this is, the writer of Hebrews acknowledges existence of some who fall away and consequently perish, but by 'we are not' he excludes his Christian subjects from this.
Conclusion?
Believers can't or will not draw back, and those who draw back can't possibly be true believers