Impossible to be "in Christ" without faith and therefore this is ARRIVAL BY FAITH. You are ignoring the contextual evidences I presented.
Strawman argument number 1. I addressed this and you ignored it.
The immediate context is not about the Second Coming but about coming to Christ that obtains eternal life. This is ARRIVAL BY FAITH as it is IMPOSSIBLE to arrive "IN" Christ in unbelief.
Strawman argument number 2, I did not mention nor imply anything about the second coming of Christ. I was referring to the second time in John 6:37, a word is translated as coming, i.e. the one who
comes to Me I will not cast out.
You are now arguing that they have already believed and as a consequence of having already believed they are then given to the Son in order to come to Christ. Thus believers who have not yet come to Christ, who have not yet arrived in Christ. Hence, you are teaching one can be a true believer in Christ and yet have not ARRIVED IN CHRIST.
Strawman argument #3. No one arrives in Christ unless given and no one is given unless their faith is credited as righteousness.
Giving precedes coming and if believing precedes being given then you have true believers OUTSIDE of Christ who need yet to come to Christ. If that is the kind of nonsense you must embrace to avoid the obvious truth then you are welcome to it.
Strawman argument #4. Believers whose faith God credits are given to Christ. Thus either you are saying someone could be a "true believer" and God not know it, or some other absurdity.
Transference from the lost condition to the saved condition is "through faith" (Eph. 2:8) and if "cometh unto me" is this transference then it can only mean "ARRIVAL IN CHRIST BY FAITH."
Strawman argument #5. The first "comes to Me" in John 6:37 refers to those given arriving in Me. Those given are given on the basis of God crediting their faith as righteousness. Folks to you see a pattern of denial and stonewalling?
First, you are assuming your interpretation is the true meaning of John 6:28-30 and it is your interpretation that is opposite to my interpretation. Second, your interpretation does conflict with John 6:36-39 as "cometh unto me" cannot mean anything less than ARRIVAL IN CHRIST THROUGH FAITH in this context.
Strawman argument #6. Note the nullification effort to conflate believing with coming and omitting God's action. Again and again the same mistaken view is repeated and repeated.
1. Look at verse 36 in contrast to verse 40. There is no difference between those in verse 36 and verse 40 in regard to seeing the Son. The only difference is the former believed not and the latter believed.
Strawman argument #7. The issue is not that both 36 and 40 refer to believing, the issue is 37 and 39 refer to being given and therefore arriving in Christ. Two actions, believing and being given are in view.
2. Verses 37-39 are the explanation of this difference and the word "believe" is not found, yet the only response described in these verses is "cometh unto me".
Strawman argument #8, the difference is 37 and 39 address being given. Putting them together we get believing and then being given. This is not rocket science. When we are put in Christ, we are born again and sealed with the Holy Spirit, thus becoming a spiritual child of God. So when are we given the right to become a child of God? When we are put in Christ and born again. And what do we believe before we are given that right? Perhaps John 1:12-13 might give us a clue!
3. Throughout this context "eating" which is equal to "cometh unto me" is synomymous with beleiving in me for eternal life. Both eating and drinking obtain the same thing - eternal life.
You can conflate till the cows come home, no one partakes of the blessings in Christ until God puts them in Christ. No one!!!!!!!!!!
I deny no such thing. I only denied you can READ INTO this passage what it does not say. The "kingdom" is not even mentioned in this context. It is not the subject of this context. The subject is the origin and nature of faith - Jn. 6:29-68 not the kingdom or entrance into the kingdom.
Strawman argument #9, being transferred into Christ such that you will not be cast back out is about entrance to the kingdom. Outside of Christ, not in the kingdom, in Christ equals in the kingdom.
In 2 Thessalonians 2:13 chosen TO salvation PRECEDES sanctification by the Spirit and belief of the truth. "you" is the direct object of "chosen" while "salvation" is the direct object of the preposition "eis" but "sanctification of the Spirt and belief of the truth" is the direct object of the preposition "dia." You are trying to reverse the order given in 2 Thes. 2:13 as you are in John 6:37-39, 44. However, the grammar will not allow you to do that.
Yet another Calvinist making an argument from grammar. My translation, the NASB95 says chosen for salvation, i.e. for the purpose of salvation. You can say the grammar does not allow that translation till the cows come home. You are wrong. Here are the translations that translate it correctly, NASB, HCSB, NET, and WEB. If you want to debate it, take it up with Dr. Daniel Wallace, senior editor of the NET. BTW, the preposition between salvation and sanctification is "en" not "dia".
You are reading into the text that believing occurred prior to the Father given them to ARRIVE IN CHRIST. Thus reading your theology into the text.
For the fifth time, at least, believing occurs before being given, we are given on the basis of faith in the truth, 2 Thessalonians 2:13.
In the text "cometh unto me" is contextually defined as "coming through faith to me" and that is the consequence not the cause of being given.
Now we get wholesale eisgesis. Contextually coming to me is defines as a separate action from believing in Me. We have been all through this. Your view omits being placed in Christ such that you will not be cast out. Conflation, not exegesis.
Look at John 17;2 a similar text. where being given eternal life is the consequence not the cause to "as many as" were given to the Son by the Father. Again you must REVERSE what the text actually says or READ INTO the text what it does not say.
Strawman argument #10. Eternal life is a consequence of being given to Christ. Duh!!!!!
What your saying does not make much sense. I don't care what "Calvinists" say or don't say. I care what the Scripture says and don't says. You are the one invoking Calvinists not I. I stick only to the scriptures, why can't you?
Because you Sir are citing chapter and verse the bogus, out of context Calvinist view of the text.
Bottom line, John 6:28-30 teaches the work God requires is to believe in Him. John 6:35-40 teaches two actions, one we must believe in Him and two, God must credit that faith as righteousness and give us to Christ. If He does, then Christ will not cast us out, and will raise us up on the last day.
Note the length of this post, folks, because rather than discussing my position, I had to address 10 bogus arguments.
Calvinism 101