John of Japan
I finally noticed that you were answering my post in this. It would have helped if you had mentioned my name here.
Sorry about that.
So please clarify. Are you disagreeing with what I quoted from JM? Are you saying that one does not decide to believe, it just "happens?" Then are you saying people not only don't have a free will, they don't have a will at all? Because that's the only way I can see that one can believe without deciding to.
I don't study JM's teaching so I can't say whether I agree with him or not. I suppose there are a great many things I agree with him about and many things I don't. But to answer you other questions here, no I don't believe salvation "just happens" In fact, I don't believe anything "just happens" or is outside the Sovereign Decree of God. Nor are people saved apart from the Lord's appointed means. Nor am I saying people do not have free will. I am saying people do not have an absolute free will. If they did, they would be God. I have never stated that choice is not involved in the process. I have stated that salvation of anyone, its cause, is the will of God, not the will of man.
Consider one biblical text. Then said he, Lo, I come to do thy will, O God. He taketh away the first, that he may establish the second. Hebrews 10:9
I think we are both agreed that this passage is referencing the Lord Jesus Christ and is a quote of OT Scripture. This is a prophecy of the Son of God speaking to God the Father stating that He has come to do the will of the Father. We both could multiply numerous Scriptures from the Gospels showing that Jesus came to do the will of the Father.
By the which will we are sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all. Hebrews 10:10
It is not by the will of man that we are sanctified, or set apart, but by the will of the Father. Again, we both could multiply many Scriptures that show that in Jesus doing the will of the Father including the unfailing and unfrustratable salvation of a people. Unless, of course, we suppose that God's will can be frustrated.
Also, can you give me a quote from someone you believe teaches "decisional regeneration" that shows they believe the decision is what regenerates, that man regenerates himself as opposed to being regenerated by the Holy Spirit? The only quote given in the article you linked to was from Jack Hyles, and whatever you may think of his methods, he didn't say these things.
Probably not. The concept of decisional regeneration and the term was coined by the author of the article, nor do I think you will find one instance in a systematic theology or otherwise of someone affirming the concept under the said term. Nevertheless, what the article states and present experience bear out the truth of what is being proposed, namely, that salvation is preaching as hinging on the choice, or decision, of a person, making regeneration a decisional act. Have you not seen this? I have....I have done this in the past in my witnessing. We go out, preach the Gospel, reason with some soul, and try to get them to "make a decision for Jesus." Once they do, as long as they prayed and asked sincerely, we welcome them into the kingdom of God. Men like Rick Warren have gone further suggesting a mere whisper of a few words is sufficent to save a man and he welcomes them into the Kingdom.
Jack Hyles often preached on the Holy Spirit and His power to help the personal soul winner and to save the sinner. I know. I heard him preach about it many times. He wrote in one place, "What a motivation this is for the believer to yield himself to that Christ Who lives in him, as the Holy Spirit has wrought the amazing work of regeneration!" (Jack Hyles, Meet the Holy Spirit, p. 20).
If I am not mistaken, Jack Hyles was quoted postively in the article. I agree that regeneration is the act of the Holy Spirit. And I agree we can take comfort that when we preach the Gospel by the Holy Spirit we are not beating the air so to speak. I also gain a large amount of confidence that the salvation of man does not depend on his ability to choose to Christ while in an unregenerate state, at enmity with God, unable to understand the Gospel being blinded by satan, and dead in their trespassaes and sins. I am full persuded that God by the preaching of the Gospel to sinners calls men, women, and children to Himself and will certainly accomplish that end through Jesus Christ.
RB