Heavenly Pilgrim said:
HP: What you are suggesting is that if one does not have God’s absolute knowledge of who is saved and who is not, no one can be assured of their salvation. That is simply not the case. We indeed do, BY FAITH, stand assured of our standing before God now, and stand assured of our final abode with Him yet to be revealed. What we do not have is a sure confidence of either our standing before God now or our final abode while in a state of an evil conscience. God has not so designed our assurance of salvation to testify of our rest in Him while in possession of an evil conscience.
Herein is one deception of OSAS. It ‘presumes’ upon the grace of God to cover for sins that have not been repented of and forsaken. “Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins!”
1Jo 1:7 BUT IF we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin.
Sorry, I suggested no such thing, since I am the one being responded to here. But I did "suggest" (actually more than 'suggest', but why quibble?) that one cannot be assured that one's salvation is 'assured' when that salvation is based, even in part, on one's 'works', since one can never be sure that his or her works meet that 'undefined' level, that is necessary, to either attain (or 'keep') one's salvation or eternal life, depending on which wording one wants to use. However, since I Jo. 5:8-13 says we indeed may know that we have eternal life, I, unlike you, believe that is possible, and that is said to be based on believe/faith. I've believed that promise, and I do "know". And I see nothing in the verses about a 'qualifier' of the condition of my conscience, nor anything in Scripture, that another can even evaluate the condition of such.
"Page 2"
Since the phrase "repent of/from (one's) sins" is never found in the Scriptures, at all, as I have mentioned at least six to eight times on the pages of the BB, maybe the "
'presumes'" has to do with this theology, as opposed to "upon the grace of God to cover for sins...". And I find very little in Scripture tying 'forsake' with "sin(s)", although I agree that that is a good idea. I do find a few dozen verses that speak of 'forsaking God', however. I sugest if "we walk in the light", sin is not as big a problem as when we "walk in darkness". But we are never completely free from the old nature, as it is part and parcel of all of us, this side of the resurrection, hence we all can and do still sin. Read the next few verses in I John. Even the denial that we don't sin, is said to be self-deception. And I suspect that one cannot "confess" a sin that is unknown to that individual, even though one can commit a sin in ignorance.
Ed