Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
What does it mean to "bring someone to repentance?" To bring someone the gospel message and put before them the choice of repentence? And if they reject the gospel, how can they be bought to repentance again, unless they come to their senses, and stop rejecting the gospel?
I can taste something without swallowing it. Understand it without accepting it. Understanding the work product of the Holy Spirit, the gospel of Christ, without accepting it or accepting it fully.
If it rains on cultivated ground, the ground produces a useful crop, but if it rains on uncultivated ground, it produces thorns and weeds and a crop that is not useful. Unless a person is open to the gospel, a person who believes in the Father and is receptive to God's Word, the rain of the gospel will not produce a useful crop. Evangelism 101.
Hebrews 6:4-6 (NASB) For in the case of those who have once been enlightened [understood the gospel message] and have tasted the heavenly gift [tasted, not swallowed, considered, not accepted] and have been made partakers of the Holy Spirit [has shared in the work product of the Holy Spirit, the gospel of Christ] and have tasted the good word of God [have a contextual understanding of the gospel message as presented in God's Word] and have [tasted] the powers of the age to come [have met and observed born again believers who walk the talk and who will reign with Christ] and have fallen away [ from choosing to believe in Jesus] it is impossible to renew them again to repentance, [unless they come to their senses] since they again crucify to themselves the Son of God [they consider Him dead to them] and put Him to open shame [as a liar or lunatic].
With this understanding of the text, then Hebrews 6:4-6 is talking about potential Christians, not born again Christians.
If we turn now to verse 9, we see the kind of folks where the rain fell on cultivated soil, that which produced useful crop. Real, born again Christians.
May God Bless
Yes, this passage, nor any other verse or passage, contextually considered supports loss of salvation with salvation being defined as positional sanctification. All the so called loss of salvation passages, that actually address the topic, and this one does not, refer to loss of rewards, which is to say loss of the benefits of progressive sanctification, our good works after we are born again. But even with the lose of rewards, we still enter heaven has one escaping from a fire, bringing little or no rewards with us.
I had thought once saved always saved was a Baptist distinctive, and so no Baptist would adhere to the Arminian view of loss of salvation. Are you saying there are people posting on the Baptist only forums that believe in loss of salvation?