canadyjd said:
You are turning the very words of our Lord around to fit what you to believe. Jesus told some "you do not believe because you are not of My sheep." The "effect" (do not believe) is the result of the "cause" (you are not of My sheep).
It might appear that way because you have ignored a previous event --
in order to BECOME His sheep in the first place, they had to enter via the "Door." Now they hear Him because they believe Him. And the others do not because they are NOT of His sheep because they didn't enter the "Door."
Once in the "Door," His sheep hear His voice and follow wherever He leads. But this it AFTER they are "in."
Just listen to Jesus speak and forget your preconceived notions (as I had to do when I really studied this issue).Again, you are changing the words of Jesus around to fit what you want to believe.
If preconceived notions" means ignore the rest of the discourse, then no, I won't do that, canady.
We are reading John 10:25-30 but go back to 10:7-18 where He speaks to those same "Jews."
This is where we find out HOW one becomes a "sheep" --- "by Me, if any man enter he shall be saved." (10:9) So this gives us 1) knowledge that salvation is by the volition of "men" who will "enter" through Christ and 2) tells us why they are His sheep.
You asked where a certain line of thinking would take a person. That's what I meant. I believe you would not have chosen Christ if God had not changed you.
Do you see where I'm coming from now (John 10:7-18 is relevant to free will salvation, denies sovereign grace, and is relevant to 10:25-30, hearing Christ POST salvation)??
If God is responding to something you have done by your own will power, I don't see how that can be called the giving of grace (unmerited favor),
That is exactly why most people, even believers, cannot live the Christian life, canady. Their will is rarely overpowered by God's will. If they could get "filled" with the Spirit (though NOT regenerated yet) or the Spirit would "quicken their mortal bodies," they would gladly choose God's will as their own will.
Example: God wants us to attend church, right? Heb 10:25 But how many of us get excited about it? How many expect to meet God every time they go? There are even some believers who don't want to meet God on some particular weeks just as if they, too, were lost!
Why is that? Not filled with or quickened by the Spirit. And in John 6:63 Jesus says, "It is the
spirit that quickeneth;... the words that I speak unto you, they are
spirit, and they are life." It is here that we see that the flesh/carnal is quickened, not by God directly, but by the spoken word -- by
preaching.
There is no such thing as being regenerated and not having faith.
So it really IS a matter of "the chicken or the egg," right?
Your analogy to baptismal regeneration is clearly flawed.
No, that's AUGUSTINE'S analogy.
As far as the history of regeneration preceding faith having its origins in infant baptism, I would like to see a link or two to prove that assertion.
It carried over from the Catholic traditions. Luther questioned it -- Calvin required it and seemed to go along with Augustine's regeneration model as I documented on my thread on Sproul's book
Willing to Believe.
You are simply going to have to show scripture support for your doctrine that O.T. saints could not get forgiveness "in their spirits".
Heb 9:9, 13-14
David even asked God not to remove His Spirit from him.
The clear teaching of which was that God could take His Spirit away then but we KNOW that He cannot now,.
skypair