Maestroh said:
Yes. I don't know of any other kind of salvation. Except you believe Jesus as LORD...
Is there a possibility that the phrase would be better translated as (Rom. 10:9) as
"Jesus IS Lord"?
9 because, if(
A) you confess with your mouth that
Jesus is Lord and(
B) believe in your heart(
C) that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. (Rom. 10:9 -ESV)
This rendering in the
ESV is also entirely consistent with the rendering by the
NIV,
NIV-UK,
TNIV,
AMP,
WE,
NIRV,
HCSB,
NLV,
NCV,
CEV,
NLT, , and even that decidedly 'notorious for paraphrasing' version, the
MSG, at least according to the 21 versions in English, found on Bible Gateway. The last time someone checked my math, 13 out of 21 was over a 3/5 majority, at almost
62%.
The
WYC,
NKJV,
YLT, and
KJ21 are rendered as the
KJV, here, with "
the Lord Jesus (
+ Christ - WYC)". 5 of 21 is just a bit smaller than
24%.
In fact, only 3 versions found there render this phrase with the words of
"Jesus as Lord", they being the DARBY, ASV, and NASB, or a 1 of 7 rartio, which is smaller than
15%. I would tend to say this rendering appears to represent a "minority view" among translators.
The lordship salvation debate ended 15-20 years ago. The Hodges-Ryrie-Wilkin side lost. Period. Their view is not even the majority view today at Dallas Seminary - and you'd be hard-pressed to find someone who belives (sic) the 'no lordship' doctrine who is not connected with DTS.
Incidentally - I'm a current student there.
The popularity, today, of John MacArthur, and a few more influential figures, who tend to believe much along the lines as he does notwithstanding, I suspect the "reports of the death" of this debate may 'have been greatly exaggerated'. In fact, I seem to recall one ongoing in this thread, as we speak.
However, I see a couple of flaws of reasoning, in this post, here. There is a great deal of difference in not believing a "lordship salvation" teaching, vis`-a-vis some caracature of a "'no lordship' doctrine", IMO. I reject "lordship salvation", as the teaching of Scripture. I just as firmly reject any 'no lordship' doctrine, whatever that is really supposed to mean. To me, 'no lordship' is merely a strawman, and an undefined pejorative phrase. You will know the sort I'm speaking of. 'Easy believism' comes to mind, for another common one, in this same 'theological debate', and can often be found (allegedly) contrasted with "make Him Lord". It really doesn't mean anything, but it sure "sound good" as a catch-all negative pigeon-hole.
John of Japan,
Alex Quackenbush,
webdog and me -
EdSutton, and I believe
Lou Martuneac (although I'm not absolutely certain of Lou M., and my brain is too tired to find out, at the moment), have posted at one time or another, that
Jesus is absolutely Lord. It makes no difference whether or not I particularly want to 'accept this', it is part and parcel of
who He is.
HE IS, WAS, and ALWAYS WILL BE THE LORD JESUS CHRIST! GOD MADE HIM LORD!, without any help from me, and that 'long ago', to boot.
It is even a part of His blessed and holy Name! It is impossible to make Him something He already is, to begin with. And that is one huge fallacy of this teaching.
FTR, and I cannot speak for any other,
I am not, nor have I ever been in any way "connected with DTS", not that I'm all that important, by any stretch, in this debate, as I'm merely a farmer and layman in KY. I have had the rare privilege of meeting a couple of Dallas folk, and conversing via phone, with a couple more, over these 40 years, just as I've had the rare privilege of meeting a few from other institutions, as well. Not too many of them have shown up in my hay and pasture fields, though. In fact, I can think of exactly zero.
Also FTR, I have read the same number of books by John MacArthur that I have read by Lou Martuneac, among a few others mentioned in this thread - again, exactly zero.
One final thought, and I can speak for no others, once again, except for here, maybe Lou Martuneac. I'm pretty sure that both he and I would disagree that one cannot find someone who does not really believe in Lordship Salvation, aside from in Dallas. Why, he probably might even remember a 'dumb farmer' from KY, wearing Bib overalls, with a few others, showing up in his "neck of the woods", if asked. :thumbs:
Ed
P.S. Sorry, my posting can't usually keep up with some of you other folks.