DeafPosttrib said:
Today, I just want to curious reading their posts. One post, which I have strongly disagree with: at post #35 pp. 4 - reformedbeliever said: 'we are born again first, then we believe'. Nonsense. I disagree with his comment.
New birth and regeneration are the same thing. The issue is this, because man is dead in sin and unable to exercise faith how is it that he comes to? The answer is that God gives him a new heart in order to enable him to respond to the gospel. Hence new birth or regeneration preceeds conversion.
Articles of help:
http://www.prca.org/articles/regeneration.html
http://homepage.mac.com/shanerosenthal/reformationink/aabbregen.htm
http://www.pbministries.org/books/pink/Regeneration/regeneration.htm
http://www.monergism.com/directory/link_category/Regeneration/Essays/
DeafPosttrib said:
The Bible teaches us,
1. First, we hear the gospel
2. Realize that I have sinned, am on the way to hell
3. Understand that Christ died for me, believe what He has done for me
4. Ask Christ for telling him, sorry for doing wrong things.
5. become child of God.
That is certainly one way of looking at it however I would argue that this is correct:
1. God chose to save some people out of the common mass of humanity before the foundation of the world.
2. For these the Son of God became incarnate as Christ and as the surety of the elect fulfilled the law perfectly and suffered the punishment due for breaking it.
3. God then sends his preacher to preach the gospel and through the outward call the elect hear the gospel.
4. The Holy Ghost regenerates the elect and works faith into them so that they embrace Christ and trust in him solely for salvation.
The
1729 Goat Yard Declaration of Faith teaches:
III. We believe that, before the world began, God did elect a certain number of men unto everlasting salvation, whom he did predestinate to the adoption of children by Jesus Christ, of his own free grace, and according to the good pleasure of his will: and that, in pursuance of this gracious design, he did contrive and make a covenant of grace and peace with his Son Jesus Christ, on the behalf of those persons, wherein a Saviour was appointed, and all spiritual blessings provided for them; as also that their persons, with all their grace and glory, were put into the hands of Christ, and made his care and charge.
IV. We believe that God created the first man, Adam, after his own image, and in his likeness; an upright, holy, and innocent creature, capable of serving and glorifying him; but, he sinning, all his posterity sinned in him, and came short of the glory of God: the guilt of whose sin is imputed, and a corrupt nature derived, to all his offspring, descending from him by ordinary and natural generation: that they are by their first birth carnal and unclean, averse to all that is good, uncapable of doing any and prone to every sin; and are also by nature children of wrath, and under a sentence of condemnation, and so are subject not only to a corporal death, and involved in a moral one, commonly called spiritual, but are also liable to an eternal death, as considered in the first Adam, fallen and sinners; from all which there is no deliverance but by Christ, the second Adam.
V. We believe that the Lord Jesus Christ, being set up from everlasting as the Mediator of the new covenant, and he, having engaged to be the surety of his people, did, in the fulness of time, really assume human nature, and not before, neither in whole nor in part; his human soul, being a creature, existed not from eternity, but was created and formed in his body by him that forms the spirit of man within him, when that was conceived in the womb of the virgin; and so his human nature consists of a true body and a reasonable soul; both which, together, and at once, the Son of God assumed into union with his divine Person, when made of a woman, and not before; in which nature he really suffered and died as their substitute, in their room and stead, whereby he made all that satisfaction for their sins, which the law and justice of God could require, as well as made way for all those blessings, which are needful for them both for time and eternity.