It is surprising to me in that I thought the vast majority of people on here would be OSAS or "perseverance of the saints". I did not realize that many are not in either camp.
I imagine they would have been about 20-30 years ago:
I was raised traditional SBC and I was always taught "OSAS"...Never "Perseverence" though, as we were not Calvinists.
I would be interested in whether this is due to going to churches that are free will Baptist, or Wesleyan, or Church of Christ or Pentecostal . Or is it more of an influence of internet theology sites, like Provisionism.
I think it is something like that:
Not, particular websites
per se, but, more a fact of the internet/"information age". I also think the influence of podcasts and Youtube can't be overstated.
The Seminaries and the clergy simply don't have the monopoly on and stranglehold on Theology that they used to.
Individual believers have access to as much info as anybody at their fingertips. Many believers are questioning what they were raised to believe by seminary-trained pastors, and not only on this particular doctrine.
I remember how critically important it was years ago to ask of a ministerial prospect: "what seminary did he go to?" as though it was a guarantee of what he believed. It may have been at one time. I no longer think so.
Just curious. As a side note, I read Puritans for years, benefiting from the serious way they portrayed following Christ and pursuing holy living, all the while not realizing that most of them were strict Calvinists. We probably have all read Pilgrim's Progress, by the Puritan Bunyan. Without prior knowledge of his theology, would you say he was teaching that Christian was guaranteed that he would complete his journey to the Celestial city?
My reading of Bunyan was years ago, but, as I recall, it didn't seem to me that Bunyan assumed "Christian" was guaranteed anything. I read it as though it was a nail-biter each and every time whether he would escape the traps laid for him and continue each time. I don't know for sure what Bunyan himself thought. I would only loosely place him in the "Puritan" camp though, as he was a non-conformist. I assume he was "reformed" in his Theology (Calvinistic, at least for the most part) but he wasn't a formally trained theologian. So, that may have made a difference in the way he portrayed the Christian walk.
It almost appears that there is a practical theology found in what was taught to the congregations by preaching, and the academic theology, which was designed to combat the Roman Catholic scholars and differentiate from other denominations. Just thinking out loud.
I agree.