SBCPreacher said:I just don't know of any other way that it can be. Maybe my choice of words is not the greatest, I don't know.
I agree with the wording too, but it's just a tough sell for some. :thumbs:
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!
SBCPreacher said:I just don't know of any other way that it can be. Maybe my choice of words is not the greatest, I don't know.
Alcott said:Nevertheless, while "eternal security" is doctrine I believe, but do not "know it without doubt," there is a practical conclusion to be drawn therefrom... if there is no way one can lose one's salvation, then one cannot lose by believing one can lose it. Therefore, there is nothing to be gained by making a point of it. If a Christian is a true believer, but does think he can lose his salvation, and for that reason he gets up and goes to church when he wants to lie in bed all day, and for that reason he gives his money and help to those in need, and for that reason he doesn't steal from his employer when it would be easy to do so....... would you try to convince him he can't lose his salvation even if he did skip church, was stingy with his possessions, stole, et al? And why?
Can you clarify...your #3 seems to contradict #1, as if saved people desire God and the things of God...why the unsaved in #1 would be doing what they are doing?1. But here's the issue: Are all who profess faith in Christ truly His? Were they saved to begin with? Is it possible that we have a lot of unsaved people going to church, giving their monies and so on?
2. While on the other hand, there are some who say that they are saved but their actions betray them.
3. I truly believe that a saved person would have a desire for God and the things of God.
webdog said:Can you clarify...your #3 seems to contradict #1, as if saved people desire God and the things of God...why the unsaved in #1 would be doing what they are doing?
Tom Butler said:It does make sense.
I would ask these questions of those who say one can lose his salvation: Will one sin do the trick? If not, how many sins does it take? How will we know when we've crossed the line? And if you can lose it, can you get it back? And how?
TCGreek said:1. I really think this statement is true: If I could lose my salvation, I would lose it.
2. I see no reason, whether philosophical or otherwise, why this statement isn't true. It is true as 2+2=4.
Pilgrimer said:Hello Webdog,
>Can one go from being uncircumcised to circumcised...and then back to uncircumcised again?
According to God's Law, yes . . .
"For circumcision verily profiteth, if thou keep the law: but if thou be a breaker of the law, thy circumcision is made uncircumcision." Romans 2:25
In Christ,
Deborah
BaptistBeliever said:Do you have a Biblical reason why it IS true or just a hunch?
Pilgrimer said:>I didn't do anything for it; It was a gift.
You had to hear about the gift. And you had to believe in the gift. And at some point in your life you had to make a conscious decision to partake of the gift. And even now that you have received the gift, and have escaped the pollutions of the world through the gift, if you become again entangled in the pollutions of the world and overcome by them, your latter end will be worse with you than the beginning. For it had been better for you not to have known the gift, than, after having known it, to turn from what you were commanded to do. But it will happen to them according to the true proverb, The dog is turned to his own vomit again; and the sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire." 2 Peter 2:20-22 paraphrased
There is one way a believer can lose his salvation . . . by throwing God's gift back in His face . . .
In Christ,
Deborah
Pilgrimer said:>You skipped the ones with Bible verses next to them.
That's because none of the verses cited address the question of whether or not a believer can stop believing.
>Are You trying to loose your salvation?. For being someone who is scared to loose it you sure are trying hard to prove you can instead of resting in God promises.
I'm trying hard to explain that you must rest in God's promises to be saved, and if the day ever comes that a Christian stops trusting in God to perform what He has promised . . . he will throw away his only hope of salvation.
Faith in the promises of God for salvation is not a one-time act of faith . . . it is a way of life.
"As ye have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk ye in him." Colossians 2:6
In Christ,
Deborah