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!
Can the Lord actually even regenerate one prior to them placing faith in Jesus?
How can you make someone spiritually alive who is still dead in all their trespasses and sins?
:eek:This is what God does everyday
Your sins are not forgiven until you believe.
Your sins are forgiven when God forgives them
Therefore you can not be spiritually alive until you first believe.
No...about 300 people have explained...you cannot believe until you have life
It is sin itself that makes you spiritually dead
Adams sin
the wages of sin is death. Until your sins are removed through faith you cannot possibly be spiritually alive.
How can you make someone spiritually alive who is still dead in all their trespasses and sins?
Your sins are not forgiven until you believe. Therefore you can not be spiritually alive until you first believe. It is sin itself that makes you spiritually dead, the wages of sin is death. Until your sins are removed through faith you cannot possibly be spiritually alive.
False once again
What do you mean how can "you" make someone spiritually alive who is dead in their trespasses and sins?
You can't and no one else can either.
The thing is you HAD to word it that way in order to arrive at your unscriptural conclusions and/or to maintain your unscriptural theology.
Why don't you ask that of God, it is the work of God, not of man. Your question here shows forth that you are yet again looking at this whole entire thing through the eyes of man, asking man how "he" can do it, and basing your theology on mans (your) reason.
HUGE mistake.
Can the Lord actually even regenerate one prior to them placing faith in Jesus?
Can the Lord actually even regenerate one prior to them placing faith in Jesus?
It depends on who you ask. If you define regeneration as, "the action of the Holy Spirit, whereby He transforms the lives of those given the gift of faith so they experience the "new birth" and salvation through Jesus Christ" then the answer is "yes."
Explanation: Before the spiritually dead person can exercise faith, God must do a work in the heart. That work is regeneration. The heart is "quickened" or made alive to the things of God. Faith occurs quickly thereafter. So quickly, in fact, that it is indiscernible from regeneration.
If I can put it another way; regeneration is a requirement of, and leads to, saving faith.
Thats one theory
The other is that there is no life spiritually apart from Christ and the new birth (regeneration) coincides with The life.
It depends on who you ask. If you define regeneration as, "the action of the Holy Spirit, whereby He transforms the lives of those given the gift of faith so they experience the "new birth" and salvation through Jesus Christ" then the answer is "yes."
Explanation: Before the spiritually dead person can exercise faith, God must do a work in the heart. That work is regeneration. The heart is "quickened" or made alive to the things of God. Faith occurs quickly thereafter. So quickly, in fact, that it is indiscernible from regeneration.
If I can put it another way; regeneration is a requirement of, and leads to, saving faith.
Why a duplicate thread less than 2 weeks after the other? Why not just continue off that one? This is whats known as spamming the board.
I am probably the minority at this point of considering regeneration as NOT necessarily coinciding or at the same time as salvation. It certainly doesn't FOLLOW salvation, but how long before salvation is indeterminate.
It is my opinion that there are examples in the Scriptures in which a person was given regeneration and then a period of time passed before the completed work of Christ took place in the person.
Earlier yesterday, I mentioned Saul on the road to Damascus. There was a space of time between the awareness of a superior being and his ability to accept the change in his life. He was struck out of the saddle, he cried out asking who did this, and then he was told to wait in town for more information. None of the other travelers heard and saw what Saul did and it wasn't the only time that a regeneration took place and then time elapsed. Some may say, "But he used the term, 'Lord'" But that wouldn't be unusual given that the term was readily used for any great authority figure. I hold that Saul was showing how humbled he was before a superior force.
I am convinced the Macedonian family was the same way. God implanted the regeneration into their hearts before Peter ever saw the vision.
The jailor for the Philippians would be another example. I'm convinced that the regeneration had taken place before the earthquake.
Each of these already NEW they were a sinner. It wasn't just some intellectual ascent, but a sudden deep awareness and conviction that changed their living. That indicates something new had entered them.
The Scriptures teach that a person in their natural state cannot have this experience, but it comes as God makes them alive by implanting a new creature. Remember, the prepared earth receives the seed and it grows to be harvested. Regeneration is preparing the earth - so to speak.