StraightAndNarrow
Active Member
And it is exactly this, Major B, that mystifies me when Calvinists fall for Lordship Salvation, as I have said before on this thread. In case you haven't read the whole thread, it is exactly my contention that you are unable as a lost person to accept Christ's Lordship, and that regeneration makes you able. I find it incredible that a Calvinist would not agree!!Originally posted by John of Japan:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Major B:
Not to throw a cog in the wheel of this long-lasting argument, but for several hundred years, "free grace" has been a synonym for five-point Calvinism, which, by the way teaches that we are saved TOTALLY by grace, but that IF true salvation has happened, there will be a changed life. If there is no evidence of a changed life, then real salvation has not taken place. "FG" has, apparently, hijacked the historical term.
Lordship salvation in it's theological meaning (that is, in the scholarly literature and theological journals) deals primarily with what is necessary for salvation (faith alone, as the Reformers believed, or faith plus dedication, as LS advocates believe), and only secondarily with what happens as a result of salvation. In Internet debating, on the other hand....
I know that I might technically be arguing the wrong point but I'm concerned about living the Christian life. After being saved, I don't accept the argument that a genuine Christian can continually reject the idea that Jesus is their Lord. And yes, I don't think such a person is saved at all.