Originally posted by Brother Bob:
Ed Sutton;
I can't believe you would use those under the Law Covenant to try and justify being saved today. They had concubines (we certainly can not, they offered beast of the field for their sins, we certainly can not, they had more than one wife, we certainly can not.)
Also, You use the one committing adultery with his father's wife as being saved.
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr /> Ed Sutton;
I do believe I recall something like this in a couple of places in the Bible, as to a man being "with a woman not his wife, committing adultery with her and be saved at the same time", to use your words.
I'd suggest that David would qualify as one of those. I'd also suggest that the individual in I Cor. who was with "his father's wife", is another.
1 Corinthians, chapter 5
1": It is reported commonly that there is fornication among you, and such fornication as is not so much as named among the Gentiles, that one should have his father's wife.
1 Corinthians, chapter 5
"12": For what have I to do to judge them also that are without? do not ye judge them that are within?
"13": But them that are without God judgeth. Therefore put away from among yourselves that wicked person
(No Salvation here!!!)
Come on Ed, its not like you to use such a statement, is there some hidden reason to do so? </font>[/QUOTE]No, Bob, I had no ulterior motive. I merely answered the question as you wrote it, at the time. I did not read all the posts before getting involved, but answered them as I came to them. You have somewhat altered the question by expanding in later posts, that you are talking about a specific instance and a "lost man". That was not clear at the time, nor the question you asked that I responded to.
The question was then, and I quote:
We are not talking about Salvation here. Salvation is of the Lord. We are talking if a man has to quit doing wrong, can he be in the act of adultery and be saved without first quitting. You still haven't answered it.
I can't put it too plain without getting thrown off here, but can he be with a woman not his wife, committing adultery with her and be saved at the same time. answer please?
The answer was and still is "Yes!" David is Exhibit "A". Described as 'the man after God's own heart', he certainly, IMO at least, was saved
before he committed adultery with the woman who is unnamed in Scripture other than three titles, the most common of which we know as Bathsheba ('Daughter of' Sheba, literally) or "Her that had been the wife of Uriah", whom David arraigned to have subsequently murdered, after finding out that she was "with child". (You're the daddy!!). David was saved before his act of adultery; David was saved
while he was "committing adultery with her"; David was saved
after his act of adultery with her: David was saved while having Uriah murdered - er, I mean killed in battle; David was saved
when he was confronted by Nathan; David was saved
when he confessed and asked God to restore the joy of his salvation, after this, not his salvation itself, which he never ceased to have, as recorded in Psalm 51.
David
never 'stopped' "being saved", during any of this, even when Scripture declares:
"But the thing that David had done displeased the LORD." (II Sam. 11:27b, NJKV)
But I would offer that he
did pay a heavy price for this.
Secondly, you now write (but not then):
"I can't believe you would use those under the Law Covenant to try and justify being saved today. They had concubines (we certainly can not, they offered beast of the field for their sins, we certainly can not, they had more than one wife, we certainly can not.)"
I'm not sure that "those under the Law Covenant" are any different than 'those under "the Grace Covenant"' as to adultery. Another poster has well put that the offering of the "beast of the field" did not 'take away sins', but merely 'covered' them, as in Hebrews. Nor was one 'saved' differently under the Law than under Grace. Read Romans 4. Salvation was and is "by faith", with righteousness accounted "apart from works", and with a citing from David, himself, in the chapter. I'll offer that a 'mistress', to use a genteel term, of a married man is in essence, a concubine. And there are groups that do practice multiple marriages, to this day, although they are not very common. (And probably displease God, as well, as I read Scripture, also.) In fact, was there not a mention in the news, only in the last couple of weeks, of such recently in some Western state?
As to the individual in I Cor. 5, I'd say that since the ones who are addressed are described as "the church which is at Corinth; sanctified in Christ Jesus, and called saints", none of which terms, to my knowledge, are used of unsaved individuals in Scripture, that the addressees are saved. (Based on the whole overall reading of the Corinthian epistles, I'd suggest that many of the saints weren't acting very 'saintly' at all, however.) Since the one is "among you", that implies to me that he was a saint, hence a saved individual. Paul is telling the Corinthians, as I read it, to "church" him, to use a term that many of us Kentuckians would know, even though many of other areas would not. ('Disfellowship' or discipline him, for those in Palm Beach County and Rio Linda.) The verses you cited (I Cor. 5:12,13) support this as well, but do
not say as you wrote "(No Salvation here!!!)"!
I'd add that II Cor. 2:1-10 seems to refer to a particular individual, and I believe it is this individual, considering the language, and he should now be restored, having apparently confessed and forsaken this.
That, and that only was my point. I cannot be responsible for taking something at face value, as written, when the meaning is not what you or any other may have intended. There have been adequate posts in this thread on the idea of 'free grace'.
I have previously tended to be one of those, in belief. I may however, be rethinking a bit of this. I want to be identified with those Scripture calls righteous, faithful, and godly. How about you or any other? Is that a good group to want to be associated with, for Biblical 'heroes'?
Awaiting a response, on this one.
In his grace,
Ed