Amy.G said:
If that were the case, why was he sad? I think Jesus pointed out to him that money was his God, his idol. Nothing can come before God. When we come to God for salvation, we are willing to give anything for it because we have realized our sinful and depraved lives. We realize our need for God and call out to Him for mercy.
The rich ruler wasn't willing to let go of himself and reach out for God even it meant giving up eternal life. There are plenty of people just like that today. In fact, I'd say we were all like that at one time.
Amy.G, you have inadvertantly 'hit the nail dead center with your head' as to the issue. So I'll repeat it.
Salvation is not nor does not come from us "giving" anything for it.
God is the giver, here, and the only one. He gave his only begotten Son; God the Son gave his life on a cross on Mt. Moriah, for us. He gives unto them eternal life.
Salvation is a gift.
We are only the
receivers of His salvation, and that through repent/believe/faith, which is BTW, an all in one 'act'. It is in no way conditioned on us giving God anything, at all. It cost us nothing at all; it 'cost' God His Son, and it 'cost' the Son His precious blood and His own life.
And that is in 'total' contrast to the discipleship of following Christ. It may and can cost any of us who are believers everything, up to and even including our lives, and we witness that fact even today (try preaching Christ openly in defiance of the 'authorities' in such places as Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, China, No. Korea, etc. to name just a few), as well as the martyrs all throughout church history, not to mention those in the OT "from the blood of righteous Abel to the blood of Zacharias, slain at the temple, as well as those slain '"between the testaments", those who may yet be slain durug the 'church age', and those who will be slain in the future during the events spoken of in The Revelation.
It costs something to be a disciple, often every material and personal thing one has or holds dear, including prison, witness Paul, Peter, up to some even today. It has cost some believers their wives or husbands and/or their families. You name it, discipleship has probably cost it to someone, somewhere.
Just don't confuse and confute the two things of salvation and discipleship.
That is the error of Lordship Salvation, in a nutshell. In a vernacular way of phrasing it, Lordship Salvation amounts to attempting to "push a rope." And "rope pushing" works no better in Bible teachings than it does in everyday life.
But the old "Baptist phrase" (although I do not know if its origin is really Baptist) of "just give your heart to the Lord" or "give one's heart to Jesus" is simply a platitiude that is unScriptural, in its entirety.
God said He would give us a new heart.
He didn't say anything about a trade.
I normally would have cited the Scriptures for all I said here, but simply do not have enough time to look up each one before evening services.
And as it is also business meeting night (and my first session as the Moderator at our church), they kinda' are expecting me to show up, I would guess! :laugh:
So gotta' run for now.
Ed