Silverhair
Well-Known Member
What I would point out is that the theology that betrayed you is a branch of hybrid Baptist theology called "easy believism" which is free will as far as getting saved but then hyper-Calvinist as far as staying saved. If taught wrong it can do a lot of damage. It is a type of antinomianism that Baxter, Wesley, and the Reformers were always warning against.
A Calvinist will say that if God calls you and regenerates you initially and is solely responsible for you getting saved of course you will stay saved and you will continuously believe because the whole process is driven by God. But an Arminian or I assume a Free Will Baptist, who puts a high value on the free will, or at least the non-refusal of the free will the question is logically then why can't I use my free will and leave the faith?
Even with the hybrid Baptist theology mentioned above you need to understand that the reasoning is that although there is some degree of free will involved in initial salvation, the idea of regeneration or being born again means that a new principle of life in given to a believer and it is now unthinkable that they would totally and finally leave the faith. That this can morph into "easy believism" is not new. Read Romans Chapter 6.
Yet even here be careful. I think it was Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones who said that if you preach the gospel of grace truthfully and faithfully you will be accused of antinomianism at some point. All I'm trying to say is that you have a point in that we are to continue in belief but that is not unique to Free Will Baptists and I wouldn't camp too much on the tenses in some verses, as if you have discovered a controversy that never really existed.
God has provided the various means through which a person can come to the point of freely trusting in Him for their salvation. While I agree that it is unthinkable that someone who has trust in Him would latter reject Him the reality is that it does happen.