HP: Certainly the Scriptures do say that we are born again by God, and not by the will of man, but that does not insinuate or imply in the least that the will of man is not indeed actively involved, ‘without which’ no man can be saved. The passage you are referring to simple is stating that man’s will is not the grounds of salvation. It is saying that salvation’s plan, its implementation, and setting forth the means to accomplish God’s plan (the atonement) was not, is not, and will never be caused by the will of man.
Indeed belief is an act of the will, as is repentance, faith, and enduring to the end. That is not to say that man accomplishes them without help and influence by the Holy Spirit, but that salvation will not be accomplished without man, willingly yielding his will to God in faith, trust, and obedience. Although man's will is indeed involved in the salvation process, the actions of man will are not thought of as being meritorious in nature, nor are we saved for the sake of anything man can or will do. Man's intents and actions are always thought of in the sense of 'not without which,' not 'that for the sake of.'
Have you read the prison illustration I have posted several times? It sets forth the distinction of the senses in which I am speaking, i.e., not without which and that for the sake of. Until one comes to grips with the meaning and distinction of the senses of which our wills and that of God's are spoken of in realtionship to salvation, one most likely will never be able to place the will of man in a proper biblical perspective as it is involved in the salvation process.
The life ring example was by no means an illustration of salvation by works. It was a wonderful illustration of the salvation process illustrating the two senses perfectly. Nothing mans will can do while drowning in the water can in any way be seen as the means by which, or the grounds of his salvation. Just the same, mans will must reach out his hands voluntarily without force or coercion and lay hold of the life ring to be saved. Thanks SFIC for sharing that with the list.:thumbsup:
Paul illustrates this truth exceedingly clear in Acts 27. Although Paul had received clear revelation that none in the ship would perish, he also warned those on the ship. Ac 27:31 Paul said to the centurion and to the soldiers, Except these abide in the ship, ye CANNOT be saved.
They were clearly saved by a plan devised and implemented entirely of God, but just the same, they had to willingly exercise their wills in obedience in order to see that happen. The clear possibility existed that if they did not exercise their wills in obedience, they would indeed be lost. Their salvation from the sea was not accomplished ‘by their wills’ yet just the same, they were saved by their wills IN THE SENSE OF ‘not without which.’ They were not saved by their wills, but neither were they saved apart from their wills. Their wills were actively involved in one sense yet their wills were not the grounds of their being saved.
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