Does God require them to have sins dealt with before the Cross, or else get cleansed by his blood?
God requires that they understand their sin is what put Him on the cross and their life is no longer their own.
Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
Does God require them to have sins dealt with before the Cross, or else get cleansed by his blood?
I'm not really sure it's the best place to start a discussion about the book, but the two prefaces seem to keep nagging at me, particularly one phrase - mental assent.
On page ix, (Packer's preface), I read:
God has joined faith and repentance as the two facets of response to the Savior and make it clear that turning to Christ means turning from sin and letting ungodliness go (paragraph 1, sentence 3)
Simple assent to the gospel, divorced from a transforming commitment to the living Christ, is by biblical standards less than faith, and less that saving, and to elicit only assent of this kind would be to secure only false converts (par 2, sen 6)
So what is in question is the nature of faith (par 1, sen 8) - I would agree with this statement, by the way. This should be a question as to the nature of faith.
Looking at those sentences in my book of which I highlighted (thanks for the tip). I think the point that Packer is trying to make here is that God grants faith and repentance and those truly saved will show fruit of a true conversion. Bye the way I like Packer and have two of his books. Like Mac a great person to read.
Then on page xi (Boice's preface), I read:
Did I say weakness? It is more. It is a tragic error. It is the idea - where did it come from? - that one can be a Christian without being a follower of the Lord Jesus Christ. It reduces the gospel to the mere fact of Christ's having died for sinners, requires only of sinners that they acknowledge this by the barest intellectual assent, and then assures them of their eternal security when they may very well not be born again. (par 4, sen 1-2)
What I see in both of these prefaces is that both of these men equate faith with mental assent to some facts, or "the barest intellectual assent"
Thats partly true however I think you missed this line by Boice (another great author whom has some great books) It is the idea - where did it come from? - that one can be a Christian without being a follower of the Lord Jesus Christ. Then this line by Packer Simple assent to the gospel divorced from a transforming commitment to the living Christ, is by biblical standards less than faith...
Here is Packer again:
"faith and repentance as the two facets of response"
Then he goes on to define (or describe) what these two facets are:
"Simple assent to the gospel, transforming commitment"
Thats correct. If one has no commitment but claims Christ they have a false faith.
And now Boice again:
"It reduces the gospel to the mere fact of Christ's having died for sinners, requires only of sinners that they acknowledge this by the barest intellectual assent"
Neither of these men define or describe faith as full assurance, personal conviction, trust, expectant hope.
How complex a topic like Faith cannot be fully explained in 2 page forward by both men can it?
By their insistence that a removal of commitment leaves only a "simple assent" or "barest assent", they are, in essence, saying that faith = intellectual assent.
I disagree. They clearly state that saving faith also involves a transforming commitment and fruits.
So they have posited a view that assent to facts is not enough, but that this assent to facts must be coupled with a commitment to follow. We can therefore conclude that their idea of "saving faith" would be the following two components:
facts + following
Well yes even the devils know the facts (James 2:19) but do they have a real faith? You know when Christ walked the earth the only persons that believed in him was the devils! Everyone else, even his own disciples doubted who he was! The devils knew the facts but they have a false faith. Knowing the facts is not enough as one must show their fruit.
In Hard to believe page 10 Mac writes
Following Jesus is not about you and me. Being a Christian is not about us, its about our being sick of our sin and our desperation for forgiveness. It is about seeing Christ as the priceless savior from sin and death and hell, so that we willingly give up as much as it takes even if it costs us our families, our marriages, and whatever else we cherish and possess.
Mac goes on to say later on the page that the Lord may take your life, your money, your family, your spouse and your job. I take this to mean that being a Christian is not about my self-fulfillment nor self-esteem. Also I take this to mean that being a christian may entail one get into financial problems and that God may or may not bail you out. This is contrary to the message of the modern church which states that God will and is obligated to bail us out of large debts and financial problems. God may or may not do this. Also I take what he says (and he provides much scripture to back up everything he says) to mean that I must preach hard on sin and hell, so that people are desperate for Christ. This is one reason why I prefer The Way of the Master because it hits hard on sin.
PS- Looking forward to your next reply James. Oh and I would ignore the people posting in this thread unless they have a honest question or have read the book. Most have not and still reject LS so I ignore what they say. If they can't read the book, then they should read Hard to Believe a easier to read version.
Hey! Maybe when everyone gets their editions checked an actual conversation will take place.
Thats partly true however I think you missed this line by Boice (another great author whom has some great books) It is the idea - where did it come from? - that one can be a Christian without being a follower of the Lord Jesus Christ. Then this line by Packer Simple assent to the gospel divorced from a transforming commitment to the living Christ, is by biblical standards less than faith...
Here is Packer again:
"faith and repentance as the two facets of response"
Then he goes on to define (or describe) what these two facets are:
"Simple assent to the gospel, transforming commitment"
Thats correct. If one has no commitment but claims Christ they have a false faith.
Looking at those sentences in my book of which I highlighted (thanks for the tip). I think the point that Packer is trying to make here is that God grants faith and repentance and those truly saved will show fruit of a true conversion. Bye the way I like Packer and have two of his books. Like Mac a great person to read.
Thats partly true however I think you missed this line by Boice (another great author whom has some great books) It is the idea - where did it come from? - that one can be a Christian without being a follower of the Lord Jesus Christ. Then this line by Packer Simple assent to the gospel divorced from a transforming commitment to the living Christ, is by biblical standards less than faith...
Thats correct. If one has no commitment but claims Christ they have a false faith.
How complex a topic like Faith cannot be fully explained in 2 page forward by both men can it?
I disagree. They clearly state that saving faith also involves a transforming commitment and fruits.
Well yes even the devils know the facts (James 2:19) but do they have a real faith? You know when Christ walked the earth the only persons that believed in him was the devils! Everyone else, even his own disciples doubted who he was! The devils knew the facts but they have a false faith. Knowing the facts is not enough as one must show their fruit.
In Hard to believe page 10 Mac writes
Mac goes on to say later on the page that the Lord may take your life, your money, your family, your spouse and your job. I take this to mean that being a Christian is not about my self-fulfillment nor self-esteem. Also I take this to mean that being a christian may entail one get into financial problems and that God may or may not bail you out. This is contrary to the message of the modern church which states that God will and is obligated to bail us out of large debts and financial problems. God may or may not do this. Also I take what he says (and he provides much scripture to back up everything he says) to mean that I must preach hard on sin and hell, so that people are desperate for Christ. This is one reason why I prefer The Way of the Master because it hits hard on sin.
PS- Looking forward to your next reply James. Oh and I would ignore the people posting in this thread unless they have a honest question or have read the book. Most have not and still reject LS so I ignore what they say. If they can't read the book, then they should read Hard to Believe a easier to read version.
Those who do not hold to LDS salvation would also agree that a Christian needs to become a follower/disciple of Christ in order to be in the will of God for their lives, and to keep on growing and maturing, but that we still can at times been choosing the foolish way, and try to still run our own lives, and that will bring disciple/chaistisement from God, but does NOT mean that we were never saved!
LEARLY teachesthat as inner ONLY must place faith unto jesus, look to him to get saved, and after that, we must start the process of continued growing/discipleship, due to us already now saved!
Those who do not hold to LDS salvation would also agree that a Christian needs to become a follower/disciple of Christ in order to be in the will of God for their lives, and to keep on growing and maturing, but that we still can at times been choosing the foolish way, and try to still run our own lives, and that will bring disciple/chaistisement from God, but does NOT mean that we were never saved!
LEARLY teachesthat as inner ONLY must place faith unto jesus, look to him to get saved, and after that, we must start the process of continued growing/discipleship, due to us already now saved!
Have you read the book? Do you have the book? If not buy a copy and let's chat.
John,
I forgot to add...
The reason I started with the two Forewords (I think i mistakenly referred to them as Prefaces) is that they both offer a summary of the issue at hand.
I know they're not exhaustive, but they both used the same verbiage to convey their idea of what faith is or is not. And they agreed with Mac.
This is the foundation of the entire debate, and must be addressed first
SolaSaint,
We are using "The Gospel According to Jesus"
The '88 edition has two Forewords, which I erroneously referred to as Prefaces. If you want, I can post both full Forewords tonight, so that you can read them.
Thanks James, so are you in agreement with Packer and Mac? Do you feel a truly saved man will show his faith by works? Can simple mental assent save anyone? By the way I feel we have many filling the pews today that fit that description (mental assent only) or as Hank Hanagraff states as a Said Faith.
Have you ever seen Ray Comfort's DVD called True and False Conversions?
I have not seen Comfort's DVD.
As for "simple mental assent", that is what I was addressing in post #14, then John responded in pose #22, then I responded in posts #26 & 28
But as you can read in both these Forewords, the same verbiage is used, such as "bare" (or naked) mental assent. The natural implication is that this "mental assent" needs to be joined together with commitment.
But that is nothing but facts and works, neither of which save.
If faith minus works is equivalent to bare mental assent, then *true* faith would necessarily amount to mental assent coupled with works.
I do not believe a mental assent - whether it is coupled with works or not - amounts to faith.
I agree that many are filling the pews with a mental assent to some facts, but it is not works they are missing, it is hope in Christ. They are missing full assurance of God's promise, found in His Son. They are missing confidence in His finished work.
John,
I think I may have used some terminology that didn't resonate. I'll try to use phrases which convey my point from the Lordship mindset.
In the eyes of a Lordship proponent, there is a distinction between "faith" and "saving faith"
And saving faith has several synonyms - genuine faith, real faith, true faith, and maybe others.
In the eyes of Boice and Packer (And Mac), faith is a bare intellectual assent to facts. Then, when coupled together with a commitment, the sum is "saving faith"
You wrote:
I didn't miss it, I was trying to highlight the nature of faith, which Packer had already stated is the heart of the issue, with which I agree.
Here is a quote from me:
To which you responded:
You agreed with them that "faith" is a mere intellectual assent. But that intellectual assent becomes "saving" when it is coupled with works.
That boils down to a view that facts + works = saving faith
But faith is not adherence to facts, even if it is coupled with works
Facts, even if coupled with a commitment, do not save. Facts are facts. There are certainly facts about Christ, but knowing the facts, and trusting HIM are not the same thing