Havensdad said:
It was a common practice for Jews to call one another "brother".
Uh, right within the verse. The person who has "dead" faith, is not saved. Therefore they are bound for eternal damnation. What do you think they are not "saved" from, rabid polar bears?
The word "believe" in Jn 3:18, is the same word as the word "faith" in 2:14. John 2:14 COULD just as easily read in English "can that 'belief' save him"?
ALSO> the word "sodezo", for "save" is the same word used throughout the New Testament, to refer to salvation.
People who "skew" this verse, have an unbelievably obvious agenda.
In regards to Romans: keep reading.
Rom 6:1 What shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound?
Rom 6:2 God forbid. We who died to sin, how shall we any longer live therein?
Romans 4:1-8 simply states that we are justified apart from works of the LAW> it does not state that you can act against your stated belief.
If you believe a train is coming, you get off the track. Those who say they believe, but do not act in accordance with that belief, are called "hypocrites" in the NT, and are condemned.
Thanks for the 'Greek' lesion, 'er I mean lesson.
I believe if you were to re-check, you would find that the word for save is "
σῶζω" or "sOzO" (to use my 'system' of transliterating) or as others have done, "swzw", which is a word used in Jas. 2:14. Yes, the word "sOzO" certainly is the one rendered as 'save', however, the word in Jn. 3:18, in all three instances is a verb, "pisteuO", while the other referred word in Jas. 2:14 is the noun, "pistis", which is, I grant, 'derived' from "pisteuO', but is not exactly the same word.
I do, however, believe that you are placing undue emphasis on "save" and "dead faith", in your reading of Jas. 2, while 'downplaying', as it were, the idea of "profit" (or one's rewards.) I do not believe eternal salvation is ever spoken of as "profit" but rather it
is "the 'free gift' of God." "Justified" and "you see", in the context, as well as the concept of practical service, found in the verses immediately preceding this, but seem to get 'short shrift', as well. Not to mention, a question of "before whom" ("one of you..."; "Someone will say...". and "You see, then") There is a mention of Abraham, in the context, as well.
"When", Biblically, was Abraham justified? When he offered up his son, Isaac, as referenced here?
Or 25 years prior to this, when 'Abraham believed in the Lord, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness?'
The answer is both;
Abraham was justified, i.e, declared righteous,
before God, by his faith, and that only, and that by God, before he was even known as Abraham, there and before God even re-confirmed His covenant with Abraham. Did you notice that God, alone, walked "through the pieces" binding Himself (but not Abraham) to the conditions of that covenant?? (Gen. 15:6, 9-18; Rom. 4:3; Gal. 3:6; Jas. 2:23)
Abraham was justifed before man, by his 'works', when he offered up Isaac, as this 'faith' (and the declaration of him as righteous) was fulfilled at this time. "You see then, that a man is justified by works, and not by faith only." But God sees not as a man sees, but God looks on the heart (I Sma. 16:7), something that is impossible for man, hence this is said, and here (not 25 years before) Abraham is now called 'the Friend of God.'
Saved? From what? The physical suffering in the Tribulation that occurs and no one would physically be 'saved' unless the days be shortened (Mk. 13:20?; "a soul from death" (Jas. 5:20)?; the sick (Jas. 5:15)?; from wrath (Rom. 5:9)?; "the fire" at the judgment seat of works for a Christian (I Cor. 3:11-15)?; "from our/their sins" (Mt. 1:21)?; physically from the Sea (Ac. 27: 20,31,43)?; "Hell"?
Incidentally. one can never find these words "save" and "Hell" in a single verse of Scripture together, that I found. I suggest that "salvation to eternal life" on the basis of works is not what is in view, (nor "saved from eternal damnation") here, not is it "saved from polar bears".
Rom. 4:1-8 says nothing about "the LAW", at all, it merely says "works". And in the near context, "the Law" refes to the Mosaic Law as given by God at Sinai, and following, something of which Abraham was never subjected to, for it did not yet exist. Incidentally, I am (and have always been) exactly as subject to any of the precepts of the Mosaic law, as was Abraham - ZERO!!
As a Gentile, before I was saved, I never had it; As a Christian, after I was saved, I was not under it.
I want to get back later to this "dead" bit, but have to go for now.
Ed