convicted1
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A Christian does not need to be restored.
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A Christian does not need to be restored.
Know that we cannot lose our salvation, but in a practical sense, do they experience ANY spiritual effects here and now?
I'm not exactly sure what you're asking about. A professed believer who displays no repentance from sin is in a dangerous place. Christians do sin. They may even fall into a bad way for a continued period of time; but part of the Christian life is repentance. In fact, repentance is central to the Christian faith. An unwillingness to recognize their sin, and to confess and turn from it, displays a calloused heart to the Holy Spirit. While we cannot say dogmatically, such actions display an unregenerate heart; not the heart of a child of God. I would fear for such a person.
1. The bible does not say whether the man returned or not, it merely tells the church how to treat him. We don't know the end of the story.
2. The language of "returned to God" could be problematic. "Repented" would be a more biblically correct term. FAL is correct that it is impossible for a true believer to "leave" God, or God to "leave" the believer. While I would be more open to saying our experience of "fellowship" with God can be disrupted than FAL is, I think we would be in agreement on the main Idea that The relationship is maintained by God's spirit in us.
was referring to IF that person, who was a genuine believer, would face loss of fellowship, empowering, prayers getting answered etc...
If there would be consequences until he came back to God
Thanks for the clarification.
The reason I refer to such individuals as "professed believers" is because their refusal to repent from sin undermines their profession. If a church member refuses to repent they open themselves up to progressive church discipline. If their heart remains hardened throughout all attempts to call them to repentance, then they face the prospect of excommunication. The result? They are to be treated by the church as an unbeliever. Regular fellowship and the graces of the church are withheld. That doesn't mean they are to be persecuted or their family shunned; especially if the family is continuing in fellowship in the church. We should pray for such a person that God will grant them repentance and save them.
Oh Herald.....Ive seen that work both ways. Ive seen a youth pastor at an IFB church vilified, fired & labeled as a reprobate because the youth pastor believed in doctrines of Grace & the Head Pastor was violently apposed to it....so he used church discipline as a means to restrict the Youth Pastors desires to follow that path in his Soterology......Even to telling everyone that the Church would NOT be blessed because of the Youth Pastors belief system.....effectively making the Youth Pastor a outsider in his own church community
The fellowship restortion is with other believers not the Lord. A Christian never loses fellowship with the Lord.
My view is that a true believer can, in fact, lost his fellowship with the Lord. But he cannot lose his relationship.
When I disobeyed my father, relationship was unaffected, but our fellowship was not the same.
If a genuine Christian and they sin again and do not confess. God will correct them. I just have a problem believing a true Christian would refuse to confess. A corection from God can be life threatening. Just look at what happened to Jonah.Know that we cannot lose our salvation, but in a practical sense, do they experience ANY spiritual effects here and now?