Larry
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I love ya, Larry! Thanks for sharing yourself.
Pastor Larry said:
The foreknown are not believers yet. And the context does not give us two groups of foreknown. And that is your problem. You have foreknown people who are not called, justified, and glorified.
"Foreknown not believers yet." True, but God knows they will be. That's the whole point of omniscience, isn't it?
Calvinism recognizes that the word translated as sanctification is used for an act of God prior to faith and salvation...
Then we've found the error! Unbelievers are being sanctified daily mostly to SATAN. Calvin is, just as I observed, trying to sanctifiy people who aren't even justified before God. The only "salvation" sanctification precedes is glorification -- the day we end up in heaven. (See below before answering).
...I have given you the evidence and you have no answer for it that does not involve changing the text. So I reject your answer.
What text? 2Thes, 1Pet, John 7?
This is exactly the problem. You want to leave behind the verses so you can talk about your philosophy and theology. We have no basis to discuss salvation if we are going to leave behind the verses.
Well, I think even you have decided what those verses read and there is no more approaching them directly, is there. The same would go for me. The point being, I am trying another tact -- this issue of the process of salvation, justification-sanctification-glorification. There is more scripture bearing on the issue. It is possible to come back to those you cite later. Can you follow that?
Me: I agree justification is never said to follow election.
You: Then why did you say that justification comes before sanctification/election?
It does. I can't find in scripture where it doesn't.
Hagiozo only has one meaning, to set apart. It is applied in different ways. It happens to believers, to set them apart for godliness. It happens to unbelievers to set them apart for salvation (2 Thess 2;13; 1 Peter 1;2). It happens to unbelieving spouses because of a believing spouse (1 Cor 7:13). It always means to set apart. The context of the passages help us understand what that setting apart is to.
I see what you are driving at -- that God is aware that there is could be a work of sanctification going on prior to salvation.
But it wouldn't be the same work as the one where we are indwelt by the Holy Spirit, is my point. I'd like to restrict our discussion to that since that is what I call regeneration, born again, indwelt, etc. which comes AFTER justification.
See, I agree that Israel was set apart as a nation but they weren't all saved. This is the same model that Calvin uses (I believe) -- the same one by which Israel omitted to repent and choose God because they were already "elect" by His declaration. And this is what is called "sacralism" -- where whole societies are the redeemed church by proxy. However, the true church are the "invisble" saved among them who have made their own belief and committment to Christ, usually in spite of their organized church.
You have yet to show any weakness in my soteriology. So far you have managed only to show that you can’t handle Scripture.
Map out for me your distinctions between justification, sanctification, glorification. I can't even show you the weaknesses until you can distinguish what differences there are. So far, IMO you are running them all together.
I don’t know a lot about it, but from what I know it is pretty decent.
And yet D. James Kennedy would have you drive the listener to the sinners prayer. How is that different from Calvinism?
This is true because God changes our will so that we willingly believe.
If you say by seduction or persuasion of the Spirit, I agree. He doesn't go into our "computer" mind and change a "1" to a "0." WE "flip the switch." But, yeah, God is in there in word, in conscience, in authority -- "7 spirits of God" (Rev 5:6).
And this comes from Scripture and you want to leave certain verses behind because they don’t fit your system and you have no explanation for them. [1Cor 2]
I carefully showed you the change from when Paul preahced to them and then what he was about to write to them. The latter was "wisdom to the perfect." It is obvious that starting a church, Paul would come only preaching Christ crucified which they could understand. It is also clear that in writing he gave them the wisdom of God which unbelievers cannot understand. As with other texts, you are removing them from consideration because you have so misunderstood them as to be blind to them. It behooves me to replan my approach so that you can understand.
So why should I continue since you refuse to interact on what Scripture says, since you refuse to study? What benefit is there for me in this?
I refuse to study? That's pretty desperate, Larry. The fact is when you offer a verse, all I have to do is put my cursor over it the whole chapter pops up for me to study [Instaverse.com and download). I would therefore suggest that maybe you are not following up by studying my assertions and interpretations. But I'm not going to make a big deal out of it. You either will or won't but there is plenty of other scripture left on my side.
skypair