How about the paralyzed man in Luke 5:20? Man, your sins are forgiven you. Was he saved or not?When God judges the world, those trusting that righteousness is credited to them rather than actually being righteous will experience the "second death".
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How about the paralyzed man in Luke 5:20? Man, your sins are forgiven you. Was he saved or not?When God judges the world, those trusting that righteousness is credited to them rather than actually being righteous will experience the "second death".
Yes.How about the paralyzed man in Luke 5:20? Man, your sins are forgiven you. Was he saved or not?
But your system (if I may call it that) does nothing to satisfy the justice of God. It does not allow God to be just and the justifier of the one who believes in Jesus. God gives ungodly people a new birth (I assume that's what you are talking about) and bingo! They have their Get out of Jail Free card. But what about their sins? Rev. 6:10. "How long, O Lord holy and true, until You judge and avenge our blood on those who dwell upon the earth?" Under your system, God would be unjust.The reason you committed a fallacy (a false dichotomy) is the conditions can actually be met without God becoming guilty of committing an abomination.
God will not justify the wicked.
God will not punish the righteous as if guilty
God will not justify the wicked.
We are now bearing His righteousness, God lays His righteousness on us. But we are not now standing before God at judgment.
God predestined us to be conformed to Christ's image, to be justified, to be glorified. This will happen.
God will punish the wicked...ALL of the wicked.
God will never punish the righteous (God is just).
This is unclear as written, could you clarify? Are you saying, You are actually righteous?When God judges the world, those trusting that righteousness is credited to them rather than actually being righteous will experience the "second death".
Yes, I can.This is unclear as written, could you clarify?
That becomes a denial of the cross. And what was finished before His physical death.That's fine. My only concern was that there is a school of thought that views the resurrection as saving us and not the cross.
I do not think that @DaveXR650 was being serious (I think he was trying to mischaracterize those who disagree with his views). I have never heard of any school of thought in Christianity that views our salvation as being wrought by the Resurrection rather than the Cross.That becomes a denial of the cross. And what was finished before His physical death.
The Divine Exchange: The process is often described as a "divine exchange" where believers' sins are transferred to Christ, and in return, His righteousness is transferred to them.
Yes, I believe this is true. This is the "better covenant". God is just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Christ. And Christ Himself is the Guarantor of this better covenant by which we can now be credited as righteous through faith.Basis in faith: This imputation is received through faith in Christ. The Bible states that "faith is credited as righteousness" for the one who believes in God, not because faith itself is the righteousness, but because faith unites the believer to Christ.
No, I do not believe this.Not an inherent righteousness: Imputed righteousness is not about believers becoming inherently righteous on their own. Instead, it's about God declaring them righteous based on Christ's work, which is then legally credited to their account.
I am still not following this as written.Yes, I can.
I asked , are you righteous?Right now we are credited as being righteous by faith in Christ
While there is a better Covenant, that is not answering this issue.who wrought a "better covenant" in His blood
I do not think I have ever seen this covenant in scripture!and in accordance to that covenant who have faith in Christ are predestined to be made into His image,
Again this is vague, and unclear? Who are these people? Who would believe Christ died for them, but somehow they will not be conformed to His Image? I have never heard of any such people!to be righteous, to be glorified.
At Judgment those who believe they will escape accountability for their actions by Christ having suffered that penalty and clothed them in His righteousness but are not actually made into Christ's image
This explantion is very confuisng.(actually made righteous, actually glorified) will hear "I never knew you" and experience the second death.
At Judgment those who stand before God in Christ's image will live. This is what Christ accomplished on the cross.
My apology. I can explain another way.I am still not following this as written.
In the present God credits my faith as righteousness (this is Christ's righteousness). But I am predestined to be conformed into His image. The only part of me that will survive is Him in me.I asked , are you righteous?
This is getting closer to truth.My apology. I can explain another way.
Have you ever heard of a surety (in the US you may have heard "surety bond")?
A surety is a guarantee to a grantor that the receiver will meet the conditions of a contract. I view it this way because I believe we are dealing with a covenant.
God declares those who have faith in Jesus as righteous based on Christ Himself as the Surety of the covenant.
This is true if it is a God given faith.At Judgment we will be conformed to His image, so in the present He credits our faith as righteousness based on His righteousness.
This is murky....what is the source of this faith? You had it in and of yourself? Do natural men posses this faith? Or is such faith the gift of God?In the present God credits my faith as righteousness (this is Christ's righteousness).
The foreknown elect? Those who God foreknew?But I am predestined to be conformed into His image. The only part of me that will survive is Him in me.
For those whom God foreknew, He also predestined to become conformed to the image of His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brothers; and these whom He predestined, He also called; and these whom He called, He also justified; and these whom He justified, He also glorified.
I agree with you that Martin's position of sin being laid is problematic. Your view is more logical, but I do not believe it is correct.what is the source of this faith? You had it in and of yourself? Do natural men posses this faith? Or is such faith the gift of God?
Do you believe that God views it as evil to comdemn a righteous man as if guilty as well as to clear or justify a wicked man?This is getting closer to truth.
@37818. I appreciate your clarification. If @JonC could set aside his nastiness for a moment I'll explain what I meant. When John Stott, in his excellent book "The Cross of Christ" was talking about this and how the death of Christ and the resurrection must always be taught together he said this, with the emphasis in bold being mine:I do not think that @DaveXR650 was being serious (I think he was trying to mischaracterize those who disagree with his views). I have never heard of any school of thought in Christianity that views our salvation as being wrought by the Resurrection rather than the Cross.
But who knows...a bunch of people killed themselves to get on a spaceship behind a comit. I can only say, if @DaveXR650 was not just trying to mischaracterize his mistake is assuming such a school of thought as being within our faith.
I was not being nasty. I was simply saying that I have not heard of any school of thought in Christianity that views our salvation as being wrought by the Resurrection rather than the Cross.@37818. I appreciate your clarification. If @JonC could set aside his nastiness for a moment I'll explain what I meant. When John Stott, in his excellent book "The Cross of Christ" was talking about this and how the death of Christ and the resurrection must always be taught together he said this, with the emphasis in bold being mine:
"It would be seriously unbalanced to proclaim either the cross without the resurrection (as I am afraid Anselm did) or the resurrection without the cross (as do those who present Jesus as a living Lord rather than as an atoning Saviour)." John Stott
And so my concern in light of the mixed up things Jon is trying to convince people of that I noticed what Stott said next:
"For it was by his death, and not by his resurrection, that our sins were dealt with."
So I don't think my post warranted a stupid response like he did, but he is probably correct in that it is a mistake to think such a school of thought, where it is denied that "our sins were dealt with" would be within our faith.
It does, if Jesus is the reconciliation of man and God. Christ suffered for sins once for all time, the just for the unjust, so that He might bring us to God, having been put to death in the flesh, but made alive in the spirit.But your system (if I may call it that) does nothing to satisfy the justice of God. It does not allow God to be just and the justifier of the one who believes in Jesus.
I agree with you that Martin's position of sin being laid is problematic
Martin Marprelate said:You may see it as being problematic. Your problem is that it is in the Bible. 'And the LORD has laid on Him the iniquity of us all.'
It is a delight to see you quoting some Scripture for a change. Thank you. Will you explain, please, exactly what you understand by 'Christ suffered for sins once for all time'? How is this not God punishing the righteous? And what do you understand by 'for sins'?It does, if Jesus is the reconciliation of man and God. Christ suffered for sins once for all time, the just for the unjust, so that He might bring us to God, having been put to death in the flesh, but made alive in the spirit.
Really?I stop at heresy. Nothing else matters after that.
One more time. 'For when we were still without strength, Christ died for the ungodly.' Does that mean that God justifies the wicked? YES! 'For scarcely for a righteous man will one die; yet perhaps for a good man someone would even dare to die. But God demonstrates His own love for us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Much more then, having been justified by His blood, we shall be saved from wrath through Him.'God will NOT justify the wicked.
'He who did not spare His own Son, but delivered Him up [to suffering and death] for us all, how will He not, with Him,God will NOT condemn the righteous.
Indeed, but only on the basis of Christ's atoning death for the ungodly, otherwise God will not be just and the justifier of the one who believes in Jesus.God WILL forgive sins based on repentance.
The post in question said that "it is finished" was said before Christ died. You then, who have been saying that those of us who believe in penal substitution are heretics gave it a "thumbs up", on the same thread. So I asked for clarification, which 37818 gave. And that was fine. Your reaction, along with your other posts, would indicate that you are going off in some strange directions. If you are not then that is good.Why would you think it is "nasty" to assume your reply was relevant to the thread in which you posted rather than simply addressing some group John Stott may have encountered during his lifetime?