Brother Joseph, no need to repeat the rebutted arguments, please address the rebuttals.
Let me restate it by the numbers:
1) The claim is "bought" cannot mean saved. The rebuttal, my position does not claim bought means saved..
Brother Van,
As I stated, the Greek word for the word "bought" in that verse is often not used in a redemptive sense. You did not read or do not know how to comprehend what you read if that is what you concluded was the "gist" of his argument. In the thirty New Testament occurrences, where the Greek term agorazo is used (this is the greek word for the word "bought" in the verse), only five texts are clearly and indisputably redemptive. This was his central argument.
4) I provided two verses that also use "master" to mean God or Christ. Clearly here the reference is to Christ. Jude 4 uses the term to refer to Christ, the provider of grace. The claim in the article is without support.
Again, you must have not fully read either time it was posted. The author
did not claim that the Greek word for "master" was not referring to Christ as the following sentence that I have posted twice states it is "to Christ...as Sovereign! " He writes,"It has been demonstrated that the term “Master” (despotes) refers to an owner in a master- slave relationship. The meaning here is not of Christ as Savior or Mediator (despotes is never used as a redemptive title),
but to Christ (or the Father) as Sovereign."
Further, this argument that the word master in the verse refers to Christ as the owner of those he "bought" in a manner similar to Deut. 32:5-6 of a sovereign master (despot) who had
purchased slaves and on that basis commanded their allegiance is further strengthened as the Greek word for master used is "despotes" is explicitly defined as "an authority figure ("master") who exercises complete jurisdiction (wields unrestricted power)"
http://biblehub.com/greek/1203.htm
He created the nonelect, therefore it can be said He has a master/slave type relationship in that He "bought" or "created" them, but He did not buy them in a redemption sense. This relationship of authority over the non-elect is seen in the following two verses, "The Lord hath made all things for himself: yea, even the wicked for the day of evil." (Proverbs 16:4) and "Hath not the potter
power over the clay, of the same lump to make one vessel unto honour, and another unto dishonour?" (Romans 9:21)
I have now answered you a third time in this thread, if you choose to ignore or not read this post in it's entirety or respond to the points made herein, I trust any fair minded reader can see this was the case by a simple reading of the exchange between us on the thread. I also noticed that in your two "replies" to my posts (i.e. your post 33 and 35) you did not quote my posts, further proof that you do not desire to debate, but I quoted your posts for both of my replies with applicable responses both times.