glfredrick
New Member
I'm late coming to this thread, but some questions have popped up in my mind.
Does anybody here really believe that Thomas was not saved until he saw the resurrected Jesus in the flesh? If so, then you must believe that all the other disciples were also lost. And so was Mary Magdalene, who came to the tomb on that Sunday morning to prepare the body. She had no thought she'd find the tomb empty. And the men were getting ready to go back to the jobs they had before they joined Jesus as his chosen twelve.
In Luke 24, Jesus joined Cleopas and his friend on the road to Emmaus. Only after their eyes were opened (v.24) did they recognize Jesus. They went back to Jerusalem, found the eleven and told them they had seen him. Were they lost up to the moment they were convinced he was alive? Surely, nobody would argue that.
In the OP, Skandelon asked why Thomas demanded that he see Jesus before he would believe. He asserted that Thomas chose not to believe.
Actually, the other disciples made the same choice. Mary Magdelene chose not to believe he would rise from the dead. She (and the eleven) acted on that belief. But this does not mean they were not saved. It simply means they didn't believe he was alive until they saw him alive.
There is a good case to be made that no one was "saved" until Christ was resurrected, at which time salvation was accomplished through His atoning. That fulfillment could then be applied to those who God had elected and who were righteous in faith, as described in Hebrews 11 and other places.
Some also suggest that it is possible to see that salvation did not arrive until the coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, but that remains open for debate. I only mention it because it is a position that some have argued and make no judgment on it myself (still studying that issue).