I had meant to sayDannyM wrote:Your salvation is all the work of Christ, and 'changing one's mind' would be a work of yours and not Christ.
Your salvation is all the work of Christ, "turning away from" would be a work of yours and not Christ.
I had meant to sayDannyM wrote:Your salvation is all the work of Christ, and 'changing one's mind' would be a work of yours and not Christ.
Your salvation is all the work of Christ, "turning away from" would be a work of yours and not Christ.
And I agree. The quote I meant to put there was,Like I said, repentance goes hand in hand with your faith in Christ.
I think if you read it in this context it will make more sense. I will correct.You do not 'change your mind' when you trust Christ..... and 'changing one's mind' would be a work of yours and not Christ.
I agree. Faith, and repentance are not works. But that is not what you said. You said, "and 'changing one's mind' would be a work of yours and not Christ." That would seem to contradict. the other.DannyM wrote:I really don’t see your problem. Trusting in Christ is not a work. Repentance is not a work. If repentance had been condition for one’s salvation then repentance is still not a work.
You've confused me here.Sorry, J, that doesn’t fly. My faith entails a repentance. You do not 'change your mind' when you trust Christ. Repentance comes after and with my faith. This faith is distinct from the saving faith given to me by Christ.
I don't have any problem with that.Yes I agree and this is why I say repentance is synonymous with our faith.
Repent therefore and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, so that times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord.” (Acts 3:19)Where am I told to repent in order to be saved?
[/quote]Your salvation is all the work of Christ, "turning away from" would be a work of yours and not Christ.
I don’t know if it is Calvinism or not. Ephesians really talks to me, in that I identify with such unmerited, unadulterated grace.jlay wrote:Looks like you are taking a determined Calvinist view on this. We've beat that horse to death.
You love Ephesians but you don’t see how those verses convey anything? How does an imparted faith entail a non-cooperative response? And I think you’re jumping from A to B a bit hastily. J, Apologetics is not meaningless with an imparted faith. It is you saying God will impart faith to “whoever”, as if God puts on a blindfold and just plays ‘you are not it’. I don’t really see an infringement on a limited free will we both endorse.I love Ephesians. It is my favorite book in the bible. But not sure how the verses you quote convey anything unless you start with a determined Calvanist view, which I do not, nor do I think is required. This would only mean that faith is imparted or implanted, not a cooperative response to the truth. If it is imparted, then apologetics, contending, etc. are meaningless, as God will impart faith to whoever. And blind the rest from any hope.
RickD wrote:Of course, Danny. I thought that this whole thread was about taking verses out of context. I figured I'd just pick a few random verses, quote them out of context, and that would prove my point. Did I win?DannyM wrote:And these apply to me, for my salvation?RickD wrote:Luke 13:3Where am I told to repent in order to be saved?
Matthew 4:17
Mark 1:15
My comment wasn't directed towards you, Murray.If you are accusing me of taking koran verses out of context think of this first.
Come on now Danny, let's not do that. Ephesians conveys a lot. It is pretty obvious I am talking about the context regarding why you quoted said verses in the first place. I would assume since you quoted those verses that you were representing them as a defense of your position, regarding repentance.You love Ephesians but you don’t see how those verses convey anything?
This implies that repentance is not a response involving the cooperative mind of man, but something implanted by God. If true, why would God COMMAND all men everywhere to repent? Why would God COMMAND people to do something they can not do? And the same goes for faith. Danny, it is most certainly a determined Calvinist view. Which is fine. I just don't hold that view myself. And that being the case, we may agree on the definition of the word, but will likely not agree about the nature of how it is applied.A change of mind cannot come when we are depraved,
kmr wrote:Skimming through some topics here, there is just one thing I'd like to note. If a lying, cheating, stealing, murdering man professed faith in Christ, and then continued to behave the same way, he has not really come to Christ. "Good works", or any moral code, comes from faith in Christ, and an absolute disregard for such is denial of Christ. This doesn't mean that you need to be moral to get into heaven, but it means that in order to accept Christ you need to truly love Him and understand Him. We are all, after all, sinners, but in the face of God, any sins regardless of magnitude will still distance us from him. So yes, a murdering lunatic can go to heaven, but after accepting Christ he would change his ways if he truly had accepted Him, because the Holy Spirit would work in him.
O okayRickD wrote:quote]
My comment wasn't directed towards you, Murray.
J, I was responding to thisjlay wrote:Come on now Danny, let's not do that. Ephesians conveys a lot. It is pretty obvious I am talking about the context regarding why you quoted said verses in the first place. I would assume since you quoted those verses that you were representing them as a defense of your position, regarding repentance.You love Ephesians but you don’t see how those verses convey anything?
I want to say that repentance can only come once God has worked in us. Whether my view is Calvinist or not should not negate the point. If I’m wrong it’s because I’m wrong and not because I’m ‘Calvinist.’ I don’t know every piece of Calvinism so could not with true conscience call myself Calvinist. From what I do know of Calvinism I’d say it seems to be thoroughly biblical, and most objections I see appear to be objections of distaste, rather than biblical objections.But not sure how the verses you quote convey anything unless you start with a determined Calvinist view
A change of mind cannot come when we are depraved,
J, if you’ll indulge me I’m working on a post which wants to address the relationship between a graceful, saving faith and a faith which springs forth at salvation. It’ll probably be called Two kinds of Faith. But please bear with me as I try to work this out. Might take a few daysjlay wrote:This implies that repentance is not a response involving the cooperative mind of man, but something implanted by God. If true, why would God COMMAND all men everywhere to repent? Why would God COMMAND people to do something they can not do? And the same goes for faith. Danny, it is most certainly a determined Calvinist view. Which is fine. I just don't hold that view myself. And that being the case, we may agree on the definition of the word, but will likely not agree about the nature of how it is applied.
Of course, but I would like to know what you specifically mean by "God has worked in us." My initial impression is that you are saying that salvation has already occurred. If this is not the case then please let me know.I want to say that repentance can only come once God has worked in us. Whether my view is Calvinist or not should not negate the point.