Kurieuo wrote:By discipline, you mean naturally in this life... or in the everlasting life hereafter?
Both.
Your "trusting in" is like a loophole if you will, for escaping what I see (and no doubt Gman sees) as an unwelcome bedfellow -- someone hating God and all those who love Him being allowed into heaven. And further yet, without any restraints in place or God transforming a person (into someone they're not?), haters could even continue to persecute, accuse and hate.
Those within "Free Grace" who believe only intellectual assent is required, the heart doesn't need to be involved at all. It's all an intellectual acknowledgement.
Your trust on the other hand, requires something of the heart. A change in the person. Such that, their trusting in their "Daddy" necessitates fulfilling a personal need and desire... a vulnerability to be accepted and have their trust fulfilled or rejected... a longing for the other who has trust invested in to receive the request and help... It is hard for me to conceive that one who trusts in God could then willingly turn from God, or trust in God with an immediate desire to oppose Him thereafter. To the contrary, it is quite easy for me to conceive of someone just taking God's gift (via intellectual assent) without any real change.
In the first, there is a lesser requirement to be saved since an empty acknowledgement of certain Christological truths allow the gift can be received. In the second, the requirement is more because "trust" seems to require an actual change in the person as I have tried to demonstrate in my previous paragraph.
I think the difference between those in "Free Grace" (sorry, if that's incorrect as just not sure what else to call it) who adhere to "Intellectual Assent" versus a "Trust in Christ" have quite drastic repercussions. With the former, Hitler could be saved. With the latter, one could say Hitler never really trusted in Christ but rather himself of which Hitler's life is a testiment to that.
First, the term "Free Grace" is perfectly appropriate. Second, I'm heavily, heavily involved in the movement. I have presented at both regional and national conferences. I know several of the leaders (Bob Wilkin, Dennis Rokser, Charlie Bing, Dave Anderson, J. B. Hixon, etc.) on a first name basis, and I teach and develop classes at Free Grace Seminary. I give you that little list of credentials only because I have never heard anyone in the FG camp make some of the claims you make. I really think you should read actual FG literature, because you seem to have a rather skewed view of things.
Now, more specifically, there is no unwelcome bedfellow. I'm trying to avoid the possibility of "someone hating God and all those who love Him being allowed into heaven. And further yet, without any restraints in place or God transforming a person (into someone they're not?), haters could even continue to persecute, accuse and hate." On the contrary, I think all that is true! It is perfectly possible for someone to hate God and go to heaven. And yes, believers can hate and continue to persecute and accuse. Now, there ARE restraints, but those restraints come in the form of divine chastisement. A carnal believer or apostate is as saved as you and me, and no matter how wickedly they treat others, they are still saved. No matter how much they come to hate God, they are still saved. God just may discipline them, both in this life and the next. Several places in the NT talk about that, which I'm sure I don't have to quote. That discipline, in fact, may include death. What it does not, and cannot, include is punishment in an eternal Hell.
Lastly,I don't make as strong a distinction as you seem to between intellectual assent and trust. We aren't saved by being persuaded that something is true. We are saved by TRUSTING Jesus, or if it helps, by ENTRUSTING our souls to Him. Now, it's quite natural to be grateful and want to continue to follow the Savior of your soul, but it's not a logical necessity. Now, the big point here is that trusting Jesus doesn't necessitate a change in a person. It's just a passive reception of God's grace. If there is a change, it happens when we abide in that trust--when we keep trusting Him to live through us.
I think "works" could still be pleasing. I find my children's desire to clean pleasing, even though they may drastically do it wrong and just delay it actually getting cleaned. How would God's rewarding some more than others work (which I understand you believe in), unless God was more pleased with some than others. But, pleasing such that our works are deserving of salvation -- such is wrong.
Not even Gman believes this really, though he might tinker on the brink. But Gman always comes back on the side that keeping the Law isn't required for salvation when push comes to shove -- while at the same time finding it hard to comprehend why anyone would feel a desire to keep the law is a burden rather than joy. But ultimately, and I've pushed him lots, he'll come on keeping the Law not being required to be saved.
God is pleased when we trust Him. God is pleased with His work in our lives, not with our work in our own. Remember that it is IMPOSSIBLE to please God without faith. That means that works don't please Him. Faith is trust--but trust in what? Trusting that God will do what He promised to do--sanctify me, which means trusting Him to do in my life what He wants to. If I do it in my own power, it doesn't please God at all.
I'll let Gman explain himself. I know he says that the Law is not required for salvation. He does think that breaking the Law is sin, but I don't care about any of that, really. I care about him saying things like, "faith IS works AND repentance." Faith isn't works. Faith isn't repentance. The bottom line is that anyone, anyone, anyone who believes that the presence of sin or the lack of works or a lack of love or any other such things means that a person doesn't go to heaven--that there is no eternal life--then whether the person intends it or not, what they're saying denies the fundamental nature of the gospel. If that's him, then fine. If it's not, so much the better. I'm just interested in stating what I see the Scriptures say about the gospel as clearly as I can. It's up to others to ask if I'm right or wrong and how what I'm saying applies to their own beliefs.