Danieltwotwenty wrote:Kurieuo wrote:Philip wrote:Daniel: I personally believe there will be people of all faiths in the new creation, even the Bible says there will be people there who we didn't think would be there and people not there who we thought there would be.
Dan, this is not a Scriptural belief! Period! While we may be surprised at some who might be saved, we won't see anyone saved who doesn't have a faith in Jesus and the One true God. Meaning, you won't see people there confessing Alah, Krishna, or any amongst the pantheon of false gods, or any that believe in a Jesus not found in Scripture (that He's not God, wasn't resurrected, etc). Unless I am somehow misunderstanding you, yours is a belief in universalism. And if that is the case, we might as well stop sending out missionaries, as the Great Commission is a huge, dangerous and immensely expensive waste of time.
Unless I'm mistaken Dan has nuances to it in that there are "exceptions" with those who may not have heard Christ, how they respond to God's general revelation.
Still, this is not something I'd go freely sharing with a non-Christian and causing all sorts of confusion.
Do you really want Audie to go away thinking she can be Hindu or Muslim and be saved?
That there are many ways to God?
As I said when we discussed it Dan,
this is something for Christians to discuss on a theological level (i.e., kids, those pre-Christ, what responding to Natural Revelation means, etc)
-- but when we did got to talking with a non-Christian who is well aware of Christ, all these exceptions are moot for them.
For Audie and others who have heard about Christ, it clearly becomes a matter of how they will respond to Christ.
Unless like Phil says you are advocating a form of universal salvation.
I believe in honestly, I never said saving faith was not through Christ and I was waiting for a response from Audie before explaining further how I think the Bible explains it.
Why should I lie about what I believe.
Leading someone to Christ based on a lie, will always be wrong.
I thought about what we talked about and changed my mind, I have to go with honesty, sorry.
There's a few "red herrings" there:
Don't lie about what you believe.
You're not leading someone to Christ in claiming other religions lead you to Christ.
Be honest with yourself by all means, but such is dishonest with Christ's teachings.
This issue is not a matter of honesty. I'm not really sure what you're preaching here.
Unless you believe everyone will be saved, even the most vile (Universalism), then it seems to me your theology is built upon works of some sort.
This is nowhere to be found in Scripture. Please point me to where being largely good in life or one's religion, or sincere in beliefs, counts for "faith in Christ"?
I don't know how you can logically says a Muslim who doesn't accept Christ, in fact actually accepts Christ.
And we're not just talking here a lack of knowledge, or a response to natural revelation. BUT, something far greater.
These are illogical contortions at best that try to smoothen to a post-modern inclination to reject exclusivity because such is "mean spirited".
But then, it was "mean" that all the people who died of ebola never got a vaccine.
If you're crossing the road and a car is speeding and approaching you rapidly,
no amount of closing your eyes and wishful thinking that the car isn't going to hit you because such would be "not nice" is going to change the fact that...
unless you act and move quickly to get out of the way then you're going to be hit.
Sadly, that's just life.