"Lordship Salvation"

Discussions surrounding the various other faiths who deviate from mainstream Christian doctrine such as LDS and the Jehovah's Witnesses.
DBowling
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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by DBowling »

SoCalExile wrote: Problem is, Romans 3:23, 1 John 1:8,10, Matthew 5:22-23, 5:27-28, and James 2:10. The problem with isn't that we aren't "good enough", it's that we aren't perfect;
True
therefore, trying to act holy on the outside doesn't get anyone into heaven. We've all sinned, and therefore we are all thieves, liars, prostitutes, murderers, etc
True
Christ's sacrifice overs up our sin to God, it doesn't make us sinless.
True... however salvation does initiate the process of sanctification in the life of a believer
Thus the LS gospel falls flat, and by it's own rules, no one is saved. It is truly the same mistake Paul attributes to Israel in Romans 10:3, and really is just another scheme to enrich those teaching it by fooling people into thinking they can build their tower and reach heaven by their own work.
False... you really must enjoy running back to that strawman misrepresentation of LS over and over again.

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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by RickD »

Byblos wrote:
RickD wrote:DBowling,

I'm not sure you're really an LS adherent. You seem to have problems with too many of the basics of LS. Either that, or your Dad has had a positive influence on your thinking, and you're starting to see the light. :D
But this goes back to my post (to which you replied most irrelevantly). Those who pay lip-service to OSAS to then say but wait, if you truly believed or if your faith was truly genuine then you necessarily must live a life of discipleship blah blah blah. There are two and only two position (irrespective of whose promise it is, Rick). Either moral assurance or an absolute, once-for-all-no-matter-what assurance regardless of subsequent acts, however vile and evil.
I agree with you that there are only two positions. But let me try to explain again, why I responded as I did to your quote here:
It's rather academic really as it boils down to an 'either/or' proposition. Either one has an absolute, once-and-for-all-no-matter-what assurance or one has a moral assurance but not an absolute one. There is no in between. If you don't believe in the former you are necessarily in the latter's camp.
Byblos,

You are defining "assurance" as confidence. Or, more like a feeling. That's not what absolute assurance is. When we say a believer has absolute assurance of salvation, assurance is a promise.

In other words, I'm saying that since I have absolute assurance, I'm saying I have God's promise.

You are saying that since I have absolute assurance, I have confidence, or a belief that I'm saved. While that's part of it, that's not what I'm saying. The "promise" definition is important because even if I don't have confidence, I still have the promise. Which is the heart of assurance.

That's why I say that whoever has trusted Christ for salvation, has absolute assurance/promise of salvation. Even if he doesn't have assurance/confidence that he is saved.

So, even those who have moral assurance, as you put it, still have absolute assurance, as long as they trusted Christ.

See if I can explain it here. We have two people. Both have trusted Christ for salvation. The first person, let's call him Rick, believes no matter what, his salvation is a guarantee because God promised that since he trusted Christ, he has eternal life.

And the second person, let's call him John, also has trusted Christ. But John has what you call a moral assurance, because John believes he must continue in the faith and hope he is still in the faith when he dies, in order to be saved.

If the only condition to have God's assurance/promise, is trusting Christ, then both Rick and John, have absolute assurance of salvation. Even though John may not believe he has that promise.

I hope I explained it more clearly.
John 5:24
24 “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life.


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DBowling
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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by DBowling »

SoCalExile wrote:
The entire premise of LS contradicts scripture.
...yet another inaccurate assertion about LS...

Let me point out two of the basic premises of LS that are not only Scriptural, but are lacking in many of the evangelical presentations of the Gospel that I've seen.

1. LS identifies the correct object of genuine faith.
According to Scripture the object of genuine faith is the person of Jesus Christ.

Many presentations of the Gospel identify the object of faith as intellectual knowledge about a set of theological truths.

Genuine faith places its trust in the person of Jesus Christ...
not my personal knowledge of key theological truths.

That is the difference between the dead faith of the demons and a living faith that works in James 2.

2. LS correctly identifies what trusting in Jesus saves us from.

When we trust in Jesus we are trusting in him to save us from our sin.

Many presentations of the Gospel focus only on saving us from the consequences of sin.

Scripture tells us that we are trusting in Jesus to save us from all aspects of sin, including our bondage to sin, and death.
If a person is only trusting Jesus to save them from Hell, then they are totally missing what Jesus died on the cross to save them from.

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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by RickD »

SoCal wrote:
Christ's sacrifice overs up our sin to God, it doesn't make us sinless.
DBowling wrote:
True... however salvation does initiate the process of sanctification in the life of a believer
Mr. Bowling,

Everyone agrees with that. But what you're missing, is that in order for a believer to grow in Christ, in this life, he must cooperate with the Holy Spirit. In order to be a disciple, one must choose to live by the spirit, and not live by the flesh.

So, you are correct in saying that God has started our salvation, and He will bring it to completion in the end(sanctification). But again, as we still have our flesh nature fighting against our spiritual nature in this life, we must make a commitment, and choose to work with the Holy Spirit.

Salvation takes trust on our part. Sanctification in this life, or growing in Christ, takes work on our part, in cooperation with the Holy Spirit.

That's why LS is wrong when it conflates salvation and discipleship. By conflating the two, it makes keeping salvation a work, because LS teaches that growing as a disciple in this life, is part of salvation.
John 5:24
24 “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life.


“A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves.”
-Edward R Murrow




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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by Philip »

Dbowling: I believe repentance is an integral component of trusting in Jesus to save me from my sin.

OK, so how do YOU define the word repentance?
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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by DBowling »

Philip wrote:Dbowling: I believe repentance is an integral component of trusting in Jesus to save me from my sin.

OK, so how do YOU define the word repentance?
realizing that I am a sinner
acknowledging that I am unable to do anything to free myself from bondage to sin
turning to Jesus and trusting in him to save me from my sin

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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by RickD »

DBowling wrote:
Philip wrote:Dbowling: I believe repentance is an integral component of trusting in Jesus to save me from my sin.

OK, so how do YOU define the word repentance?
realizing that I am a sinner
acknowledging that I am unable to do anything to free myself from bondage to sin
turning to Jesus and trusting in him to save me from my sin

In Christ
You do realize that's much closer to the Biblical meaning of repentance(change of mind), than the LS(at least according to MacArthur) meaning of repentance?

Except the part about acknowledging that you are unable to free yourself from bondage to sin and trusting in him to save me from my sin. That's trust, not repentance.
John 5:24
24 “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life.


“A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves.”
-Edward R Murrow




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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by RickD »

Here's an easy way to see if the LS kind of repentance is necessary for salvation.

In LS, repentance is at least defined as "completely giving over oneself to the Lordship of Christ."

If one has eternal life at the moment one trusts Christ, then under LS, we have to assume one has completely given himself over to the Lordship of Christ, at that moment, or before.

I challenge anyone to tell me at this point in his life, that he has given himself completely over to the Lordship of Christ. That means no idols, no addictions, basically no more sin.

If none of us has completely made Christ the Lord of our lives at this point, how could we have completely made him Lord of our lives when we first trusted Christ? The point when many of us didn't even completely understand all the theology behind it?

Seems like LS is contradicting itself .
John 5:24
24 “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life.


“A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves.”
-Edward R Murrow




St. Richard the Sarcastic--The Patron Saint of Irony
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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by DBowling »

RickD wrote:
SoCal wrote:
Christ's sacrifice overs up our sin to God, it doesn't make us sinless.
DBowling wrote:
True... however salvation does initiate the process of sanctification in the life of a believer
Mr. Bowling,

Everyone agrees with that.
I'm not sure that everyone here does agree with that...
There are a number of posts in this thread where the post-salvation results of sanctification have been equated with works-salvation and Pharisaic legalism.
But what you're missing, is that in order for a believer to grow in Christ, in this life, he must cooperate with the Holy Spirit. In order to be a disciple, one must choose to live by the spirit, and not live by the flesh.
In the second sentence I would phrase it as "grow as a disciple" (as opposed to becoming a disciple), because I believe a person becomes a disciple of Jesus when they put their trust in Jesus. During the process of sanctification a disciple draws closer to and becomes more like his master.

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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by Kurieuo »

SoCalExile wrote:
Listened to the first few minutes and stopped because there's so much to question and discuss already.

Those who know me here, would vouch that I'm a free-thinking theologian. I do not attach myself to fitting Scripture in this systematic theology or that. Clearly, unlike the man in the video, he seems to have adopted a theological system of his own. Whether that matters, well, I just say build up a case according to what is revealed to us in Scripture.

Given that I've recently been listening to perhaps the most leading Reformed preacher of the last century (Martyn Lloyd-Jones), many things in the video that the guy claims seems very strawmanish. Maximally, he is applying an infinitely broad stroke to Calvinists (aka Reformed theologians).

My understanding of Reformed theology, is that truly understood, it would never be said one is "saved by belief" except where one is perhaps being quite loose with their words. Rather, strictly speaking, it is by God's grace in Christ who was sent, that the requirements of the Law have been met completely (Christ positively fulfilled them in every way being born into the world as man via Mary, and satisfying every dot and tittle). Then Christ bore our punishment for breaking the Law thereby wiping our slate clean before God for the sin of all humanity. And finally, Christ's Righteousness is then imputed to us via faith.

Now, what I'm about to say is an important distinction. "Faith" or a belief isn't what saves us, but is merely the vehicle by which we receive Christ's Righteousness. Faith is the method by which Christ's righteousness is imputed to us, faith is not the what that saves us.

To say it is "by faith" or "by belief" that we are saved is merely adding a requirement, something we can boast in. Paul states, no one can boast. (Ephesians 2:9; 1 Cor 1:29-31) No one can boast, and yet someone who has a belief that saves can boast that they are saved on account of their belief!

Now to borrow some on Jones' thoughts and even words, many Christians or preachers today might say something like:
  • "how wonderful it is to live now... under the old dispensation God confronted people with the Law, God said if you keep that it'll save you. You've got to keep that or you won't be saved! They were confronted by the Law. Ohhh.. but thankfully there's a new dispensation. God doesn't speak about the law any more, simply says "Will you believe in my Son?" "will you accept my son or won't you? How much easier is that?" They say, "How easier to believe in Christ than it was to keep the law."
No, the Gospel doesn't void the law through offering us an easier way of going to heaven. It is not as if God says, "well the other was rather difficult after all, forget all about it, will you mere believe in my Son or won't you? If you will, it's alright. And you slip into heaven easily. If not, then off with you to the fiery pits of hell." Is it?

NOW STOP before you misunderstand. A tolerable Calvinist or Reformed theologian will not say what the man in the video says, "you must keep the Law or else it shows you're not really saved." (strawman version) No, the true thinking Reformed theologian rather sees this easy believing "faith" as a kind of new law, just one that is easier and simpler than the old law. It creates something for Christians to boast in does it not? Isn't that antithetical to Paul's teachings?

So then, I agree up to here with the more thoughtful Reformed thinking I've elaborated upon.
That is, to say one is saved on account of their belief is simply replacing the harder legalism of the OT Law with a softer legalism of NT Faith. One's actions under the Law, replaced by one's act in belief. Such an easy believism is actually legalistic and can create boast that ought to be reserved for Christ alone. It turns "belief" or "faith" in a law, one must believe to gain righteousness and be saved, fleshly actions being the very antithesis of Paul's teachings of Christ alone.

So what is "faith" then? When Paul uses by faith, it is always the opposite to everything that is legalistic.
Philippians 3, he thought he was as regards to the demands of the law, perfect and righteous. That's legalistic.
A man thinks he has made himself righteous by works or as Paul says, "confidence in the flesh."
Faith is the exact opposite of that. Jones' preached of faith that (paraphrasing),
Faith is the opposite of everything that is meritorious in men.
Faith is the contradiction and negation of every tendency in men to say that his merit is enough.
Faith is just the blank contradiction to all that.
It is in the exclusion of any worthiness in us, that the worth of true faith is brought out.
So then, if what you call faith hasn't pushed outside everything you can do, then you haven't got faith in Christ alone. You can boast in yourself, in keep a rule that says you must believe to be saved.

Now what I've written above, agree with it or not -- the above is a very Reformed (Calvinist) way of thinking. So in all fairness and respect, I naturally have some reservations just in the first few minutes of the video:
  • The man in the video just claims that the Calvinist will believe one is "saved by belief" [wrong]
  • The man also goes on to say, "We believe that the gift is salvation, they believe the gift is the faith to believe." [distorted]
  • The man also says, "While a Calvinist says, 'yes, absolutely, salvation is by belief [no they don't],' that's not where it ends with them. For us we're ok with that. When I talk to someone and I ask them what they believe in. If they say yes I trust in what God solely did for me, I believe it. They're saved and I believe I'm done." [notice the "I trust" = action = still of the flesh = still legalistic based upon a law of "must believe" = boastable = not Christ alone]
  • The man also says, "When a Calvinist says yes it's by belief, it is belief by works. So ultimately it comes across you have works you're not saved. [Jones and I guess other Reformed theologians with common sense, do not say this at all, in fact rather the opposite]
Indeed, to say that one is saved by their belief in Christ, is to add a requirement. An action or law that one must do in order to be saved. This contradicts Paul message as I read it throughout his many epistles, the the anti legalism that Paul rejoices in (Philippians 3:3).

Let's be careful here, select from one of the following:
  • Is it our belief that saves us?
  • Is it our faith that saves us?
  • Is it Christ and Christ alone?
  • Or is it a mix of our work conjoined with Christ's work?
There is only one correct answer I see which won't result in any boasting of ourselves.
Notwithstanding any issues I see with some Calvinist beliefs, the man in the video contradicts this and commits a serious error in my opinion.
"Whoever will call on the name of the Lord will be saved." (Romans 10:13)
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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by DBowling »

RickD wrote:Here's an easy way to see if the LS kind of repentance is necessary for salvation.

In LS, repentance is at least defined as "completely giving over oneself to the Lordship of Christ."
I think I have already acknowledged my discomfort with using words like "completely" or "totally" to describe conversion commitments, for the very reasons you point out.

A commitment is made to Jesus when a person trusts in Jesus. But during the process of sanctification that commitment to Jesus will continue to grow.

So I agree that is inaccurate to use "completely" to describe the commitment to the Lordship of Jesus at the time of conversion. I would probably defer to something like "the best I am able" (which is probably not very much) And I think that would more accurate verbage.

It's kind of like marriage. Very real commitments are made at the time of marriage. Those commitments experience ups and downs as the married couple grow together. And after decades together those commitments will grow to something far beyond what either of them were capable of at the time of their marriage.

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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by Philip »

I would say that, pressed to greater clarity, I pretty much agree with how DBowling states his take on this. But the way he has clarified is not how I hear LS adherents assert things, which are often well laden with fear-mongering DOisms asserted needed for proof - proof that can never be enough or validated (by man). But, especially with a guy like Paul Washer, who marries his Reformed beliefs to such teaching - well, it can cause a lot of damage and fear. I would agree that no true believer with the Holy Spirit is without ANY works - it's just that WE might not be able to discern them - OR we might think we see confirmations of "works" that are, in fact, misleading, as that God would see them as "unrighteous" ones.

One must admit that the Matthew 7:21-23 passage is very troubling:

21 “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. 22 On that day many will say to me, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many mighty works in your name?’ 23 And then will I declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from me, you workers of lawlessness.’

How incredible that one could APPEAR so committed to doing "MANY" works in Jesus name and yet not be saved. And, the indication is that this isn't the rare false Christian/unbeliever doing these things, but that "many" will demonstrate these unworthy works, and yet will nonetheless end up in Hell. Wow! And especially scary, these people are self-deluded into believing they are saved, but are not.
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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by RickD »

DBowling wrote:
RickD wrote:Here's an easy way to see if the LS kind of repentance is necessary for salvation.

In LS, repentance is at least defined as "completely giving over oneself to the Lordship of Christ."
I think I have already acknowledged my discomfort with using words like "completely" or "totally" to describe conversion commitments, for the very reasons you point out.

A commitment is made to Jesus when a person trusts in Jesus. But during the process of sanctification that commitment to Jesus will continue to grow.

So I agree that is inaccurate to use "completely" to describe the commitment to the Lordship of Jesus at the time of conversion. I would probably defer to something like "the best I am able" (which is probably not very much) And I think that would more accurate verbage.

It's kind of like marriage. Very real commitments are made at the time of marriage. Those commitments experience ups and downs as the married couple grow together. And after decades together those commitments will grow to something far beyond what either of them were capable of at the time of their marriage.

In Christ
That's good. But we're talking about LS, right? The fact that you're distancing yourself from some LS teachings, doesn't change those teachings. LS still teaches what it teaches.
John 5:24
24 “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life.


“A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves.”
-Edward R Murrow




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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by RickD »

DBowling wrote:
I'm not sure that everyone here does agree with that...
There are a number of posts in this thread where the post-salvation results of sanctification have been equated with works-salvation and Pharisaic l
That's because LS doesn't teach "post salvation". They teach that sanctification and salvation are one. Which means that the works performed during sanctification, are works that have to be performed during salvation, according to LS. Which again, if they're necessary for salvation, then it's a works based salvation.
RickD wrote:
But what you're missing, is that in order for a believer to grow in Christ, in this life, he must cooperate with the Holy Spirit. In order to be a disciple, one must choose to live by the spirit, and not live by the flesh.

DBowling wrote:
In the second sentence I would phrase it as "grow as a disciple" (as opposed to becoming a disciple), because I believe a person becomes a disciple of Jesus when they put their trust in Jesus. During the process of sanctification a disciple draws closer to and becomes more like his master.
Fwiw, I said "In order to BE a disciple", not BECOME a disciple.
And I agree that anyone who is a disciple, begins his discipleship at the time of trusting Christ.

We seem to agree on what it takes to be a disciple. Commitment, drawing closer to God, living by the spirit, etc. But I'm not sure if you agree with LS, that all who trust Christ, automatically and necessarily become disciples. Or if you agree with what I'm saying, that in order to be a disciple, or follow Christ, there has to be a cooperation on the believer's part. It's not just an automatic thing where the Holy Spirit "possesses" a believer, and completely takes over.
DBowling wrote:

It's kind of like marriage. Very real commitments are made at the time of marriage. Those commitments experience ups and downs as the married couple grow together. And after decades together those commitments will grow to something far beyond what either of them were capable of at the time of their marriage.
I really like your comparison to marriage.

When we take our vows, it's kinda like when we trust Christ. If I work together with my wife, we grow together in our relationship. Just like if I work together with The Holy Spirit, my relationship with God grows. But, if after I take my vows, I don't do anything to work on my marriage, like if I just care about myself and not my wife, my relationship probably won't grow. But that doesn't mean I'm not married. It may be a miserable marriage, but it's still a marriage.

In the same way, if I don't cooperate with the Holy Spirit, my relationship with God will probably not be good. But that doesn't mean I'm not saved.

But, if I'm selfish and don't care about my wife, and don't want to grow our relationship, according to LS, that means I was never married in the first place.

And we can see how ridiculous that is.
John 5:24
24 “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life.


“A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves.”
-Edward R Murrow




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Re: "Lordship Salvation"

Post by SoCalExile »

DBowling wrote:
SoCalExile wrote:
Christ's sacrifice overs up our sin to God, it doesn't make us sinless.
True... however salvation does initiate the process of sanctification in the life of a believer
Yet you don't know the heart so you aren't able to know.
Thus the LS gospel falls flat, and by it's own rules, no one is saved. It is truly the same mistake Paul attributes to Israel in Romans 10:3, and really is just another scheme to enrich those teaching it by fooling people into thinking they can build their tower and reach heaven by their own work.
False... you really must enjoy running back to that strawman misrepresentation of LS over and over again.
In Christ
Again, you're ignoring the links and quotes already provided, so you're constant calls of "Strawman!" don't mean much.
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