Oooops... look like my initial response came before you finished your post
RickD wrote:The problem is that A doesn't cause B.
A by itself, never causes B. A plus C causes B.
A=salvation
B=good works
C=living according to the spirit/continued trust in Christ.
One MUST cooperate with the indwelling Holy Spirit, in order for one to grow in Christ. There's nothing in scripture that says believers automatically, and necessarily do good works. The Holy Spirit is not like demon possession. He/HS leads a believer. But we must respond to the prompting of the HS.
We obviously disagree regarding some aspects of the work of the Holy Spirit in sanctification... and that's fine... but regardless of which one of us is correct that doesn't change the basic logic fallacy that if salvation causes works, then by implication works must therefore cause salvation.
It's really simple DBowling. Whenever something is a necessary result of something else, like in LS, works are a necessary result of salvation, then the negative is true as well.
no, no, no, no, no... that's simply logically inaccurate
the negative of a negative may be equal to a positive
but the straight negative of something is the opposite... not the same!
If A causes B and B sequentially follows A.
Then by definition B cannot cause A
You can listen to MacArthur clammer on all day about works not being necessary for salvation. But when he says all "true" believers produce good works, then that means works are necessary.
I really don't see how you can't see this.
Basically because the conclusion you draw about LS doesn't logically flow from the statements that LS makes about itself.
EDIT...
in rereading this I'd like to focus on a point you make above
Do you believe the two statements mean the same thing?
a. B is a necessary result of A
b. B causes A
LS says works don't precede salvation. Salvation comes by trusting Christ. Then come good works.
True
Except in the case of someone who trusted Christ for salvation but didn't produce good works. According to LS, that means the person was never saved.
no... there is no "except in the case of" in LS
According to LS that person never trusted in Christ in the first place.
Nope, sorry. No good works=no salvation. Doesn't matter if you trusted Christ. Good works are the sign one is saved. Not faith in Christ.
That may be your position but it is not the position of LS.
LS explicitly states that it definitely does matter if you trusted in Christ.
According to LS, If a person trusts in Christ they are saved... no exceptions
In Christ