All it takes is one word to get stuck in the logical gears that churn in my mind.RickD wrote:You have much to learn young grasshopper. The condition of obtaining everlasting life by God's grace, is through belief. Once one believes, he has everlasting life. Everlasting life means he will live forever. If for any reason one would perish, that means he only had temporary life, not everlasting life. And God would be a liar.Kurieuo wrote:Actually, to be technical, the condition of everlasting life in John 3:16 is based upon belief. Therefore, if one stops in their belief, the condition is no longer satsified, and one might indeed perish. So this verse alone, I don't believe gets you there.RickD wrote:John 3:16 to me, is the most obvious verse proving OSAS. If I believe today, I have eternal life. If I lose that life, it was never eternal to begin with.
With other passages in Scripture, like the one I just quoted in Romans, the case becomes much stronger and requires some explaining should a person disagree.
If you can put matters in OSAS terms that resolves the difficulties below; until then, "once" in OSAS intended in a temporal sense, such is temporal language useful in describing matters in ways that make sense to us who are created, but on most fundamental levels such structures fall apart and can only be figurative representations at best. Nonetheless, like Newtonian physics, it can be useful. OSAS highlights important truths.
Yet, what's the issue? "Once" is temporal talk. God' isn't temporal, unless one believes God is in fact now temporal?
On the most foundational levels of existence, Existence itself has no bounds. Existence has always been, or else nothing would exist. Existence, specifically Aseity, is something we ascribe to God.
So then, God has no boundaries, is even transcendent, then "Once" doesn't apply to God who knows the beginning from the end. Rather, it's actually simply a matter of those who are adopted of God in Christ to be revealed. (Romans 8:19) God sees the outcome of His plan, such that everything to Him is final. There is no "once" to God. He knows those who are His already, and they (in temporal speak) will be found as the world and lives of people unfold.
Now if God is temporal, or became temporal via some change in Himself (as Bill Craig believes), then God's not strictly immutable. If God's not immutable then Divine Simplicity must be shown the door. If we toss aside Divine Simplicity, then we no longer really have a language for talking about God. Rather the God we talk up becomes very anthropomorphic, and very temporal-like, very much like us.
You said I often talk very complex like, well above is a more complicated response. To be clear, I do believe in OSAS, but would highlight to people that the correct placement of person being saved was when they were chosen in Him before creation. (1 Peter 1:20-21; Ephesians 1:4) It seems more correct to me to try and see matters from God's point of view, and as such Christ's, rather than in terms of our temporal view of the world. Nonetheless, a temporal perspective is also often beneficial to us, particularly since we're physically temporal beings.