"Seven Reasons NOT to Ask Jesus into Your Heart"

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Byblos
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Post by Byblos »

Jac wrote:I wouldn't say it is assurance of salvation so much as assurance of fellowship. Have you ever wondered about your relationship with God, not whether or not you HAVE it, but the status of it? Have you ever wondered "how you are doing" or if you are in His will? Good works and good fruit are assurance of our fellowship with Him, not of our salvation. We know we are saved because we have believed in Jesus for eternal life (John 3:16).
Wow Jac! You sound like me now :D (as Jac faints).
Let us proclaim the mystery of our faith: Christ has died, Christ is risen, Christ will come again.

Lord I am not worthy that you should enter under my roof, but only say the word and my soul shall be healed.
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Post by FFC »

Byblos wrote:
Jac wrote:I wouldn't say it is assurance of salvation so much as assurance of fellowship. Have you ever wondered about your relationship with God, not whether or not you HAVE it, but the status of it? Have you ever wondered "how you are doing" or if you are in His will? Good works and good fruit are assurance of our fellowship with Him, not of our salvation. We know we are saved because we have believed in Jesus for eternal life (John 3:16).
Wow Jac! You sound like me now :D (as Jac faints).
Byblos, maybe you have fellowship mixed up with salvation. :P
"Faith sees the invisible, believes the unbelievable, and receives the impossible." - Corrie Ten Boom

Act 9:6
And he trembling and astonished said, Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?
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Post by ttoews »

Jac3510 wrote:The actual idea of a straw man is to put forward a position the opponent doesn't hold to and then procede to tear that down.
yep, that is how I was using it to describe your repeated categorization of my soteriology as "works-based". Let us look at the last straw man you made:

Jac: You reject that because it means that an evil person can believe in Christ, be saved, continue being evil, and not be thrown into Hell.The fact that you have a problem with that tells me that you believe some people don't deserve salvation (see how you have made an assumption and incorrectly put forward my position?)
ttoews: ...my position is that all people don't deserve salvation. Notwithstanding the absence of any deserving people God has predetermined salvation for some of the undeserving...and He did this according to His good pleasure(note how I must clarify my position in the face of your error?)
Jac: In fact, you say that those predestined deserve salvation here. (now note how you put forward a position (for me) that is in direct opposition to the one I have just stated....when I say "all people don't deserve", you claim I say "some people deserve")
Jac: That their merit of it is based on God's pleasure doesn't change the fact that, for you, it is meritorious (note how you have distorted my claim that God has predestined some according to His pleasure so that you can insert {putting forward a position the opponent doesn't hold} the concept of merit into God's pleasure...God's pleasure somehow constituting a person's merit is a concept that is not only foreign to me, but strikes me as ludicrous)
What I am doing is pointing out the logical conclusions of your various positions.
you may think that you have supplied some logical conclusions, but the above exchange shows nothing of the sort...

Jac, I also note that you describe two approaches to scripture. They are:
It is immediately obvious that no single verse or passage provides a comprehensive or exhaustive explanation of any given doctrine. If we want to understand a biblical doctrine, and even further, if we want to understand how biblical doctrines work together, we have to examine a variety of texts..... In other words, we take a passage, or a series of passages, that relate to a subect, and we study each one in its own context. Through this study, we come to a series of inductively supported conclusions. This is the general goal of Biblical Theology, to come to inductively supported propositions relating to various doctrines.
What you have done, though, is take a series of conclusions (i.e., election) and then interpreted various texts in that light. For example, you have taken a particular conclusion with reference to what it means to "know," and have interpreted Matt. 7:20-23 in that light. That is backwards. Or, again, you have taken a particular tree/fruit motif and interpreted Matt 7:14-19 in that light, which is again backwards. That's why you are going to be inconsistent, and that is I find several aspects of your soteriology to be works based.
interesting stuff Jac....let us see where I went so terribly wrong. Wrt Matt 7 I said:

I am content to invite anyone considering this matter to:
a) read the 4 gospels, Acts and the epistles
b) then return to Matt 7 and ask
i) should the understanding of "bad fruit" be limited to "bad teaching"
ii) should the understanding of the "will of God" be limited to "simply believing"
iii) should "being known by Jesus" be limited to the mere acceptance of an offer

..now call me crazy, but this sounds to me like I have defined the issues between our two views and am am suggesting an approach that is the same as the first one you described...yet you claim that I have used the second. You know nothing of my personal history nor what studies I undertook before I arrived at my soteriology, so one must ask where you got your presuppositions wrt my methodology? You might have read theologians before you got around to reading the bible and then squeezed the meaning of scripture into the views of those theologians, but I started with the Bible and took a long time before I turned to the works of any theologians.

The two sides - the Lordship group and the Free Grace group - clashed in the eighteenth century in what is called the Marrow Controversy. The battle has been raging ever since.
thanks for the info...not a whole lot in my history texts about this issue.
Then you need to reread my exegesis of this passage. You agree that these people are offering a defense. They are saying, "God, this is why you should not damn us!" That is what a defense IS. They appeal to their works to save them. Now, bear in mind that the works they did in life, they did in Jesus' name. What does that tell me? That tells me that there are "many" who do works in Christ's name who are not regenerate. Just because someone professes to be a Christian - just because some acts like a Christian - just because someone does the work of a Christian - that is in no way an indication of their spiritual condition.
actually it is only stated that they claim that they did things in Jesus' name, but assuming that they did what they claimed I would correct your words as follows:
Now, bear in mind that the works they did in life, they thought they did in Jesus' name. What does that tell me? That tells me that there are "many" who think they do works in Christ's name who are not regenerate. Just because someone claims to do works for Christ - that is in no way an indication of their spiritual condition or that Jesus "knows" them.
Thus, we come to the saying, "Inspect the root, not the fruit."
I'll stick with Christ's suggestion to look at the fruit...as the real root (one's heart) is beyond my vision
So you differentiate between works (casting out demons) and fruit?
no the opposite
Wouldn't you agree that the "fruit" in Matt. 7:15-20 is the same as the works of the false prophets in 21-23?
it is possible...it is also possible that Jesus starts a second topic at v. 21....in either case, the works described in v. 22 would not be good fruit. Prophesying in Jesus' name w/o being known by Jesus will result in false prophesy.
We can let the meritorious idea drop for now . . . we have enough to deal with without getting into this. If it comes up again, we can deal with it. All I was pointing out was that you have a problem with the idea that a person can "get saved" and then live in deep, unrepentant sin. Such a person shouldn't be saved because that would be a mockery of God. Thus, the logical conclusion to your claim is that we have to be good after we are saved. God makes us "deserve" our salvation.
No, it is never that we "deserve" our salvation...Jesus has "bought" it...His work and His work alone acquired my salvation, nothing I do counts toward it.
Would you like me to be more literal? Very well. When I say I am a staunch literalist, I am referring to the grammatical-historical method of interpretation.... These are literal interpretations because they take the text for what it is, including figures of speech, teaching methods, etc.
giving this understanding of literal interpretations it seems pretty well anyone who holds to any level of inerrancy would consider himself to be a "literalist"...but nice to see you recognize that figures of speech exist and that all words are not to be taken literally (trad. defn)


...for what its worth, your latest bits with FFC wrt the Holy Spirit's participation in our good works is your best work (IMHO) on this thread.
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Post by Byblos »

FFC wrote:
Byblos wrote:
Jac wrote:I wouldn't say it is assurance of salvation so much as assurance of fellowship. Have you ever wondered about your relationship with God, not whether or not you HAVE it, but the status of it? Have you ever wondered "how you are doing" or if you are in His will? Good works and good fruit are assurance of our fellowship with Him, not of our salvation. We know we are saved because we have believed in Jesus for eternal life (John 3:16).
Wow Jac! You sound like me now :D (as Jac faints).
Byblos, maybe you have fellowship mixed up with salvation. :P
You always have to have the last word, don't you? :wink:
Let us proclaim the mystery of our faith: Christ has died, Christ is risen, Christ will come again.

Lord I am not worthy that you should enter under my roof, but only say the word and my soul shall be healed.
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Post by FFC »

Byblos wrote:
FFC wrote:
Byblos wrote:
Jac wrote:I wouldn't say it is assurance of salvation so much as assurance of fellowship. Have you ever wondered about your relationship with God, not whether or not you HAVE it, but the status of it? Have you ever wondered "how you are doing" or if you are in His will? Good works and good fruit are assurance of our fellowship with Him, not of our salvation. We know we are saved because we have believed in Jesus for eternal life (John 3:16).
Wow Jac! You sound like me now :D (as Jac faints).
Byblos, maybe you have fellowship mixed up with salvation. :P
You always have to have the last word, don't you? :wink:
Only time will tell :wink:
"Faith sees the invisible, believes the unbelievable, and receives the impossible." - Corrie Ten Boom

Act 9:6
And he trembling and astonished said, Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?
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Post by Jac3510 »

Jac: You reject that because it means that an evil person can believe in Christ, be saved, continue being evil, and not be thrown into Hell.The fact that you have a problem with that tells me that you believe some people don't deserve salvation (see how you have made an assumption and incorrectly put forward my position?)
No, I don't see an assumption. I see a logical necessity. Did you not say
ttoews wrote:God will not be mocked and the attitude you describe here (for the hypothetical person) is not only mocking but blasphemous. Blasphemy will be forgiven, but can't be the act that achieves salvation. Consider:

Matt 10: 32-33 "Whoever acknowledges me before men, I will also acknowledge him before my Father in heaven. 33But whoever disowns me before men, I will disown him before my Father in heaven.

The "deal" as you call it and describe it is simply not offered.
You then clarified - I'll bold the relevant parts:
ttoews wrote:
Jac3510 wrote:First, as you know, you should be REALLY careful with the NIV. .....
Now, do these passages say these people lose their salvation?
so you didn't think the passage that I asked you to consider supported my point. Fine. But what about my point itself? It was that God will not be mocked.

later you asked a related question:
Jac3510 wrote:Now, ttoews: let me just ask you one question while you digest all of this. If the gospel of John is the ONLY book of the Bible written specifically to bring non-believers to saving faith in Christ (John 20:30-31) . . . heck, even if it is just written for that very purpose . . . then doesn't it follow that by reading it, you should have enough information to come to saving faith?
I don't know where you get the "only" from, but it matters not. The Gospel of John contains enough information to come to saving faith. To summarize, it tells me that Jesus was with God and is God, that He lowered Himself and was made flesh, that out of His and His Father's love for us He died on the cross as the remedy for our sin so that if we believe in Him we can have eternal life. The question then, is what does "belief" entail? Is it mere belief (if such were possible)or is it a belief that entails commitment?
So, unless I am reading you wrong (which is different from presenting a straw man), you are arguing that a genuine faith produces commitment. A "false faith" doesn't produce commitment and is thus a mockery to God. God won't save the latter person because he hasn't believed.

Where does the mockery fit in? It seems to me there is only one way it can, if your view is correct, anyway. What is the difference in a true and false believer? One mocks God, the other doesn't. Now, why does the true believer not mock God while the false believer does? Answer: the indwelling of the Holy Spirit produces committment. Thus, the Holy Spirit keeps us from mocking God, because God will not be mocked.

Now think about this . . . your primary objection to my position is that a person could be saved and mock God. But God will not be mocked. Therefore, God works in people so that they will not mock Him. It is then logically necessary that God does not save those that mock Him, so it must follow that He gives the Holy Spirit so that those whom He does save will not mock! This is the basis on which I accuse you of believing in a meritorious salvation. God gives you the Holy Spirit to make sure that you don't mess it up. He makes you be able to merit it. Now, can you show me where the fault in my logic is?

To continue . . .
ttoews wrote:ttoews: ...my position is that all people don't deserve salvation. Notwithstanding the absence of any deserving people God has predetermined salvation for some of the undeserving...and He did this according to His good pleasure(note how I must clarify my position in the face of your error?)
Jac: In fact, you say that those predestined deserve salvation here. (now note how you put forward a position (for me) that is in direct opposition to the one I have just stated....when I say "all people don't deserve", you claim I say "some people deserve")
I actually flat misread you here. You said, "Notwithstanding the absence of any deserving people God has predetermined salvation for some of the undeserving." I now notice that "Notwithstanding . . . people" is an introductory clause. Let me copy it in the sense I read it:

"Notwithstanding the absence of any deserving people God (whom)has predetermined salvation for some of the undeserving" . . .

Ultimately, I should have read this more closely, but a better way to phrase this would have been:

"My position is that no deserves salvation. Given this, God has predetermined salvation for some of these undeserving...and He did this according to His good pleasure." Is it fair that this is what you meant?

Anyway, even so, this doesn't change my above argument. You still need to work through the mockery issue.
now call me crazy, but this sounds to me like I have defined the issues between our two views and am am suggesting an approach that is the same as the first one you described...yet you claim that I have used the second. You know nothing of my personal history nor what studies I undertook before I arrived at my soteriology, so one must ask where you got your presuppositions wrt my methodology? You might have read theologians before you got around to reading the bible and then squeezed the meaning of scripture into the views of those theologians, but I started with the Bible and took a long time before I turned to the works of any theologians.
Two things. First, as to why you haven't done things the way I have suggested, look at your own methodology:
  • I am content to invite anyone considering this matter to:
    a) read the 4 gospels, Acts and the epistles
    b) then return to Matt 7 and ask
    i) should the understanding of "bad fruit" be limited to "bad teaching"
    ii) should the understanding of the "will of God" be limited to "simply believing"
    iii) should "being known by Jesus" be limited to the mere acceptance of an offer
Notice how you have them come to a conclusion on the definition of "bad fruit" by imposing on them the definition of "fruit" from other passages, i.e., the Gospels, Acts, etc.? Now, in this particular case, if you do that, what you will find is a variety of uses for this phrase. But, let's say that in every single instance, it always refers to behavior. Does that mean it refers to behavior here? NO. If the context clearly shows it is "teaching," then what we have are two inductively arrived at prinicples: that "fruit" can sometimes refer to teaching and sometimes refer to behavior. The only time deduction rules out a particular interpretation is if it creates a contradiction with other inductively supported principles. Therefore, you are still going backwards.

As it stands, the context of this passage simply does not allow for "fruit" to be behavior, because the context itself rules that out by saying that these falsep prophets look like sheep externally.

Next, I made no assumptions about your theological background. If you notice, I said "you can skip this part . . ." I said that exactly because I don't know how familiar you are with the historical-grammatical method of interpretation. Have you been trained in inductive Bible study, ttoews? Now, I'm glad that you didn't read other theologians and then come to your conclusions. I'm glad you started with the Bible. But when you apply the wrong principles to biblical interpretation, you get the wrong conclusions.

There is an underlying theme to our debate. Have you noticed that it is our hermeneutic that is more and more frequentely coming up? You accuse me of dividing the text and making unnecessary distinctions. I accuse you of not placing texts in their appropriate context. Ultimately, our disagreement is rooted in our different hermeneutical approach. I believe in a grammatical-historical method of interpretation, and you don't seem to as much. I don't know what you interpretational theory is. What would it be, exactly?
actually it is only stated that they claim that they did things in Jesus' name, but assuming that they did what they claimed I would correct your words as follows:
Now, bear in mind that the works they did in life, they thought they did in Jesus' name. What does that tell me? That tells me that there are "many" who think they do works in Christ's name who are not regenerate. Just because someone claims to do works for Christ - that is in no way an indication of their spiritual condition or that Jesus "knows" them.
So you are hinghing your entire theological position on the fact that they didn't REALLY do things in Jesus' name. You say they only THOUGHT they just mistaken? And where do you find that in the text? That's more of an assumption than I have ever made.

But, even if we let that slide, it doesn't change my argument. These people were doing works that they believed were in Jesus' name. Whether they were in actually or not doesn't matter. This is STILL their defense. They THOUGHT they were doing things "in Him name." How is that different from you or me thinking that we are doing things "in Jesus' name"? And how does this not contradict what you say about fruit? If the works someone does "is in no way an indication of their spiritual conditon or that Jesus 'knows' them," then how do we know someone by their fruit?
I'll stick with Christ's suggestion to look at the fruit...as the real root (one's heart) is beyond my vision
Or you could stick with Christ's suggestion to look at the fruit of their doctrine. Besides, how do you equate "real fruit" with the heart? Fruit is outward. The heart is inward. If a man's heart is good, he will produce good fruit. If his heart is evil, he will produce evil fruit. Thus, the heart is not the fruit. You can, though, ask a man what he believes. I don't care how great you appear to be on the outside. I don't care what fabulous things you think you have done in Jesus' name. If you turn around and deny that Jesus is the Christ, or if you deny His resurrection, or if you deny salvation by faith alone, or any of these such things, then you aren't saved. Period. Thus, by your "fruit" I know you.

See, we still don't have any practical way to apply your position. How would you recognize a false prophet, ttoews? His behavior? But don't false prophets look like some of the best people out there? Don't they look like good believers? Don't they do works that look like they are in Jesus' name?

Now . . . ttoews . . . your central position, if I remember correctly, is that saving faith necessarily produces good works. Can you provide Scripture for that position, because we can go on about all this other stuff forever.

God bless! :)
Proinsias wrote:I don't think you are hearing me. Preference for ice cream is a moral issue
And that, brothers and sisters, is the kind of foolishness you get people who insist on denying biblical theism. A good illustration of any as the length people will go to avoid acknowledging basic truths.
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Post by ttoews »

ahhh, Jac. So you didn't like my application of your own logic to your soteriology on the Question for Jac thread? You were right that it was a bit silly, but you were wrong in thinking that I was arguing for the sake of finding disagreement. I stand by my assertion that if your logic is good, then you advocate salvation by works....and I think you could learn something by seeing your logic validly applied to your views.

You have said that if good works necessarily follows from faith then the existence of good works is a proper condition of the reality of faith. And that, you say, results is a doctrine of salvation by works. We both see good works necessarily resulting from belief...we only differ on the timing.

You have claimed that if God ensures the absence of mocking in believers then salvation is based on merit, however, we both believe that God ensures the absence of mocking in believers...we only differ on the timing.

You think my assertion (that your soteriology is one of works according your logic) is silly and (trust me on this) I think your assertion (that my soteriology is one of works according your logic) is equally silly b/c I think your logic is bad.

So here is my suggestion...let's stop this particular silliness and each refrain from making the above described assertions again. What do you say?
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Post by Jac3510 »

LoL, good try, but I'm not about to let you take my line of thinking hostage with such terrible logic. Let me break this down for you:

I charged you of meritorious salvation because YOU made the argument that God will not be mocked, and therefore, those whom He saves will not mock Him. For you, then mocking has a soteriological context. We could put it in this syllogism:

1. God will not be mocked,
2. Believers go to heaven,
3. Thus, believers will not mock God.

Granted, this is a major oversimplification of your argument, and we aren't taking into account incidental sins, but as a lifestyle, this seems to be a good representation of your postion. The assumption in all this is that God's not being mocked is related to the promise of salvation. Or, more specifically, the underlying assumption is that it would be a mockery of God for Him to save us, us still live in sin, and us go to heaven.

Now, I deny that assumption. Why? Because for me, mockery has absolutely NO soteriological context (in the eternal sense). Therefore, final sanctification (glorification) has no bearing on mocking. In my view of things, God will not be mocked by His children in this life. It is a statement that God will discipline His children. In an eschatological sense, it is a statement saying that Christians will answer for the lives they lived for all of eternity with relationship to their rewards. Therefore, while you hold to meritorious SALVATION (God will not be mocked, therefore, He saves believers), I hold to meritorious REWARDS (God will not be mocked, therefore, He rewards/disciplines each fairly).

See the difference?

Now, if you would care to get back to Scripture, I'm still looking for reasons that you believe that good works necessarily follow justification.

God bless
Proinsias wrote:I don't think you are hearing me. Preference for ice cream is a moral issue
And that, brothers and sisters, is the kind of foolishness you get people who insist on denying biblical theism. A good illustration of any as the length people will go to avoid acknowledging basic truths.
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Post by YLTYLT »

I have question about this subject of whther chistians do not have to show eveidence of salvation in the form of good works.


If this is true it would only be for a very immature christian, Like those discussed in 1 Corinthians

When you say that a saved person may not necessarily have evidence in their life of salvation, do you mean that to others, it may not be apparent at any one given point in time that they are saved, or do you mean that they may never show evidence throughout their life.

And could it be that there is internal evidence of the believer, although others may look at him and not see the eveidence. Because if a saved person continues to sin, will he not be chastise or disciplined in this world to try to get him to turn from sin. Therefore a believer that is sinning may be going through some hard times because of God's discipline might be considered evidence of salvation without good works.

And I guess the big question is can he continue to sin after being chastise so much ...

Secondly,
If he is saved and continues to sin, I have heard it said that God will take the sinning saved person from this earth, becuase he is of no use to increasing God's Kingdom.

I do not know scripture to back this idea up, maybe some of you could help me with this, whether it is scriptural or not. And if it is not, what scriptural basis do those that believe this use, and why they may be incorrect.

Thanks,

In Christ
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Post by Jac3510 »

There a certain interal changes that may never make it to the surface. God does discipline His children, and there is plenty of reason to believe that if a believer is living in sin, after enough of it, God may well take him or her early. Of course, who are we to say that if someone is going through hardship that it is a result of sin?

If you want to know if someone is born again, just ask them what they believe about the Gospel. If they haven't simply trusted Christ alone for everlasting life, then they haven't believed it. It may be because they've never heard it. It may be because they've reject it. It may be because they've misunderstood it. But, you know what they say . . . close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades, eh?

So, if a preosn knows for 100% sure that they are going to heaven because they have trusted Jesus for it, then they are a believer. End of story. Nothing else adds to or takes away from that.
Proinsias wrote:I don't think you are hearing me. Preference for ice cream is a moral issue
And that, brothers and sisters, is the kind of foolishness you get people who insist on denying biblical theism. A good illustration of any as the length people will go to avoid acknowledging basic truths.
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Post by ttoews »

Jac, I think I have left some of your questions unanswered, but like you, I would like to get back to scripture...

so here is the next installment....starting to deal with the passages raised in your lengthy post of June 18, 2006.

First, wrt Eph 1:13-14 my point was that each and every saved person receives the Holy Spirit....I don't think that there is any issue there and I don't believe there was anything in your treatment of that passage that necessitates a response. Same wrt the 2 Cor passages.

Your handling of Romans 8, however, is different. The passage reads in the RSV:

5 For those who live according to the flesh set their minds on the things of the flesh, but those who live according to the Spirit set their minds on the things of the Spirit. 6 To set the mind on the flesh is death, but to set the mind on the Spirit is life and peace. 7 For the mind that is set on the flesh is hostile to God; it does not submit to God's law, indeed it cannot; 8 and those who are in the flesh cannot please God. 9 But you are not in the flesh, you are in the Spirit, if in fact the Spirit of God dwells in you. Any one who does not have the Spirit of Christ does not belong to him.

10 But if Christ is in you, although your bodies are dead because of sin, your spirits are alive because of righteousness. 11 If the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will give life to your mortal bodies also through his Spirit which dwells in you. 12 So then, brethren, we are debtors, not to the flesh, to live according to the flesh-- 13 for if you live according to the flesh you will die, but if by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body you will live. 14 For all who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God. 15 For you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the spirit of sonship. When we cry, "Abba! Father!" 16 it is the Spirit himself bearing witness with our spirit that we are children of God,

17 and if children, then heirs, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, provided we suffer with him in order that we may also be glorified with him.



And in the NIV it reads:

......5Those who live according to the sinful nature have their minds set on what that nature desires; but those who live in accordance with the Spirit have their minds set on what the Spirit desires. 6 The mind of sinful man is death, but the mind controlled by the Spirit is life and peace; 7 the sinful mind is hostile to God. It does not submit to God's law, nor can it do so. 8 Those controlled by the sinful nature cannot please God. 9You, however, are controlled not by the sinful nature but by the Spirit, if the Spirit of God lives in you. And if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Christ.

10 But if Christ is in you, your body is dead because of sin, yet your spirit is alive because of righteousness. 11 And if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you, he who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through his Spirit, who lives in you. 12 Therefore, brothers, we have an obligation--but it is not to the sinful nature, to live according to it. 13 For if you live according to the sinful nature, you will die; but if by the Spirit you put to death the misdeeds of the body, you will live, 14 because those who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God. 15 For you did not receive a spirit that makes you a slave again to fear, but you received the Spirit of sonship. And by him we cry, "Abba, Father." 16 The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are God's children.

17 Now if we are children, then we are heirs--heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ, if indeed we share in his sufferings in order that we may also share in his glory.

I expect that you will not like the NIV version of verse 9 where it states that the addressees "are controlled not by the sinful nature but by the Spirit, if the Spirit of God lives in you." If the NIV is correct with its interpretation then it would seem that Romans 8:9 presents a problem for you in that if the Holy Spirit is given to/dwells in all believers (which I believe we agree upon) then all believers would be controlled by the Spirit. The RSV renders it "you are in the Spirit, if in fact the Spirit of God dwells in you". Does "in the Spirit" mean controlled by the Spirit? Romans 7:5 reads "While we were living in the flesh, our sinful passions, aroused by the law, were at work in our members to bear fruit for death." So when one is "in the flesh" one is subject to the work of the sinful passions and produces corresponding fruit....and it follows that when one is "in the Spirit" one is subject to the work of the Spirit and produces corresponding fruit.
“So then,”—based on everything that came before, in this case, the statement in verse eleven that we are raised with Christ, living in him—Paul now argues that we have a new master, not the flesh, but the Spirit.
with this remark you seem to be in agreement with what I have said for one obeys (not ignores) a master, otherwise He is no master.
Paul then makes the statement in verse fourteen that has sadly been the root of great misunderstanding
yah, you'd think God woulda saw that coming (if indeed, there was a great misunderstanding)
“For all who are being led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God.” Notice again the “for.” Paul is explaining the reason for the previous statement. Those who live by the Spirit will reap life. Why? Because they are sons of God. Those who live by the flesh reap death. Why? Because they are not the sons of God. Does that mean that those who walk in the flesh are not believers? No, it does not. Nor does it mean that those who walk in the flesh are unsaved. A great promise is given here...
at this point you disregard what Paul has already stated at verse 9. Prior to verse 9 Paul is contemplating 2 sorts of people...those who live according to the flesh and those who live according to the Spirit. Paul's contemplation concludes by clarifying that you live according to the Spirit if the Spirit dwells in you. For Paul it is quite simple. Believe and the Spirit will be given to you. If the Spirit dwells in you, you will be given eternal life and you will live according to the Spirit.(v. 9) If it were possible to have the Spirit w/o any effects, then Paul should have described three types of people: those in the flesh b/c the Spirit doesn't dwell in them, those in the Spirit b/c the Spirit dwells in them and those in the flesh despite the Spirit dwelling in them....but he only describes two types.
And here, Paul uses a different word. He does not say that we are sons, but that we are His children, for all believers are children, but not all believers are sons. As we saw previously, only those who walk by the Spirit are considered sons. All believers are children, but only disciples are sons.
This is just wrong. Paul is not distinguishing at all between "sons" and "children". Rather, Paul is using the terms "children" and "sons" to mean his fellow believers, his brothers in Christ. Paul never states that only some believers are sons and the rest of the believers are merely children (or daughters?) We all receive the same Spirit...a Spirit of sonship. We all call God our "Father". There is only one Spirit (in Romans 8 He is called the Spirit of Christ, of God and of sonship). It isn't that some believers get only a Spirit of "childrenship" or "daughtership" and some get a Spirit of "sonship".
It seems that you think verse 14 states: "because those who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God, and are not just children of God"
...but it doesn't, that last bit is missing

It seems that you think verse 9 really states: "You, however, are controlled not by the sinful nature but by the Spirit, if the Spirit of God lives in you and just to be clear, those who are just children of God have the Spirit, but the Spirit does not live in them, but rather the Spirit only lives in the sons of God for only they are controlled by the Spirit."
....but again it doesn't.
Paul introduces the term "sons" in verse 14, uses it again in v. 15, switches to "children" in vv. 16 and 17 and returns to "sons" in v. 19. Paul thoughts concerning believers in those verses are:
a) those who are led by the Spirit are sons of God v.14
b) you have received a Spirit of sonship v.15
c) the Spirit testifies that you are children of God v.16
d) if you are children of God then you are heirs with Christ v.17

the ideas that Paul expresses in vs 16 and 17 flow from the ideas contained in vs 14 and 15....(unless your soteriology needs it) there is just no reason to think that Paul is switching to consider a different group of believers.

If this is to be the test between our two positions, then I am very happy to put it to the jury as:
a) if you think Paul is making a distinction of status between "sons of God" and "children of God" then Jac is right and if no such distinction is being made then Jac is wrong.
However, if God's children suffer with Christ, then they are co-heirs with Christ, considered as sons, and worthy to inherit the kingdom.
please explain this....what do you mean by "worthy" and "kingdom"...is it that by being a disciple/son one merits reigning with Christ in a millennial kingdom?....is yours a soteriology that is strongly tied to millenialism?
Again, this passage strongly teaches that all who are justified by faith alone in Christ are children, but only those who walk with and suffer with Christ are considered sons, or heirs, and will reign with Him.
Jac, if such was indeed taught "so strongly", don't you find it surprising that the distinction between "children" and "sons" was missed by so many for so long.

Later, you move on to Galations 4 and say:
This passage teaches much the same thing as Romans 8:12-17. Paul is explaining to the Galatians that they are sons of God through Christ, not slaves to God through the Law, and therefore, they are to live by the Spirit rather than walk by the flesh (that is, rather than trying to obtain the righteousness of God by works of the Law).

It could be immediately objected that Paul calls the Galatians sons, and thus all believers are sons. But, as always, context is in order. In 4:1 Paul says that “as long as the heir is a child, he does not differ at all from a slave although he is owner of everything.” Therefore, there is a definite contrast set forward between a child and a mature believer, as son, as it were.
Here I agree that Paul is making a distinction between "child" (which in this case means infant child) and "son" (by which he means adult son), but you are wrong to suggest that Paul equates "child" with immature believer and son with "mature believer".

The passage reads in the NIV Gal 3:23- 4:7:

Before this faith came, we were held prisoners by the law, locked up until faith should be revealed. So the law was put in charge to lead us to Christ that we might be justified by faith. Now that faith has come, we are no longer under the supervision of the law. You are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus, for all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise.
What I am saying is that as long as the heir is a child, he is no different from a slave, although he owns the whole estate. He is subject to guardians and trustees until the time set by his father. So also, when we were children, we were in slavery under the basic principles of the world. But when the time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under law, to redeem those under law, that we might receive the full rights of sons. Because you are sons, God sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, the Spirit who calls out, "Abba, Father." So you are no longer a slave, but a son; and since you are a son, God has made you also an heir.

Careful examination of verses 1-3 teach us that Paul considered the Law “childish” and resulted in enslavement. Faith in Christ was “mature” and resulted in freedom and authority. Thus, Paul says that Christ came to redeem those under the Law that they may no longer be childish, but rather they might be sons—mature believers no longer enslaved to the Law.
and by Paul's reasoning all the children of God who came before God's Son was sent are like infants (their inheritance is held in trust for them)...note these infants would include the likes of Moses, David, Isaiah, Elijah etc. for they were all under the law. On the other hand, by Paul's reasoning all the children of God who came after God's Son was sent are like adults (their inheritance is placed in their own hands and not in the hands of a trustee). The contrast that Paul is making is not between mature believer (son) and immature believer (child) but between a pre-incarnation child of God (child) and post-incarnation child of God (son).

. Being mature believers advocating simple faith in Christ, they are sons, and as sons, they are intimate with God and are waiting to receive their inheritance. However, to go back to the old ways to is to be childish and immature, losing that intimacy and authority.
Again maturity of belief is not what established sonship. At v 3:36 Paul states: for in Christ Jesus you are all sons of God, through faith....it is faith (not spiritual maturity) that establishing sonship...the same faith that saves.
Further, if you look at 3:29 "And if you are Christ's, then you are ... heirs according to promise." and 4:7 "So through God you are no longer a slave but a son, and if a son then an heir"....you should note that "belonging to Christ" and "sonship" are equated in that both things make you an heir.
By Christ's act of redemption the infant might receive the full rights of a son(v. 5)...In Galatians, the transformation from infant to full adult son is triggered by Christ's first coming and His redemption of the infant and not by the progression from immature to mature Christian. Doesn't Jesus redeem all believers? So yes, Paul is calling all Christians "sons" in v. 26.
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Post by Jac3510 »

I expect that you will not like the NIV version of verse 9 where it states that the addressees "are controlled not by the sinful nature but by the Spirit, if the Spirit of God lives in you." If the NIV is correct with its interpretation then it would seem that Romans 8:9 presents a problem for you in that if the Holy Spirit is given to/dwells in all believers (which I believe we agree upon) then all believers would be controlled by the Spirit. The RSV renders it "you are in the Spirit, if in fact the Spirit of God dwells in you". Does "in the Spirit" mean controlled by the Spirit? Romans 7:5 reads "While we were living in the flesh, our sinful passions, aroused by the law, were at work in our members to bear fruit for death." So when one is "in the flesh" one is subject to the work of the sinful passions and produces corresponding fruit....and it follows that when one is "in the Spirit" one is subject to the work of the Spirit and produces corresponding fruit.
I was working through this reply, and I found myself wondering what was going on. I have already dealt with everthing you've addressed throughout this post . . . then I found the problem. You asked for an exegesis of Romans 8:12-14 separately from Romans 8:5-10. Yet, in your disagreement with me, you go all the way back to verse 9! So, rather than redo my entire argument from scratch, I'll just repost my original argument and let you take another shot at it:
Jac3510 wrote:
  • For those who are according to the flesh set their minds on the things of the flesh, but those who are according to the Spirit, the things of the Spirit. For the mind set on the flesh is death, but the mind set on the Spirit is life and peace, because the mind set on the flesh is hostile toward God; for it does not subject itself to the law of God, for it is not even able to do so, and those who are in the flesh cannot please God. However, you are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God dwells in you. But if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him. If Christ is in you, though the body is dead because of sin, yet the spirit is alive because of righteousness. (Romans 8:5-10)
I included verses five through seven because they provide very important context for this eight through ten. As a matter of general context, very briefly:

“For” connects 8:5-7 with 8:1-4. Paul has stated that there is no condemnation for those in Christ. The moment you are saved you are in Christ, and being in Christ, you will never again be in danger of the fires of Hell. The reason this is true is that the being in Christ frees us from the law of sin and death. The Mosaic Law tried to do this, but it could not, because it worked through the flesh. However, Jesus overcame the flesh and fulfilled the Mosaic Law “so that the requirements of the Law might be fulfilled in us, who do not walk according to the flesh but according to the Spirit.” Thus, if believers walk according to the Spirit, they have fulfilled the Old Law.

This is true, Paul says, because “those who are according to the flesh set their minds on the things of the flesh . . .” Again, carefully note the argument: believers in Christ are not condemned. They are not condemned because Christ has set them free from the law of sin and death by perfectly keeping the Old Law. The Old Law could not do it because it was weak in the flesh. Therefore, when believers in Christ (who are not condemned) walk in the Spirit they walk in Christ's righteousness, thus fulfilling the Old Law just as He did. However, note that believers must walk in the Spirit for this to be true! You see, those who walk “according to the flesh set their minds on things of the flesh.” This is true of both the believer and the unbeliever. So, we are dealing with the proposition now, not that we are saved, but that we are or are not fulfilling the old requirements of righteousness. In short, are we walking in the Spirit, and if so, what does that mean?

Paul presents two groups of people: those “who are according to the flesh” and those “who are according to the Spirit.” The former “set their minds on things of the flesh.” The latter set their minds on “things of the Spirit.” Paul now states that the mind set on the flesh is death, whereas the mind set on the Spirit is life. We are not contrasting eternal life and eternal death. It is evident that Christians can walk “according to the flesh” or “according to the Spirit.” 7:14-25 makes this very plain! What Paul is dealing with here is experiential death and experiential life.

Consider again the proposition we are dealing with, which is the fulfillment of righteousness as per the Old Law. We know that those in the Old Testament were not saved by keeping the Law. Therefore, fulfilling the Law did not result in salvation. It is wrong, then, to argue that by walking in the Spirit, we keep the Law, and therefore are saved. However, keeping the Law did result in life in the experiential sense. If the Jews kept God's commandments, He promised them peace, prosperity, etc. However, we know from history that they constantly abandoned and broke the Law because of their sinful nature, and therefore, they experienced death, not in an eternal sense, but in an experiential sense.

So, Paul says here that the mind set on the flesh is death, but the mind set on the Spirit is life and peace, and verse seven tells us this is true “because the mind set on the flesh is hostile toward God.” Being hostile it “does not subject itself to the law of God.” Breaking this law naturally results in death. In fact, Paul states that “it is not even able to do so.” That is, the natural mind is not capable of subjecting itself to God's law (hello, Total Depravity!).

Verse nine presents a logical conclusion: those who are “in the flesh” cannot please God. It is extremely important to note here that Paul changes his wording. In 8:1-8, he has been speaking of those who walk “according to the flesh” (kata sarka). He contrasts that with those who walk “according to the Spirit” (kata pneuma). However, in verse nine, he says those “in the flesh.” There is a huge difference in kata (“according to, in harmony with”) and en (“in, on, among”). Unbelievers are “in the flesh.” Consider 7:5, which uses this same phrase, “For while we were in the flesh, the sinful passions, which were aroused by the Law, were at work in the members of our body to bear fruit for death.”

Needless to say, those “in the flesh”—that is unbelievers, have minds “according to the flesh.” Therefore, unbelievers, and any according to the flesh, cannot please God, because, again, such minds are hostile to the things of God.

“However, you are not in the flesh but in the Spirit.” “However” in this verse translates the strong contrasting conjunction alla rather than the weak contrasting de. “Unbelievers cannot please God,” Paul says, “but you are not unbelievers, you are believers!” Note that Paul says his readers are “in the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God dwells in you.” “If” here could be taken grammatically as either “if” or “since,” but neither affects the argument much. Paul is saying that those who have the Spirit in them are in the Spirit, and therefore, they are capable of pleasing God, for they are capable of setting their minds on the Spirit.

Verse ten of this passage requires little further comment. If Christ is in us, then even though our bodies are dead in sin (thus, allowing us to set our minds according to the flesh), our spirits are made alive in Christ, and thus, we can set our minds on the Spirit, being now able to please God.

Before we leave off this passage, we should note that the NIV translates “in the flesh” and “in the Spirit” as “controlled by the sinful nature” and “controlled by the Spirit” respectively. That's just the danger in using a formal equivalent. The Greek for “control” or “led by” is not in these verses, but the position “in” is the preposition used. In fact, it is surprising that they used a verb to translate a preposition in the first place! Theological bias plays a large role in translation at times . . . that is simply the case here.

To conclude, then . . . Paul here is teaching that Christians, unlike un-believers, have the Holy Spirit within them, and therefore they can choose to walk in that Spirit. When they walk in that Spirit, they fulfill, through Christ, the requirements of the Law and experience life and peace. This, in turn, is because Christ fulfilled the Law in His flesh, and by trusting in Him, we receive His righteousness, guaranteeing that we will never come into condemnation.
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  • So then, brethren, we are under obligation, not to the flesh, to live according to the flesh—for if you are living according to the flesh, you must die; but if by the Spirit you are putting to death the deeds of the body, you will live. For all who are being led by the Spirit of God, those are sons of God. For you have not received a spirit of slavery leading to fear again, but you have received a spirit of adoption as sons by which we cry out, “Abba, Father!” The Spirit Himself testifies with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with Him so that we may also be glorified with Him(Romans 8:12-17)
Note that I included verses twelve through fourteen for context. This is a very commonly misunderstood passage that teaches a profound truth, but in my mind has often been horribly distorted!

“So then,”—based on everything that came before, in this case, the statement in verse eleven that we are raised with Christ, living in him—Paul now argues that we have a new master, not the flesh, but the Spirit. We are “under obligation” to Christ. We are not under obligation to the flesh, to “live according to” it. Paul then explains why. “For”—a transitional word of explanation—“if you are living according to the flesh, you must die.” This is in direct contrast with the primary idea, which is that because we are raised to life in Christ, we are under obligation to Him. However, if we live according to the flesh, we do not live, as we should, but instead we die. Paul then offers a strong contrast. Living under the flesh brings death, “but if by the Spirit you are putting to death the deeds of the body, you will live.” The first obvious contrast is life versus death. But the cause of these are equally contrasted. Note that “living according to” the flesh brings death, where as “putting to death the deeds of the body” brings life. In other words, Paul is exhorting and warning his readers concerning their lifestyles.

Paul then makes the statement in verse fourteen that has sadly been the root of great misunderstanding: “For all who are being led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God.” Notice again the “for.” Paul is explaining the reason for the previous statement. Those who live by the Spirit will reap life. Why? Because they are sons of God. Those who live by the flesh reap death. Why? Because they are not the sons of God. Does that mean that those who walk in the flesh are not believers? No, it does not. Nor does it mean that those who walk in the flesh are unsaved. A great promise is given here. When we are in strong fellowship with God, we are sons. That is, we are mature believers, ready to inherit not simply eternal life, for that is the reward of all God's children, but we are ready to inherit the very kingdom of God. We are ready to rule with Him! This is seen even the Roman society. It was not uncommon for a man to look among his children and not find one worthy to bear the family name and honors, so he might find another man of virtue and adopt him as his own, leaving to that man his estate. His natural children were still his children, but they lost the privilege of their inheritance.

In verse fifteen, Paul continues his argument, beginning with another “for.” Remember that the main thrust of this argument is not that those who walk by the Spirit are sons. The main thrust of the argument is that we are to live by the Spirit for we are under obligation to it. So Paul provides a second explanation. We have not received again a spirit of fear, but rather we have received a Spirit of adoption as sons, and by this Spirit, we cry out “Abba! Father!” We are to walk in the Spirit because God is our father. As John MacArthur, who is absolutely no friend of the position I am advocating, points out, the spirit of adoption here is not so much referring as the transaction of adoption, but rather assurance that comes with the promise of adoption. As an adopted son may call his father “Abba,” so we may call our Father “Abba.” It is a word of intimacy that is not available with reference to God otherwise, and this intimacy is available to all believers. Thus, because we are so intimate with God, we are to walk in the Spirit, and to walk in that Spirit is life, but to walk in the flesh is death.

Finally, we come to the last part of the passage and again another common misunderstanding. Paul states that the Spirit testifies “with our spirit that we are children of God.” Paul is not beginning a new argument but further the case of the previous point, that we, as believers, have direct access to God not previously available to us, and not available to any outside of Christ. Many have mistaken this to mean that the Spirit speaks to our own spirits, assuring us of our salvation. Grammatically, this is a possibility, but the word itself literally means “to bear witness along with.” It is better to take this to mean that the Holy Spirit bears witness along with us that we are children. Who are we and the Holy Spirit bearing witness to? None other than God the Father! Again, this is demonstrated in Roman culture. When a man adopted someone into his family, he had to have seven witnesses to confirm the transaction for it to be legal. Likewise, Jewish law required the witness of two or three witnesses before something could be considered true. Therefore, when we cry out “Abba!”, the Spirit is a witness to God that we are, in fact, His children. And here, Paul uses a different word. He does not say that we are sons, but that we are His children, for all believers are children, but not all believers are sons. As we saw previously, only those who walk by the Spirit are considered sons. All believers are children, but only disciples are sons. And as if to make sure his readers did not forget that vital point, Paul states “and if children, heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with Him so that we may also be glorified with Him.” We are children, and therefore, we are heirs if we suffer with Him. Only children can be heirs. A servant can suffer with his master and it will profit him nothing. Men can suffer for God, and it will profit them nothing unless they are His children. However, if God's children suffer with Christ, then they are co-heirs with Christ, considered as sons, and worthy to inherit the kingdom.

Again, this is a profound passage, sadly misunderstood by many. It has robbed many of the assurance of their salvation by men who believe that all Christians are “led by the Spirit” and are “putting to death the deeds of the body.” MacArthur, in answering the question of how we are led, rightly pointed to the illumination of the Scriptures. Thus, if we are properly understanding the Scriptures, we can be sure we are saved, but if we do not understand them, then we are forced to doubt our salvation. And again, these men teach that the subjective witness of the Spirit to us confirms for us our salvation, which simply is not true. How many Christians doubt because they don't hear what they believe should be a “still, small voice.” Why, if they heard that voice, then they would not doubt! And yet how many men are absolutely deceived into believing they are being led by the Spirit, and being confirmed by Him to their own hearts as well? That is, after all, the nature of deception. How many of these will stand at the judgment and cry “Lord, Lord!”?

Again, this passage strongly teaches that all who are justified by faith alone in Christ are children, but only those who walk with and suffer with Christ are considered sons, or heirs, and will reign with Him.
The long and short, here, is that there is a textual differene between being "in" the Spirit and walking "according to" the Spirit. Because (the "if" in v. 9 you pointed out) we are "in" the Spirit, we have the ability to walk "according to" the Spirit, which was not the case when we we "in" the flesh. Once you see this contrast, the Son/Child motif shouldn't be too hard.

Like I said, I suggest you work through this again. If you are going to appeal to a context, you have to reference what I've already written on that as well. We can pick up Galatians after we deal with this one, as this will take more than enough work on its own. Besides, we really don't need to go much further than this. If my exegesis is correct, your entire position - faith necessarily produces good works - fails. This, your prooftext for your position, actually proves you to be incorrect. So, there isn't much use in going anywhere else? We can, but I can't see how it would be any more useful that this, unless you believe the Bible contradicts itself, of course . . .

God bless

edit: Yeah, I just read through this again. Just read it as quoted above and it will help. In the original series of texts, 12-14 was done before 5-10. I've posted them in the correct order . . . 5-10 and then 12-14, and it creates on continuous argument (are we surprised?). I then went back and read your post, and almost every question you asked was answered. All the exegetical ones were, in fact, answered.

And while here, let me just point out the practical ramifications of your position, which I did in the above quoted exegesis, but I really want to hit it hard: according to your understanding of the text, a person cannot know that they are saved. There is no absolute assurance, because if you are really saved, you will walk by the Spirit. Well, none of us walk by the Spirit all the time. John MacArthur, who holds the position you do, tells people in counseling, "Well, do you have the sense of the leading of the Spirit in your life?" That is his question to help with assurance, but that's far from biblical. It's certainly VERY subjective. It's also dangerous, because people can deceive themselves. If you are honest, you will admit that there are times that you do not walk by the Spirit. But, that means that you are not a child of God, because children of God walk by the Spirit . . .

It's the inherent flaw in the idea that God guarantees some works. We argue for the paradox that God allows for occasional sin, but not for habitual sin. Well, if God is going to keep us from habitually sinning, why stop there? Why not just stop us from ever sinning? Wouldn't perfect Christians make a far better testimony to this world? After all, we could say that, as Christians, we walk by the Spirit, because we are controlled by the Spirit! But, that's not the way God works, is it? He gives us the choice, and disciplines us if we choose wrongly. When we are being led by the Spirit, we are sons, mature in our faith, and solid witnesses to this world. As children, we are no better than slaves, for we are unproductive, and, in fact, actually a burden. It is a burden the Church loves, just as a mother loves caring for her child, but no mother would want to see her grown child still totally dependant on her. Children are a joy, but a burden. So we press them on to maturity. Same with the Christian walk.

Anyway, that was way more application that I wanted to get into, but that's how this idea plays out in everyday life. Hope that helps.

God bless
Proinsias wrote:I don't think you are hearing me. Preference for ice cream is a moral issue
And that, brothers and sisters, is the kind of foolishness you get people who insist on denying biblical theism. A good illustration of any as the length people will go to avoid acknowledging basic truths.
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Post by ttoews »

Jac3510 wrote:Like I said, I suggest you work through this again. If you are going to appeal to a context, you have to reference what I've already written on that as well.
thanks for pointing out the other stuff wrt Romans 8 that you had written...nice to deal with it all at once. So going back to your previous remarks I read:
Paul presents two groups of people: those “who are according to the flesh” and those “who are according to the Spirit.” The former “set their minds on things of the flesh.” The latter set their minds on “things of the Spirit.” Paul now states that the mind set on the flesh is death, whereas the mind set on the Spirit is life.....
Agreed. Paul contrasts the two groups in verses 5 through 9.
First, at v 5 Paul states that those who are according to the flesh have their minds set on the things of the flesh, and in contrast those who are according to the Spirit have their minds set on the things of the Spirit.
Next, in v 6 Paul states the mind of those of the first group is death, and in contrast, the mind of the second group is life and peace.
Next in v 7 Paul states that the mind set on the flesh is hostile toward God, does not subject itself to the law of God, nor can it do so. He then continues and states that those who are in the flesh cannot please God v. 8.
Repeating the pattern he began in verses 5 and 6, after stating the characteristics of the first group in verses 7 and 8 Paul contrasts the situation for the first group with the situation for the second group starting in verse 9. You recognize this when you say:
“However, you are not in the flesh but in the Spirit.” “However” in this verse translates the strong contrasting conjunction alla rather than the weak contrasting de. “Unbelievers cannot please God,” Paul says, “but you are not unbelievers, you are believers!”

Now Paul doesn't actually use "believers" and "unbelievers" to designate the two groups, but he does say that the second group:

a) is in Spirit
b) the Spirit lives in them
c) have the Spirit of Christ, and therefore
d) belong to Christ

...and by saying that the Spirit lives in them and that they belong to Christ, I agree that the two groups Paul is considering from verses 5 to 9 are "unbelievers" on one hand and "believers" on the other hand, and so v. 5 establishes that believers (and not just "disciples") have their minds set on the things of the Spirit.
Paul is saying that those who have the Spirit in them are in the Spirit, and therefore, they are capable of pleasing God, for they are capable of setting their minds on the Spirit.
verse 5 does not say that the 2nd group is just capable of setting their minds on the Spirit, but it says that they actually have their mind set on the things of the Spirit. Now I suppose you might want to argue that Paul contrasts non-disciples with disciples (v.5), non-disciples with disciples (v.6), and then unbelievers with believers (v.7-9)...but that would require Paul to be considering four groups not two, and there is no indication that Paul has switched (in mid-stream) from the original two groups.
Verse nine presents a logical conclusion: those who are “in the flesh” cannot please God. It is extremely important to note here that Paul changes his wording. In 8:1-8, he has been speaking of those who walk “according to the flesh” (kata sarka). He contrasts that with those who walk “according to the Spirit” (kata pneuma). However, in verse nine, he says those “in the flesh.” There is a huge difference in kata (“according to, in harmony with”) and en (“in, on, among”).
this just may be your theological bias showing...which is what you later claim wrt the NIV's translation of v. 9:
Before we leave off this passage, we should note that the NIV translates “in the flesh” and “in the Spirit” as “controlled by the sinful nature” and “controlled by the Spirit” respectively. That's just the danger in using a formal equivalent. The Greek for “control” or “led by” is not in these verses, but the position “in” is the preposition used. In fact, it is surprising that they used a verb to translate a preposition in the first place! Theological bias plays a large role in translation at times . . . that is simply the case here.
well one possible reason for the NIV's use of "controlled" would be what has preceded verse 9. Paul uses "in the flesh" and "in the Spirit" which are a figures of speech and as such translating the figure of speech (which uses a preposition) to a phrase that contains a verb may be absolutely the correct thing to do. You would agree (I think) that the 1st group is controlled in that they can not subject themselves to the law of God nor can they please God. Obviously an element of control exists for that first group and this is also evident in Rom 7:5 which reads: "For while we were in the flesh, the sinful passions, which were aroused by the Law, were at work in the members of our body to bear fruit for death." It seems that you want to argue that those in the Spirit merely have the potential to avoid the sinful passions that are at work to bear fruit for death...I look at Romans 7 & 8 and I see more than just a potential as being promised (and in part b/c I see your distinction between sons and children as an entirely artificial one).

And while here, let me just point out the practical ramifications of your position, which I did in the above quoted exegesis, but I really want to hit it hard: according to your understanding of the text, a person cannot know that they are saved. There is no absolute assurance, because if you are really saved, you will walk by the Spirit.
so then there is assurance for those that can see the fruit of the Spirit in their lives and those that can't get a wake up call...sounds about right to me.
Well, if God is going to keep us from habitually sinning, why stop there? Why not just stop us from ever sinning? Wouldn't perfect Christians make a far better testimony to this world? After all, we could say that, as Christians, we walk by the Spirit, because we are controlled by the Spirit!
well if you are going to speculate....then why not ask yourself why God didn't remain in residence on earth? Wouldn't His presence make a far better testimony to this world than any Christians? I guess we will eventually find out why He did things the way He did.
But, that's not the way God works, is it? He gives us the choice, and disciplines us if we choose wrongly.
and what if the simple believer chooses to absolutely reject God for all eternity?...does God honor that choice? if not, why would He honor any choice to sin by the simple believer?
When we are being led by the Spirit, we are sons, mature in our faith, and solid witnesses to this world. As children, we are no better than slaves, for we are unproductive, and, in fact, actually a burden.
actually slaves are productive...otherwise there is no sense having them....I don't know where Paul contemplates slaves as being unproductive. Slaves are bound to obey their master and so a slave to the flesh would obey the desires of the flesh and a slave to God/God's law would obey the desires of God. Your efforts to make your particular distinction between a child of God and a son of God simply fall short. (IMHO)
God bless you too Jac.
ttoews
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Post by ttoews »

I left some of your questions from July 13 unanswered...so here you go:
Jac3510 wrote:So, unless I am reading you wrong (which is different from presenting a straw man), you are arguing that a genuine faith produces commitment. A "false faith" doesn't produce commitment and is thus a mockery to God. God won't save the latter person because he hasn't believed.
no, what I am actually saying is that God won't save someone that has rejected Him and mocks Him and wants no part of Him even if that person simply believed at some time in the past.
God gives you the Holy Spirit to make sure that you don't mess it up. He makes you be able to merit it. Now, can you show me where the fault in my logic is?
I have already...you equate "not messing it up" with "meriting it". You claim to understand your own position wrt heaven....where God eliminates the sinful nature so that people will not mess up in heaven. Does it follow logically that He therefore makes people able to merit heaven? Surely you will answer the same as me....which is, nothing we do causes us to merit salvation or heaven...it is only what Christ did that has any merit.
Notice how you have them come to a conclusion on the definition of "bad fruit" by imposing on them the definition of "fruit" from other passages, i.e., the Gospels, Acts, etc.?
not imposing...taking into account and considering how other authors of the NT used the word.
Now, in this particular case, if you do that, what you will find is a variety of uses for this phrase. But, let's say that in every single instance, it always refers to behavior. Does that mean it refers to behavior here? NO. If the context clearly shows it is "teaching," ....
...and if the context clearly showed "teaching" as you claim, you wouldn't find that so many people (me included) disagree with your interpretation....what you claim is not clear unless one makes the same assumptions that you make.
As it stands, the context of this passage simply does not allow for "fruit" to be behavior, because the context itself rules that out by saying that these false prophets look like sheep externally.
ahh yes, that might be correct if one assumes that it would be impossible for people to mistake "good" deeds done for self-serving reasons as actual good deeds.
Have you been trained in inductive Bible study, ttoews?
yah, some ...and I have extensive experience in interpreting and explaining various writings...however, if I tried to claim that my interpretation was superior b/c it was "inductive" I would convince no one, but I would get a laugh or two. Labels don't count at all...coherency and validity do.
But when you apply the wrong principles to biblical interpretation, you get the wrong conclusions.
that is a rather profound observation. :wink:
There is an underlying theme to our debate. Have you noticed that it is our hermeneutic that is more and more frequentely coming up? You accuse me of dividing the text and making unnecessary distinctions. I accuse you of not placing texts in their appropriate context. Ultimately, our disagreement is rooted in our different hermeneutical approach. I believe in a grammatical-historical method of interpretation, and you don't seem to as much. I don't know what you interpretational theory is. What would it be, exactly?
I lean towards the branch of the grammatical-historical method of interpretation that does not read things into passages :)

So you are hinghing your entire theological position on the fact that they didn't REALLY do things in Jesus' name. You say they only THOUGHT they just mistaken? And where do you find that in the text? That's more of an assumption than I have ever made.
more accurately I am saying that they didn't actually do things for Jesus. I get that from Jesus saying "I did not know you". Like the sons of Sceva, they may have tried to use the name of Jesus...but that doesn't mean what they did, they did for Jesus...
If the works someone does "is in no way an indication of their spiritual conditon or that Jesus 'knows' them," then how do we know someone by their fruit?
beats me...but then again that is not the way it is...the works someone does are a strong indication (but not an infallible indication) of their spiritual condition and that Jesus 'knows' them...

I'll stick with Christ's suggestion to look at the fruit...as the real root (one's heart) is beyond my vision
Or you could stick with Christ's suggestion to look at the fruit of their doctrine. Besides, how do you equate "real fruit" with the heart?
did you read "fruit" instead of "root"?
I don't care how great you appear to be on the outside. I don't care what fabulous things you think you have done in Jesus' name. If you turn around and deny that Jesus is the Christ, or if you deny His resurrection, or if you deny salvation by faith alone, or any of these such things, then you aren't saved. Period.
Period?...now this can't really be what you meant....I thought that you believed that a person could turn around and deny that Jesus is the Christ, and deny His resurrection, and deny salvation by faith alone, and all of these such things, and teach salvation by works and become a Satanist and blaspheme the Father and Son in all ways imaginable, but as long as that person (at some time in the past) simply believed for a moment, then that person would be saved. So what fruits would you reference so as to know that simple believer turned Satanist?
See, we still don't have any practical way to apply your position. How would you recognize a false prophet, ttoews? His behavior?
in part...by this question you seem to presume that fruit must be either teachings or deeds....it's both.
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Jac3510
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Post by Jac3510 »

Period?...now this can't really be what you meant....I thought that you believed that a person could turn around and deny that Jesus is the Christ, and deny His resurrection, and deny salvation by faith alone, and all of these such things, and teach salvation by works and become a Satanist and blaspheme the Father and Son in all ways imaginable, but as long as that person (at some time in the past) simply believed for a moment, then that person would be saved. So what fruits would you reference so as to know that simple believer turned Satanist?
OK, I'm out. We are not getting anywhere. I meant exactly what I said, and the only reason for this quote is that you aren't trying to see my position. Anyone on this board will know exactly how I will answer that. You are looking for things to argue with, and I'm not doing that anymore. You've been convinced I was wrong from the beginning, and you've not stopped even once to consider what I'm trying to say. This proves it. So, forget Matthew. Forget Romans. Forget all of it, because I'm done. There is no reason to continue a discussion in which ideas are not being exchanged. If the last few posts are your idea of giving an argument due consideration, then there is nothing left to say. You made up your mind a long time ago and are not even trying to see my point. I'll just boil this down as simply as I can:

The entire matter that this thread has turned into comes down to this: does genuine saving faith necessarily produce good works? You have offered no evidence that it does. To go further, I've shown that a person can produce good fruits and yet still be lost, and yet you still argue that good works are evidence of salvation. You offer no support. Then we have this:
ttoews wrote:no, what I am actually saying is that God won't save someone that has rejected Him and mocks Him and wants no part of Him even if that person simply believed at some time in the past.
That's enough for me. I can't make it any clearer that you are arguing for meritorious, deserved salvation. You don't believe in faith alone. You believe in repentance/commitment alone, that a faith that does not produce repentance/commitment is no faith at all. That is the root of your belief that salvation necessarily produces good works, and it is simply wrong, because it is a denial of the Gospel. You said it yourself in the bolded part above. If a person rejects Christ, even if they have believed in Him, they are still damned. Thus, when Jesus says, "If you just believe in Me, you are saved," then you reply, "No, Lord, that isn't right!" Add whatever you want here. In the end, you make Jesus out to be a liar.

I would suggest that you stop considering Jesus to be a Judge and start considering Him to be a Savior. He came to SAVE, and He came to do so without condition. He saves freely and asks NOTHING in return (that's the definition of "freely"). That's the Gospel, that Christ saves all who simply believe. If you don't believe that, you don't believe the Gospel. You can try to redefine "believe" however you want. You can argue with the words you are reading all you want all while ignoring the point they are conveying. I am telling you what the Gospel is. You can choose to believe it or you can choose to reject it.

Now, I've made my position more than clear. It's between you and God what you do with it.

God bless
Proinsias wrote:I don't think you are hearing me. Preference for ice cream is a moral issue
And that, brothers and sisters, is the kind of foolishness you get people who insist on denying biblical theism. A good illustration of any as the length people will go to avoid acknowledging basic truths.
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