Please note:Seraph wrote:2 Timothy 1:12-13, "If we endure, we will reign with Him. If we disown him, He will disown us. If we are faithless, He will remain faithful"
The earlier verse shows that if we outright disown him, we can loose our salvation. If that happens though, we can always come back to Him as shown in the prodigal son parable. I've always understood the later verse to mean that even when our faith is weak, God will still keep us with Him so I we won't loss our salvation just because our faith isn't strong enough.
Using John 3:16 to defend the stance that salvatation can't be lost is futile because it only says that salvation can be obtained. It says nothing about whether one can loose it.
Parable of the sower - it is the soil that represents people all made of clay
Luke 8:11, “Now the parable is this: The seed is the word of God.”
The seed is the word of God falling upon all peoples of the world. The seed will produce fruit — either rejecting God's word or accepting it. Some people are rocky and hard. They may think they are saved but are not. They refuse God's word taking root in their lives and producing change.
Some people's ground is covered with thrones and thistles, thus, choking out God's word. These were never saved even though they may think they were are at some time in their past. Troubles come and they reject God's word.
Some people's soil love to walk in the path of the world's ways. They may receive God's word at first, even with joy thinking they were saved, but the paths and allurements of the world trample out God's word from growing. These, too, were never saved.
The word of God goes forth and lands on good soil, broken, turned, plowed, and takes root producing fruit of a Christ like Life. The other soils refuse the plow's work and instead prefers to remain as they are. These were never saved. Those that disown Christ were never saved to begin with. How could they be?
Look at 1 Peter 1:5 , “who by God's power are being guarded through faith for a salvation ready to be revealed in the last time.” So is God's power unable to guard us from falling? Are we more powerful than God's power?
Look at Isaiah 40:8: "The grass withers, the flower fades, but the word of our God will stand forever." ESV
God's word divides those that are plowed and ready against those that refuse and rebell (note Luke 12:51 and John 1:1).
God's word divides those that are plowed and ready against those that refuse. That is what God's word does it sorts out and divides. God's word also admonishes us to check ourselves to see if we are in the faith. This checking produces growth and provides guidance to see if we indeed are growing which leads us to a repentant life. Those that are on the world's pathway, or rocky and shallow, or over grown with thorns and thistles were never saved to begin with.
My faith is in the Lord who will never let me go. I do not sin that grace abounds because I know beyond all doubt that He will never let me go. His word transforms and changes me day by day. My Faith is in his word and not my works so that he can work through me as he so wills.
Your faith maybe in yourselves believing that you are so powerful and free to jump out of His grasp so I now ask you that believe and have faith in such doctrine is your faith in yourselves or God?
My Faith is in God's word - John 10:28, “I give them eternal life, and they will never perish, and no one will snatch them out of my hand. 29 My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all, and no one is able to snatch them out of the Father's hand.”
There I rest in him and jump not. If I tried, he would catch me with his other hand. Forever Faithful is our Heavenly Father is He not?
People love to quote John 15:1-2-15 as a proof text to support the notion of a successful jump; however, verse 16 says otherwise: “You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and that your fruit should abide, so that whatever you ask the Father in my name, he may give it to you.”
Those spoken too all stumbled and fell as the bible proves. Peter denied Christ thrice. Did Peter lose his salvation because of this? Or what he wrote later found true:
1 Peter 1:5 , “who by God's power are being guarded through faith for a salvation ready to be revealed in the last time...”
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Post script:
Here is a hypothetical question: You — yourself next day decided to reject your faith and then died in an accident. However, if you had lived, the following day you would have returned to the Lord. Would you go to Heaven or Hell?