RickD wrote:I believe in absolute assurance for the true child of God, only.
And this is why what you are saying is so dangerous. You only have absolute assurance if are you are a true child of God. But how do you know that you are a true child of God.
Jac, this part is exactly the same as you believe. I know I'm a true child of God, because I trust in Christ.
You can't appeal to your assurance on that point, because there are people who are not true children who have deceived themselves into thinking that they have true assurance.
I'm not appealing to my feeling of assurance, that I have God's assurance. Again, God has given me assurance of my salvation, because I believe in Christ. God in the person of the Holy Spirit, in me, will not contradict Himself.
It may turn out that you are not a true child of God. Then, this supposed absolute assurance you have now would prove to be just a self-deception--one of those people who were never really saved to begin with, though you are convinced that you are now. So, in fact, there is no way at all to know that you are a true believer. You can hope you are. You can believe you are. But the moment you make this concession, you deny yourself absolute assurance.
If I'm not a true child of God, then you aren't either. Because we both trust is Christ. That is the only qualifier for being a true child of God; faith in Christ.
In fact, what you have is moral assurance, which is a Catholic doctrine. That doesn't make it wrong, of course (being Catholic, I mean). But we've finally come back around to the first thing I said in this thread. For all of your arguments, you--and almost all Protestants--are exaggerating the difference in your view of salvation and the Catholic view of salvation. In the end, when all is said and done, you hold to an identical view (particulary with respect to assurance). That will inevitably inform your view of faith, which will inevitably inform your view of works. If you and Byblos were to talk long enough, you'd come to a consensus, most likely. You'd be surprised to discover that Catholics really believe just what you believe
Jac, Byblos and I have had long discussions about this very thing. And I assure you that we disagree about assurance.
There's only two positions, Rick. Mine and Byblos'--absolute, unconditional, objective assurance (free grace); or moral, conditional, subjective assurance (Catholicism).
No, Jac. You and I both agree that the only qualifier to being a true child of God, is faith in Christ. We only disagree by one degree. And, I don't really know if it's really a disagreement, per say. I just don't concretely say that anyone who claims to have faith in Christ, actually does. I just don't know for sure. Just because you claim there are 2 positions, doesn't make it so. I get the same argument from Calvinists. If I don't believe in 5pt Calvinism, then I have to be Arminian. It's just not one or the other, because you say it is.
Jac, I pretty much agree with this, from Wikipedia, on free grace, with possibly the exception of the words in blue:
Free Grace soteriology
Free Grace Theology is distinguished by its soteriology or doctrine of salvation. Its advocates believe that God justifies the sinner on the sole condition of faith in Christ, not subsequent righteous living. Their definition of faith involves belief, trust, a conviction[11] of the truth of the New Testament that may include a deep-rooted mystical conversion resulting in an acceptance of Jesus and the Holy Spirit as one's soulmates.
Faith is a passive persuasion that Jesus is the Messiah, and activization is not mandatory in terms of salvation. In other words, Jesus graciously provides eternal salvation as a free gift to those who believe in Him. [12]
Free Grace teaches that one need not proffer a promise of disciplined behavior and/or good works in exchange for God's eternal salvation, thus one cannot lose their salvation through sinning and potential failure, and that assurance is based on the Bible, not introspection into one's works. This view strongly distinguishes the gift of eternal life (the declaration of justification by faith) from discipleship (sanctification). There is also an emphasis within Free Grace on the judgment seat of Christ, where Christians are rewarded based on good works done in faith.[13
My assurance of salvation is based on the efficacious work of Christ, which is told to us, by scripture. If that is the same thing as "based on the bible", then I agree with the paragraph.
Also, from the same article:
Free Grace theology
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Free Grace theology is a soteriological view within Protestantism teaching that everyone receives eternal life the moment they believe in Jesus Christ as their personal Savior and Lord. "Lord" refers to the belief that Jesus is the Son of God and therefore able to be their "Savior".[1] The view distinguishes between the "call to believe" in Christ as a Savior and receiving the gift of eternal life, and the "call to follow" Christ and become obedient disciples,[1] meaning that the justified believer is free from any subsequent obligations unless he or she decides to undergo the process of sanctification .[2]
I agree with this, as well. If someone has faith in Christ, then he becomes a true child of God. Period. He cannot lose his salvation, from future unbelief. He cannot fall away, to the point of loss of salvation.