I thought I had read and addressed everything, but maybe I missed some things then. If you would point them out, I will try and address them.Any time that I provided specific scriptural quotes which proved my point definitively, you did not respond to those proofs. I was being polite, and I allowed you to bow out gracefully, and so I did not then point out your failure to respond. I honored your tacit admission of my proofs.
It is dangerous and poor theology to make a doctrine out of one verse. There is nothing even in the context to suggest successive wells that are to be understood as incremental salvation.Not progressive salvation, which would not be completed until some point after it was begun, but rather incremental salvation. Incremental salvation is found most poignantly in;
Isa 12:3 Therefore with joy you will draw water From the wells of salvation.
Plural.
Think of a desert caravan. Each well on the way is salvation. Salvation that is complete in itself, but not complete as to the final destination.
In all likelihood, it is a reference to God's past, continuous provision for the Israelites when they were in the desert, and, therefore, refers to God's unlimited abundance for salvation in the future. There are numerous biblical references to God's salvation being likened to water in both the OT and NT, one of which is John 4:7-14.
Not sure how this addresses what I posted.Yes, cookie-cutter Christianity. Chop, and there's another one. Everything lumped all together,
What are you talking about here?except for all the things which are problematic for worldly government, which things are conveniently eliminated by postponement. Very pat. Just stand up, sit down, kneel, pay, and repeat. Or else. Bye-bye cruel world, and fallen Church.
Free of what and free for what? Be very, very careful in being "free."I'm free.