mondar said:
Its an obvious fact that if Christ died for all men, and some go to hell anyway, then his death was insufficient to save them.
You have a rather warped sense of what responsibility is. If a boat ventures upon a drowning man and throws him a life preserver, but the drowning man refuses to grasp it, who's fault is it if he drowns?
Christ blood is sufficient for anyone wishing to do as the COI were required to do in the wilderness when bitten by snakes. Your suggestion of Calvanism that there are only elect means that Christ didn't die for those that would choose to look and see.
Jhn 3:14 And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up:
Jhn 12:32 And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all [men] unto me.
Since John 6:44 says "No man comes to me," I can point to your idea of men wanting Christ as unbiblical.
It is the goodness of God that leads men to repentance. When they see the goodness of God represented in the selfless life of Christ our Savior they will be drawn to Him. This is why the "Good News" is preached. The notion that salvation is not a choice and that God saves only who He will is completely unbibilical mondar.
The COI in order to be healed had to make the effort to "look" on the brazen serpent and have "faith" that they would be healed. Nothing has changed. We must look to Christ and have faith that He will heal.
[quote:1rxho2iv] 2Cr 12:9 And he said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness. Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me.
Paul here is talking about the "thorn in the flesh" in this context, not his salvation. [/quote:1rxho2iv] Paul was indeed speaking of his salvation for he knew that his salvation rested totally on the work of Christ.
Your the one that said Christ shed blood is merely "available." Of course in your weakened view of the crosswork of Christ, and your inflated view of the self-righteousness of man to seek God, it does make the crosswork of Christ only a possible salvation that we activate by our faith.
Christ's blood is indeed available to
any man, woman or child that will
choose to recognize He died for them and because of them.
Everytime you say that Christ's blood is merely available, it shows your weakened view of the crosswork of Christ.
By recognizing the fact that Christ died for the sinner you view that as a weakened view of Christ? Are you serious in this belief? Is there any other way to recognize the work of Jesus on the cross other than believing He shed His blood to save mankind?
in one breath you will say it is merely "available" then you say that it is "sufficient" for salvation.
Exactly. Do you have another view that I should be aware of? Is the healing and atoning sacrifice of Jesus NOT available to any that would recognize He died for them? Is His blood not sufficient for salvation?
You do not recognize the inconsistency in your own statements.
I would say you don't recognize just how consistent with scripture my statements are.
If we have to do something to activate the cross work of Christ, then that crosswork is not totally sufficient for salvation.
We have to do nothing but accept it. He knocks at the door of out heart. We have to open the door. We have to "look" and have "faith."
We must add to it our own righteous decision of accepting Christ.
Wee have no righteousness.
Of course I would object that any such suggestion of human merit is incorrect.
At this point I have no idea what you would be objecting to.
What are you suggesting here... [/quote] That the same thing you accused me of doing in my argument is the same thing you did here.
Is there any chance you would be consistent through this context? Would you also say verse 10 "There is none righteous, no not one" is speaking of only the Hebrews and not Paul and his converts?
Read verse 9. Paul is comparing the Christian believer and convert to the Hebrews - that none were righteous, none were justified. My point to you had nothing to do with Paul's meaning as much as it does your argumentation methods!
Then in verse 23 when it says "all have sinned and come short of the glory of God" you would see this as only referring to Hebrews or Jews and not Paul and his converts?
Obviously this is referring to all sinners. Of course since we are all sinners we are in desperate need of recognizing the fact that Jesus dies to make us righteous before God because without Him none could possibly be righteous.