Hi,
1) Yes, salvation is called a gift. Yet it is being ASSUMED by FreeGrace that the gift of salvation is offered by God UNconditionally and this gift is received by man UNconditionally when this is not the case at all.
This statement is totally FALSE. The gift of salvation is conditioned upon believing in Jesus Christ for it. Please don't misrepresent my views.
3) FreeGrace has yet to prove that God has made 'eternal security' a gift that cannot be revoked. God has not promised or 'gifted' eternal security to any individual unconditionally.
The proof is in what Paul about eternal life. First, he defined eternal life as a gift of God in Rom 6:23. Then, he said that God's gifts are irrevocable in Rom 11:29. What's left to prove?
4) Yes, as long as one maintains a present tense, ongoing, sustained belief he will be saved.
This is refuted by Paul's answer to the jailer who asked what he MUST DO to be saved. Paul's answer was to 'believe' and he used the aorist tense, which means completed action. Not ongoing, continuous action as being claimed.
But what happens if one quits believing? One believes by his own volition and therefore can quit believing by his own volition also and become lost.
The error here is equating loss of faith with loss of salvation, because of the error that God requires ongoing belief for ongoing salvation. But that isn't taught anywhere in the Bible.
Will FreeGrace argue one's salvation is still guaranteed even if one quits his present tense believing?
To believe in the aorist tense, completed action, PROVES that one will still be saved.
Most likely not but will probably offer the common excuse that if one quits believing he "never really believed at all" which is not a valid excuse logically nor biblically.
I agree. That is a bogus argument that has no basis for validity.
My point is FreeGrace is ASSUMING that God has made eternal security a gift.
A very stunning statement. You've changed wording. God says eternal LIFE is a gift that is irrevocable. Though every believer IS eternally secure, based on God's promise, those in the insecurity crowd certainly don't feel eternally secure. Therefore, to their own experience, they don't experience eternal security.
Yet God has made eternal life a gift and God offers that gift CONDITIONALLY through faith. Those men that conditionally maintain a present tense faith receive the promise of the gift of eternal life.
So, was Paul lying to the jailer in Acts 16:31 because he used the aorist tense, which is completed action.
Yet if I cast away my faith then I have forfeited the promise of the gift and God did NOT revoke the promise of the gift of eternal life from me for the offer of the gift still remains before me but I have to go back to meeting the condition of having faith in order to have the promise for the gift of salvation again.
There are several errors in this paragraph. First, Rom 11:29 is NOT about any promise of the gift, but of the gift itself.
Second, one actually possesses the gift of eternal life WHEN one believes. John 5:24
In other words, if I lose the promise of the gift of eternal life it is NOT because God revoked His promise of eternal life it is because I no longer meet the conditions God has placed upon His gift.
One cannot "lose the promise of the gift". That doesn't even make sense. It is the actual gift that the Bible speaks of.
Sure, God keeps all of His promises. That means that when one believes in Christ, God at that moment gives him the gift of eternal life. God doesn't give promises. He gives gifts. A very big difference, and one worth noting.