Jethro Bodine
Member
- Oct 31, 2011
- 23,344
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It's so clear I wonder how people can question it. It's so clear that James asks his question in the form of a rhetorical question.You were arguing with the standard.I was adressing the issue of those who attempt to put a standard upon others, that they do not keep themselves.
How does my hypocrisy, if I had any, somehow negate the standard, or make it impossible to impose the standard the Bible sets?
OSAS says that standard doesn't really exist, that ultimately faith without works really can save, or worse, no faith or works at all can save. OSAS vehemently denies James' teaching that dead faith can't save when pressed on the issue. And as a response non-OSAS gets attacked for being judgmental for defending James' setting of the standard for proof of salvation, and somehow hypocrisy makes it so we can't say there is a standard.
Where does James ever say," dead faith in Christ can't save?" (one has to force James into saying this specific false interpretation)
My wife, who has struggled with the faith all our adult lives, get's completely flustered by people who use the 'that's not really what it means' argument to explain away plain words (I'm pressed for time, I can't think of a politer way to say that, so don't be offended). Basically, we add to the frustration of seeking the real truth when we use that argument.
I learned from that, so I don't form my doctrine that way anymore. I take what something says at face value and then weigh it against the rest of scripture, and unless there is an easily understandable and compelling scripture to make us genuinely see that a scripture really doesn't mean exactly what it says, I go with the plain words of scripture. It does damage to the truth and those struggling with it to not do this.
The fundamental argument against this is this:2 Tim 2:11-13 Paul uses His Favorite Hymn to show us 4 First class conditional clauses about faith in Christ.
11~~FAITHFUL . . . {IS} THE WORD/DOCTRINE.
"For you see . . .
if we have died with Him {Christ} - and we have -
at the same time also, we shall also live with Him, 12~~
if we endure suffering -and we do {in the SuperGrace Life}-
we shall also rule with Him {a SuperGrace reward in
Eternity Future},
if we repudiate/deny/refuse Him -and we {some of us} do
{reversionism - rejecting bible teaching} - that same One
{Jesus} also will refuse/deny us {rewards in eternity
future}, 13~~
if we {believers in carnality} are unfaithful/believe not {to/in
bible doctrine} - and we {some of us} do - He abides/
remains faithful {where the title of the hymn is taken}."......the "corpse" of the Faith James is talking about. Useless in Gods plan for your Life. But HE IS FAITHFUL.
For you see, He {Jesus} can not deny Himself
{we are in Union with Christ and are part of Him}.
The case of the Galatians shows that you can alienate yourself from Christ. The one who abandons his faith in the blood of Christ (through a false 'other' gospel) is not in union with Christ anymore that Christ would be violating his oath of dedication to the members of his own body in disowning them.
You can't take faith out of salvation and still think you have salvation. That's completely and totally contrary to the gospel message. Paul plainly told the Galatians that they had to have faith in the blood of Christ or else they were alienating themselves from the effect of that blood. And James and others say you can tell who has this faith that saves, by what fruit characterize them...and in increasing measure.
...uh...you lost me...This fragment of a hymn references many doctrines: Retroactive Positional truth, Current Positional Truth, Suffering in the SuperGrace life, Ruling with Christ in Eternity Future, Reversionism, loss of SuperGrace rewards in time and eternity for Reversionists, and the doctrine of Eternal Security.
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