quote by cybershark5886 :
I've paid attention to your posts and I've seen your ample defense of your position and your lengthy posts, and I don't find myself disagreeing much. We have already agreed and talked about how I agree on how works work and fit in our Christian walk, so the long posts addressing that are not an issue for me.
You have been very patient and I believe that you do read my posts and try to understand where I am coming from here. I appreciate that and I also don’t mind taking time to type out these horribly long, (sorry, I’m not a very succinct writer) detailed replies and read your responses.
quote by cybershark5886 :
Now when I then went back further and pointed out that your line of discussion was banking on an Amazon Jungle type analogy, you seemed to agree and say it was induced by Gabby's H.P. scenario, which was fine in that context. However since your last post to me where you tried to explain your position where you disagred with Me and Handy, it seems to all go back to MEC's arguement, which was pushing the rare (as I have said in my previous posts) Amazon Jungle approach to salvation (and applying it to salvation as a whole it seems - which I then strongly objected too, and I still do) much before Gabby even introduced the H.P., therefore MEC was pushing a questionable and rare scenario and tried to apply it broadly, which I disagree with. I will try to explain below.
I guess the thing is, Josh, is that I see the Spirit as a real individual entity who speaks to not just you and me and those who seek his will, but to every person in the world, not just the church goers or jungle dwellers. The Holy Spirit isn’t limited to the Bible or a preacher or a church program. What we understand may be narrow but he does work broadly. It’s not rare or questionable that the Holy Spirit works with every person to bring them to a knowledge and acceptance of the truth. There won’t be many that find it because even when the spirit is willing, the flesh is weak.
But God is not unwilling or weak. He is the good shepherd who goes out to find the lost ones, and not just those who haven‘t been reached by missionaries. There are those everywhere who have heard the gospel but the cares of this world, the deceitfulness of riches or fame or addictions, choke out the word. When the church gives up, the Spirit meets them where they are and leads them to repentance. If they refuse to come, it is not because he has failed to speak to them, but because they are stubborn and rebellious and self-willed and love evil. Once a person has totally embraced evil, there is not much that can bring them around, I believe, short of a miracle brought about by the faith and prayers of some loved one.
quote by cybershark5886 :
Yes all Christians will be judged on their works, whether good or bad (1 Cor. 3:10-15), but those that will be judged for salvation on their consciences alone will be the rare Amazon Jungle profile people. I object to advocating pro-conscience (that's what "moral" atheists do to justify their lifestyles BTW) over following explicit dedication to Christ - and MEC says we don't even know if doing such a thing is necessary! That is againt the Gospel of Christ!
I do understand your reservations about tossing the baby out with the bathwater here. Especially when the baby is our own baby Jesus born in a manger. I don’t know exactly what MEC believes since I have only recently begun to read his posts in topics that I find compelling, and I can‘t speak for him as to what he meant. I know sometimes it is a simple omission for brevity that causes a misunderstanding in what the writer intended to say. Is MEC advocating that we don’t need Christ, or we don’t need the rituals of going to the altar, praying the sinner’s prayer, and saying the correct doctrinal words of some formula designed by a particular denomination?
quote by cybershark5886 :
Were not told to spread the good news of following God in good conscience, but the Good News of Christ and walking with him, and we are told to set our hope in Him. I'm not talking about dogma of works versus faith, I'm talking about what the Christian life is. Will those Amazonians who by nature obey the law, when even God's people the Jews who know the law are lost, be saved if they never hear of Christ and live according to their conscience - yes indeed I believe it, as Romans says, but this is not to be a model for Christians who are less ignorant than these.
Good question. I see what you are saying in that the Jews who rejected Christ, and those who even today reject him, could be lost while the ones who never heard of Christ can be saved for just following their conscience. Isn’t this what Paul was addressing in Romans chapter 11?
Romans 11:28-32
As concerning the gospel, they (Jews) are enemies for your sakes: but as touching the election, they are beloved for the father's sakes. For the gifts and calling of God are without repentance.
For as you in times past have not believed God, yet have now obtained mercy through their unbelief:
Even so have these also now not believed, that through your mercy they also may obtain mercy.
For God hath concluded them all in unbelief, that he might have mercy upon all.
The Gentiles who didn’t have the Jewish law, and may have rejected it because of the rituals involved with becoming a Jew, instead were following their conscience, which was a law written on their hearts by God. The ritual-minded Jew considered that they were lost heathens, having not followed the rites and ceremonies of the Jewish law. Then, Jesus came and turned the tables and showed how the law was not to be followed according to the letter but according to the spirit of the law, and to be followed, not outwardly, but inwardly, in true love and mercy toward others.
The very ceremonies that were intended to illustrate the person and mission of Christ became a stumbling block, similar to what some of the traditions in the catholic church have become to those who don’t see the spiritual meaning in the sacraments they perform, and do them as a ritual.
The protestant churches today also have made traditions that may become stumbling blocks to them. The altar call, the baptism, the Lord’s supper, the weekly worship service, the sinner’s prayer, etc., could all be turned into mere rituals.
quote by cybershark5886 :
Just like you were saying that it is a sad thing for some to just be saved and then say 'hallelujah' I'm saved, I get a better mansion and salvation, I'm good - and never move past that - then living in the 'freedom of conscience' unilluminated by the revelation of the word (we are lucky to have the Bible - for it is God's inspired revelation to us - and the Spirit can enlighten our minds and change us by the hearing and reading of the Word - that we may grow in it) is equally sad if one uses conscience as a sole guide over revealed revelation. It smacks of anomia to me, like a justification for another way than following Christ in the knowledge of Him (one of Paul's Chief goals, if not the very 'mark' he pressed toward [Phil. Ch. 3]), and even Paul said that he with his conscience he knew nothing against himself, yet by that he was not justified (1 Corinthians 4:4).
Our consciences can become dulled by our ignoring of the Spirit’s conviction, and calloused so they are not sensitive enough to be of very little use in leading us from evil, this is true. The Bible does not change and become faint from lack of use, but we have a way of just reading what we want to know and ignoring those things we don’t.
The Bible, as wonderful as it is, is no substitute for the actual Holy Spirit’s leading. As you say, the words of Christ and the Spirit of Christ work together to enlighten us. But if we never pick up the Bible, the Holy Spirit can still speak to us and we are taught of God to love one another. Even when we do immerse ourselves in the Bible, we can ignore the Lord’s words and concentrate on things that fill us with strange doctrines and elaborate theologies instead of the simplicity that is in Christ. Caught up with studies about the trinity, baptism, or history, etc, we can lose touch with the love that Christ taught us to develop between us and our brothers, our neighbors and even our enemies.
quote by cybershark5886 :
Please, oh please, tell me you understand what I am trying to tell you. You have to understand what I am defending about the Gospel, this is important.
I look forward to your reply.
I think I have a pretty good grasp of what you’re saying, but I’m not sure that what you are defending is the gospel as much as your tradition in the gospel presentation and your personal ideas on who is eligible for receiving the guidance of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit can work on every heart, regardless of their knowledge of Christ, and they will be judged in the light of the knowledge that they have. To whom much is given, much will be expected.
You have to consider that sometimes, a person isn’t rejecting Christ as much as they are rejecting so-called Christians. The essential message a person must accept is that we must love one another, forgive as we have been forgiven by God, turn the other cheek, confess our sins and repent of any evil in our lives if we are going to inherit eternal life. That is briefly the word that was brought to us by Christ, that is the gospel that he preached, and the word that we are to sow.
Looking carefully at my last paragraph, did I mention Christ’s death? It was omitted for brevity. It’s actually included in my mind in the phrase, ‘forgive as we have been forgiven by God’ but if you didn‘t know my heart in this, you might think I didn‘t believe in the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ, which made our forgiveness possible. So sometimes you have to read between the lines. I think maybe this is the case with MEC and not so much bad theology or even bad wording. Sometimes it is a toss-up between writing a shorter post that gets misunderstood or a longer one that gets a half-reading or doesn’t get read at all. :-? Don't you wish this one was shorter? :-D