Nathan
Member
I have a lot of thoughts, not least of which is my disgust in your feeble attempt to accusingly lure me into an argument. I'd like to stick to the topic of salvation.You are confused. Salvation is a noun, not a verb. Nouns don't have tenses. In this case it's a noun based on the outcome, result or completion of the verb "to save".
"to destruct" (verb) - destruction (noun).
"to redeem" (verb) - redemption (noun)
Etc.
But here's what an expert on the Greek grammar of what our Lord God said in the 1st Century (what you call "NT writings", which Peter and the rest of us calls NT Scripture but you also are confused over and refuse to call Scripture):
Mark 5:34 (YLT) and he said to her, `Daughter, thy faith hath saved thee; go away in peace, and be whole from thy plague.'
Here the verb saved (perfect tense)
"is in the perfect - the saving is complete - it happened in the past and is now being viewed as completed, giving rise to the state of salvation"Salvation is the noun form of the perfectly completed action.
http://a.co/4LZY9Mt
Thoughts???
I was not asking what the tense of the word is, but rather is it a past, present, future, or combination of all three - reality. King David was a noun, but we can say if he was a past, present, future, or combination of all three - reality.