Of course you have to believe to be saved. But this is the man who falls away when he is tempted.
Did the man believe?
Yes, and was born again, as indicated by the plant spouting.
JLB
Join For His Glory for a discussion on how
https://christianforums.net/threads/a-vessel-of-honor.110278/
https://christianforums.net/threads/psalm-70-1-save-me-o-god-lord-help-me-now.108509/
Read through the following study by Tenchi for more on this topic
https://christianforums.net/threads/without-the-holy-spirit-we-can-do-nothing.109419/
Join Sola Scriptura for a discussion on the subject
https://christianforums.net/threads/anointed-preaching-teaching.109331/#post-1912042
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Of course you have to believe to be saved. But this is the man who falls away when he is tempted.
thinking this through but a seed sprouts - a little sprout grows out and keeps growing until it becomes a root
I guess it's just God's plan to separate the wheat from the chaff. Jesus said temptation is necessary.
you are right - i was calling new roots "shoots" but i guess the plant coming out of the ground is the shoot/sprout - ooopsNo sir.
A plant first has roots then it spouts.
JLB
See, when Paul means the faith which is in Christ Jesus, He says so in his sentences.
You chopped off his sentence where he explained exactly what he means by “depart from the faith”.
I did. The underlined part in the rest of Paul’s sentence, which you chopped off again.
"but speak the truth in love"
this truth is clear in Scripture, it is not talking about controversial doctrines
if the parable of the sower was about believers falling away then it sounds like very few will be saved and most will fall away -and lose their salvation -Did the man believe?
Yes, and was born again, as indicated by the plant spouting.
JLB
if the parable of the sower was about believers falling away then it sounds like very few will be saved and most will fall away -and lose their salvation -
someone losing their salvation sounds very scary -
It’s 34 pages on this parable alone (not to mention his notes). I’ll post some of his points under some of yours. They correspond! But first, some overall points he makes about it:what did he say about the parable of the sower?
the parable of the sower talks about different soil
hard soil that was so hard the Word never entered into the soil
and the last soil that was good ground that persevered and bore fruit
so i can see how the persevering soil was the good attentive understanding soil - SAVED
the other soils either fell away right away or somewhere later - they never understood and persevered
Why does Peter start out this sentence with “but”?But there were also false prophets among the people, even as there will be false teachers among you, who will secretly bring in destructive heresies, even denying the Lord who bought them, and bring on themselves swift destruction.
Why does Peter start out this sentence with “but”?
yes - that is how i see that parable alsoIt’s 34 pages on this parable alone (not to mention his notes). I’ll post some of his points under some of yours. They correspond! But first, some overall points he makes about it:
1. ...other than Matthew’s parables of the Wheat and the Weeds and the Net, it’s the only parable given a detailed interpretation and Title.2. It is given pride of placement in all three synoptic Gospels3. It is THE parable of parables.
In other words, getting this one understood ‘right’ is a lesson on getting His other parables understood ‘right’. Thus Jesus’s question to His disciples:
The parable and its interpretation are a midrash [i.e. Divinely inspired commentary in this case on Is 6] on Is 6:9-10.And the prophecy of Isaiah is being fulfilled in them, the one saying [in Isa 6:9-10]: ‘ In hearing, you will hear and by no means understand. And while seeing, you will see and by no means perceive.“The parable focuses on the responsibility of hearing, understanding and responding to Jesus’ message.”Thus He insured His disciples ‘heard’ it properly, understood (perceived) it properly AND responded to it properly as well (my $.02). After explaining why He spoke in parables to the crowd, He gave His disciples its interpretation in private:
“You therefore, hear the parable of the one having sown: Anyone hearing the word of the kingdom and not understanding it— the evil one comes and snatches-away the thing having been sown in his heart. This person is the one having been sown the seed along the road.Matthew 13:18-19 - https://www.biblegateway.com/passage?search=Matthew 13:18-19&version=DLNT
Snodgrass (SG) means the soil’s response (i.e. people’s response including His disciples and the people of Israel) is THE focus of the parable! So, you and SG agree. Me too.
“... the importance of hearing that is not mere hearing but hearing that leads to action.”“To some degree interpretation of the parable is determined by whether one focuses on the sower, the soil, the seed, or the harvest. So many nuances have been suggested that sorting them out is akin to sorting hay in a haystack.”“This parable, as we will see, is about God sowing his people in the land in fulfillment of his promises, which directly tied to Isaiah 6 and its message about how people hear and respond to God’s message.”
“The parable is a description of various responses to hearing God’s word and surely depicts the responses Jesus encountered in His own ministry.”
“...it [the parable] anticipates real and productive hearing. Real hearing is hearing that leads to obedience, and we should not forget that the Hebrew verb for hearing (sama) is often translated in English as “obey”.
“Those who respond with real hearing receive added revelation. For those who respond with superficial hearing, even what they heard is of no effect”
“Receiving the kingdom with joy is not enough-a message the modern church desperately needs to hear. Faith that is temporary and unproductive is not true faith.”
“The only valid hearing is hearing that produces. Anything else falls under the indictment of Isa 6:9-10.”“Five times he uses the verb “synienai” (understand) in connection with the parable and then at the end of the parable’s (sic) discourse Jesus asks his disciples if they understand these things (Matt 23:51). Real hearing for Matthew means understanding in a way that transforms one’s identity and is evident in obedience.”
In the case of this particular parable, we HAVE it’s divine interpretation.i'm not sure how we can find out for sure who is seeing/interpreting accurately and who is not
great point - only one understood - the rest did notIn the case of this particular parable, we HAVE it’s divine interpretation.
But what was sown on the good soil—this is the one who hears the word and understands it, who indeed bears fruit and produces, this one a hundred times as much , and this one sixty, and this one thirty.”Matthew 13:23 - https://www.biblegateway.com/passage?search=Matthew 13:23&version=LEB
How many soils understood the word of God in this particular parable?
Dear Father in Heaven - You are the One we all love honor obey - please work in all of us in this thread so we all can see from You what Jesus meant - please speak to all our hearts and minds and show us Your truth about this issue - please intervene in our human relationships so that we can discuss things in a more effective manner - we all love You and Your words - help us learn the truth as a family who hears from You and grows in wisdom and understanding by Your power - set each of us free from anything that is skewing our understanding of what You are saying in scripture - we want to grow and learn and be strong in You - in Jesus' wonderful name amen
great point - only one understood - the rest did not
good point - the hard soil did not believe - so that kind of person was not savedSo with all that said, what is still the defining, foundational principle of being saved?
Believe.
Those by the wayside are the ones who hear; then the devil comes and takes away the word out of their hearts, lest they should believe and be saved. Luke 8:12
I don’t see where we need 50 pages of commentary, to understand this.
JLB
So with all that said, what is still the defining, foundational principle of being saved?
Believe.
Jesus spoke in parables for a few reasons.Parables, by definition, are not plain or clear. Even His disciples were confused by their meaning at times (thus His interpretation of a few for them). The Parable of the Sower being THE prime example of this principle.