Belief isn't an act? Having faith isn't an act of the will?
Abraham was righteous because he believed. He was justified because he did.
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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/
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https://christianforums.net/threads/without-the-holy-spirit-we-can-do-nothing.109419/
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https://christianforums.net/threads/anointed-preaching-teaching.109331/#post-1912042
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Belief isn't an act? Having faith isn't an act of the will?
Luke 16:15
And he said unto them, Ye are they which justify yourselves before men; but God knoweth your hearts: for that which is highly esteemed among men is abomination in the sight of God.
Any notions of Abraham "justifying" himself, APART from Christ in him, is a futile sight.
Abraham assuredly never "justified" himself. No, not once, not twice, not ever.
In Abraham, we have a sight of the father of faith, coming before God, HONESTLY, about the "sights" of himself, and it surely was not on the ground of "self justification."
Genesis 18:27
And Abraham answered and said, Behold now, I have taken upon me to speak unto the Lord, which am but dust and ashes:
I can't see where anyone has claimed that Abraham justified himself.
Abraham was justified by God in Genesis 12, Genesis 15 and Genesis 22.
The Spirit of Christ in Abraham means there was no "just" Abraham.
No, it certainly doesn't mean that a person is automatically justified [right with God] because they have the Spirit of Christ in them.
A person may be justified by God, through faith in Jesus Christ then later, go back to walking in the flesh and become entangled in the things of the world and overcome. 2 Peter 2:20-22
A person who has the Spirit of Christ in them must obey what the Spirit leads them to do.
They must choose to present themselves as obedient to God to do what is righteous. as it is written
Little children, let no one deceive you. He who practices righteousness is righteous, just as He is righteous. 1 John 3:7
Whoever hates his brother is a murderer, and you know that no murderer has eternal life abiding in him. 1 John 3:15
Just as Balaam did not do what was right in the eyes of the Lord, when he sought to use sorcery against the children of Israel.
Now when Balaam saw that it pleased the Lord to bless Israel, he did not go as at other times, to seek to use sorcery, but he set his face toward the wilderness. Numbers 24:1
JLB
I know. I agree, and it bothers me too. I have recently read up on the subject and the sin which can't be forgiven is impenitence. Refusing to repent, up until death.Hebrews 10:26-29 is not talking about just one specific sin that tramples on the blood of Christ. I see it often enough among Christians to know what the passage is addressing. It's about people who have this flippant, careless attitude about their sin because they think that grace means Christ will always be there ready to forgive it and fall all over himself to keep them safe when they need to have that forgiveness. It makes me so angry to see Christians do this. They think God is this wimpy milk toast kind of parent who picks up everything after their kids without requiring the disciplines of the faith from them. But God is not mocked.
I disagree with you here. I don't think God "shuts the door" on anyone. I think we shut the door on Him, but the door is always unlocked, with God calling us back from the other side.The person who tramples on the grace of God that way has started the clock ticking toward the time God says, 'enough!', and he shuts the door in their faces.
So, impenitence, then? If he repents on his deathbed, will he be forgiven? There have been millions of documented deathbed reversion stories, where people who have strayed from the faith (sometimes FAR away, even to Satan worship) have come back and repented on their deathbed. Do you think that God rejects these people with ostensibly sincere faith, coming back to Christ after re-conversion?I'm not talking about the weak sinner who seems to live in constant defeat, continually coming back to Christ for forgiveness. I'm talking about the person who has accepted his sin as a way of life and does not seek God about it because he thinks grace means God is winking at it. I mean if he is even thinking about grace at all.
The sin being spoken of certainly includes the sin of blasphemy of the Holy Spirit in it's most obvious form (openly denouncing and denying the Holy Spirit's ministry of testifying to the Christ). But when you understand that blasphemy of the Holy Spirit is nothing more than the sin of unbelief (deciding not to believe the Holy Spirit's testimony, thus calling the Holy Spirit a liar--1 John 5:10) you can see how the sin that tramples on and mocks the grace of God in the blood of Christ is any sin that is flagrantly and willingly done because of unbelief in the blood of Christ for the forgiveness of sins. Paul speaks of this denial of the power of God here:
5 holding to a form of godliness, although they have denied its power" (2 Timothy 3:5 NASB)
It isn't covered by the blood because there is no sacrifice given by God to cover the sin of rejecting the forgiveness of God. Persist in it and you will die with no remedy for that sin. Because there isn't one. The sacrifice of Christ doesn't remain for the 'believer' who sins because of a trampling of the blood of Christ in unbelief.
But the sin that is not brought to Christ can't be forgiven either. What sacrifice is there to forgive the sin that a person knows is sin but won't bring to Christ? I only know of Christ's sacrifice existing and remaining to cover sins that people bring to him to be forgiven. And what I mean by 'bring to him' is they have every intention of being rid of it through a relationship with God by the Holy Spirit, not coexisting with it.
IF HE PERSISTS IN UNBELIEF, as you rightly said above. This is what Jesus is talking about.They do if those daily sins represent an unbelief and a turning away from the forgiveness that they know about through the ministry and testimony of the Holy Spirit. The unrepentant person who sins defiantly and willfully is in effect rejecting God's call through the Holy Spirit to forgiveness and repentance through the blood of Christ and choosing to trample it underfoot in a careless and/or contemptuous rejection of that blood. IOW, he is unbelief.
I agree, if a person dies in this state he will lose justification forever. Do you think are there people walking around in the course of their daily lives that have been justified, have rejected that justification and can never get it back, no matter how remorseful they are or how often they repent, and that it's God Who is the One "locking them out"?And I agree. But where we disagree is I say you only lose the one-time justification you received in the cleansing of your whole body eventually after you resist and resist in unbeief God's call to forgiveness and repentance for daily sin. That is when you lose the justification--the cleanliness of the whole body---but which God says is impossible to have done again.
I thought the refusal to allow Jesus to clean the "dirty feet" does rob one of justification. Don't we agree on this?In the passage we see daily sin is not talking about the issue of having been made clean in Christ itself, but only the dirtying of the feet. That is, until you reject Christ and don't allow him to cleanse the daily sin, which I'm saying means you are, or have, departed the faith. Then it does become a matter of losing the one-time body cleansing justification you received, which we agree Jesus refers to as 'having no part of him'.
But I'm saying you never lose your justification in this scenario unless you persist in it. As Jesus says, the body remains wholly clean despite the dirty feet. So it isn't' the dirty feet that rob one of justification. It's when you raise daily sin to the level of blasphemy of the Holy Spirit (unbelief) that you can then lose justification. And you lose it forever with no chance given to get it back.
Amen...Yes, 'through repentance'. But if you don't repent asking forgiveness you are guilty of sin that can not be forgiven. Both, the sin of your unbelief, and the sin displayed as a result of that unbelief. Remain in that unrepentant, willfully sinning state and you have nothing to look forward to but the damnation of the enemies of God.
I don't think "God makes it" that way. We do. God will forgive all sins except those we don't bring to Him, that's why impenitence is the unforgivable sin, the "blasphemy against the Holy Spirit". "I will not repent", which is another way of saying that infamous line, "I will not serve".Remain in it long enough and God will make it so you can not come back.
And back around we go...You're talking in circles. When asked if Abraham was justified when he believed, you said "No. Acts are justified. There has to be an act. For instance Abraham left his country." Now belief is an act that does justify????Abraham was righteous because he believed. He was justified because he did.
And back around we go...You're talking in circles. When asked if Abraham was justified when he believed, you said "No. Acts are justified. There has to be an act. For instance Abraham left his country." Now belief is an act that does justify????
He believed in Gen. 12 and was justified. He believed in Gen. 15 and was justified. Yes or no?In Gen. 12 Abraham did what the LORD commanded him to do because he had faith and he feared the LORD. So when the word of the LORD came to him, he left his father's country. So Abraham was approved through faith when he did what the LORD said he should do.
I disagree:I disagree with you here. I don't think God "shuts the door" on anyone. I think we shut the door on Him, but the door is always unlocked, with God calling us back from the other side.
Depends on whether they had been turned over to the lie per the 2 Thessalonians scripture I cited above.So, impenitence, then? If he repents on his deathbed, will he be forgiven? There have been millions of documented deathbed reversion stories, where people who have strayed from the faith (sometimes FAR away, even to Satan worship) have come back and repented on their deathbed. Do you think that God rejects these people with ostensibly sincere faith, coming back to Christ after re-conversion?
Yes. Hebrews warns us not to be like Esau:Do you think are there people walking around in the course of their daily lives that have been justified, have rejected that justification and can never get it back, no matter how remorseful they are or how often they repent, and that it's God Who is the One "locking them out"?
Thanks anyway...My argument is Christ was crucified for our justification. By faith we are acquitted, By faith we are approved. By faith we can enter the eternal habitations.
I guess the part that I've failed to communicate in my argument is that the "is completely clean" (John 13:10 NASB) is not lost even though our feet get dirty. We don't lose our justification in our daily sinning. We remain completely clean before God. But if we trample on that gracious fact of our salvation and redemption we do risk losing our "is completely clean" status before God and will once again--like before we got saved--become subject to the damnation of the enemies of God.Unless we bring our "daily sins" to Jesus, we lose justification. We agree on this and the analogy Jesus is drawing. The "feet" represent "our daily walk", the "washing" represents Jesus removing the sins of our daily walk, and refusal to allow Jesus to do so results in loss of justification. Think about this, Jethro. Jesus tells justified believers, Apostles, that unless they come to Him to remove the sins of their daily walk, they will lose their justification. He doesn't say "unless you die in apostasy" or "unless you lose faith". Removal of daily sins (dirt) we accumulate on our daily walk, is necessary for continued justification.
No. If we stop relying on Christ for the washing of our feet in a cleansing of sin after we have been justified, we show we are losing, or have lost, faith in Christ--the faith that justifies us before the Father in heaven, believing and trusting in the continuing sacrifice and ministry of Christ on our behalf (Hebrews 7:25).Peter doesn't need a whole bath all over again. He only needs his feet washed. The bath is justification. The washing of the feet is the stain of our daily sin that doesn't necessitate an entire re-washing (re-justification) of the believer. Note, Jesus did distinguish between the truly washed, but stained, Apostles, and the Apostle that was stained, but was not washed, Judas. For your understanding of 'unleavened' to be correct, the Apostles would not even need their feet washed, or else they would be in the same category as Judas, representing the leaven that is in the lump."
The Process Of Justification
This seems inconsistent with your view in your last post and this one, that a person who doesn't come to Christ to get his feet washed, can lose justification ("have no part with" Christ). You seem to be saying in the red above, that whether we allow Jesus to remove our daily sins or not, it doesn't effect our justification. We are "completely clean" and will always remain so "despite the stain of our sins", because we have had the "bath" of justification.
Dadof10: "Jesus saying that unless he removes daily sin, we "have no part with" Him. According to you, Jesus says to justified forever people, that unless they have their daily sins removed by Him, they "have no part with" Him. Can a person who has "no part" with Jesus remain (or be) justified?"I guess the part that I've failed to communicate in my argument is that the "is completely clean" (John 13:10 NASB) is not lost even though our feet get dirty. We don't lose our justification in our daily sinning. We remain completely clean before God. But if we trample on that gracious fact of our salvation and redemption we do risk losing our "is completely clean" status before God and will once again--like before we got saved--become subject to the damnation of the enemies of God.
"Peter said to Him, "Never shall You wash my feet!" Jesus answered him, "If I do not wash you, you have no part with Me." (Jhn 13:8 NASB)No. If we stop relying on Christ for the washing of our feet in a cleansing of sin after we have been justified, we show we are losing, or have lost, faith in Christ--the faith that justifies us before the Father in heaven, believing and trusting in the continuing sacrifice and ministry of Christ on our behalf (Hebrews 7:25).
The daily sin itself doesn't rob us the justifying work of Christ on our behalf. That can, and is, forgiven when we have faith. But it is when our faith fails, as evidenced in daily sin now going unconfessed and unrepented of, that is what robs us of the effect of Christ's justifying blood. And it is God that determines when he's had enough trampling of his blood and removes that justification and that person is now beyond hope of recovery.