You really don't understand that it isn't his dirty feet that would cause 'completely clean' but dirty footed Peter to have no part of Jesus, but rather Peter's refusal to get his dirty feet washed that would cause that? You 'hand-on-the-Bible' honestly can't see that?
Peter's refusal to have Jesus do what, Jethro? Haven't you been saying from the beginning that it's
his refusal to have his daily sins removed? A
believer can refuse to have daily sins removed,
yet still have faith in Christ. This is a fact you keep ignoring. People sin, even believers, and this is what Jesus is addressing,
not lack of faith of the believer, but the sin of the believer.
If a believer refuses to repent, he can still remain a believer, but lose justification. This is what Jesus is saying. It couldn't be more clear. Jesus is saying that believers, if they don't get their daily sins removed, will lose justification. This is a possibility and what Jesus is addressing. Jesus is not addressing the faith of Peter at all, that's being taken for granted. "If I do not remove your
(believer) daily sins, you
(believer) will not remain justified". This is what the verse says and what you have to honestly deal with, instead of slipping in the word "faith" and saying "see?"
His "refusal" is nowhere called a "lack of faith"...Nowhere. Jesus didn't address Peter's faith...Anywhere. You are adding your own "doctrine" to the text.
If you disagree, please point me to the verse that mentions faith. This is what you have to do to prove your point, that Jesus was referring to faith. I have asked for this proof before and have been ignored. Will you ignore the actual words of the text and go off on another tangent, or simply show where Jesus mentions faith, in these verses?
Jesus said dirty footed Peter was completely clean (John 13:10) even though he had dirty feet. Do you disagree with that?
Nope, but, as I have been saying from the beginning without changing the meanings of words, I disagree that "completely clean" here means "justified forever". If you believe that, you have set up a contradiction.
Dirty feet (keeping daily sins) means loss of justification (having no part with Jesus).
Then you turn around and have Jesus contradicting Himself in the next breath.
Dirty feet (keeping daily sins) "has no effect on" justification (completely clean). Which you reiterate here:
That shows you right there that his dirty feet had no effect on his completely clean status.--completely contrary to your doctrine.
LOL...completely contrary to my doctrine and common sense. Keeping daily sin
"has no effect" on justification, yet in the verse above, keeping daily sin makes a
believer have "no part with" Jesus,
lose justification. You can clear up this quagmire by simply showing how a
believer can refuse to repent and have sins forgiven and still remain justified, while at the same time losing justification. Pretty simple...
He loses his completely clean status only if he refuses to submit to having his feet washed. You really can't see that? Honest?
OK. A
believer says "I refuse to have Jesus wash my feet. I refuse to allow Him to remove the stain of my daily sins".
1) Does this
believer "have no part with" Jesus (lose justification)?
2) Is this
believer "completely clean" (remaining justified)?
Here are the verses in question:
[Jesus] got up from supper, and laid aside His garments; and taking a towel, He girded Himself. Then He poured water into the basin, and began to wash the disciples' feet and to wipe them with the towel with which He was girded. So He came to Simon Peter. He said to Him, "Lord, do You wash my feet?" Jesus answered and said to him, "What I do you do not realize now, but you will understand hereafter." 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." Simon Peter said to Him, "Lord, then wash not only my feet, but also my hands and my head." Jesus said to him, "He who has bathed needs only to wash his feet, but is completely clean; and you are clean, but not all of you."For He knew the one who was betraying Him; for this reason He said, "Not all of you are clean." (Jhn 13:4-11 NASB)
There is one word curiously missing from these verses...and the ones before...and the ones after...Hummm...What could that word be? Oh, I got it...
faith...Because Jesus isn't teaching about faith here, but about
how faithful believers should be coming to Him for removal of sin or risk losing their justification.