John writes, My little children ( because they were saved under his ministry and were his spiritual children), these things write I unto you, that ye sin not. And if any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous.
This brings us to a very sensitive subject in the church world. Instead of staying with what the Bible says, some groups divide into thelogical circles or cliques that accept certain concepts whether they are scriptural or not.
It seems that the Church world as a whole is divided into two groups: Calvanists and Arinians.
The Calvanists preached that you could not repent unless God gave you a repentiing heart; that you were totally incapable of doing anything yourself.
Charles Finney preached that if God asked you to do something you couldn't do, then He would be an unjust God, but God is not unjust, and when He said, Believe, He meant you can believe. ( the Calvanists, however, felt you could not believe unless God gave you a believing heart).
Today, there are not too many old school Calvanists, their doctrines have been watered down, but now there are new school Calvanists. New school Callvanism is basically the doctrine of Eternal security, or once saved always saved.
I believe in Eternal security as long as you stay in Christ. He is able to keep you secure. But just because you are a son of God does not mean you are a free moral agent. You still have a will of your own, and you can choose to stay in Christ or forsake Christ altogether.
The ASrminian side is not correct, either. They think that when you commmit the smallest sin you are immediately and need to be saved all over again.
Arminians have the idea that God is like a fellow with a flyswatter, just waiting for a fly to lighyt so He can swat it. They think God is waiting for His children to make just one mistake, and when you do, He is going to swat them. If this were true, there are some people who have been saved 2000 or 3000 times a day.
Then there arew those who believe that God expects us to live above sin. They believe in going on to perfection. I do too, but I haven't arrived there yet. If we already perfect, we would not have anything to go on to.
This is how I look at it: After reading Phil. 3:13: Brethern, I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto things which are before.
May God bless, Golfjack
This brings us to a very sensitive subject in the church world. Instead of staying with what the Bible says, some groups divide into thelogical circles or cliques that accept certain concepts whether they are scriptural or not.
It seems that the Church world as a whole is divided into two groups: Calvanists and Arinians.
The Calvanists preached that you could not repent unless God gave you a repentiing heart; that you were totally incapable of doing anything yourself.
Charles Finney preached that if God asked you to do something you couldn't do, then He would be an unjust God, but God is not unjust, and when He said, Believe, He meant you can believe. ( the Calvanists, however, felt you could not believe unless God gave you a believing heart).
Today, there are not too many old school Calvanists, their doctrines have been watered down, but now there are new school Calvanists. New school Callvanism is basically the doctrine of Eternal security, or once saved always saved.
I believe in Eternal security as long as you stay in Christ. He is able to keep you secure. But just because you are a son of God does not mean you are a free moral agent. You still have a will of your own, and you can choose to stay in Christ or forsake Christ altogether.
The ASrminian side is not correct, either. They think that when you commmit the smallest sin you are immediately and need to be saved all over again.
Arminians have the idea that God is like a fellow with a flyswatter, just waiting for a fly to lighyt so He can swat it. They think God is waiting for His children to make just one mistake, and when you do, He is going to swat them. If this were true, there are some people who have been saved 2000 or 3000 times a day.
Then there arew those who believe that God expects us to live above sin. They believe in going on to perfection. I do too, but I haven't arrived there yet. If we already perfect, we would not have anything to go on to.
This is how I look at it: After reading Phil. 3:13: Brethern, I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto things which are before.
May God bless, Golfjack