But, Deborah, Jesus said that believing is indeed a work. And a work that God requires:
28 Then they asked him, “What must we do to do the works God requires?”
29 Jesus answered, “The work of God is this: to believe in the one he has sent.”
(John 6:28-29 NIV)
Many rationalize it away, because it's hard for people, taught by the church that any and all work is damnable, to accept believing as being a 'work'. The teaching in the church these days interprets Paul's 'works'--the works that can't justify--as any and all works, even the 'work' of believing. So, if you take even the slightest credit for accepting the gospel you are condemned as one who is trusting in his own work for salvation. But the Bible plainly says believing is a 'work' God requires. And the 'work' that Paul CONTRASTS with all other work, not included in the works that can't justify a person.
I've been saying that this 'knowing' is the very power of faith at work in a person's heart. God sends the Spirit into the earth to convince people of what they otherwise have no capacity whatsoever to know is true. Faith is what the Spirit gives the person whom God is calling to salvation, so they can know for sure the truth of what God wants them to trust in and be saved by.
"Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see." (Hebrews 11:1 NIV)
Deborah, how can a person trust in Christ if they do not first receive this empowerment of faith, by the voice of the Holy Spirit, to know the gospel is true in the first place? Salvation then occurs when you place your trust in that which you now know to be true through the power of faith. But the church can't accept this because they think that any and all experiences of faith can only occur to saved people. But simply knowing the gospel is true (through the power of faith) does not save anybody. Trusting in that which you know to be true by the power of faith, is what saves a person.
Most people will reject the voice of the Spirit instilling faith in their hearts to know the gospel is true, calling them to trust in it and be saved, and so they are lost. So it is not simply knowing the gospel is true that saves. It is 'acting' on that which you now know to be true that saves, and what Jesus calls the 'work' of believing. It's the difference between simply being called (many are called), and being chosen because you believe in what God is calling you to (few are chosen)
How is surrendering your will not in itself an act of your will to do so?
Just because it can't happen without God's gracious influence and persuasion, does that make it no longer an act of your will? This is the thing about 'predetermined election' that I find ridiculous. A changed will is still the will of that person. But predestination is being taught here as meaning 'it wasn't your choice, God did it for you, and God did it for you so it wouldn't be work that you can take credit for, for that would be the works Paul says can't save a person'. Which is why I ask, "please show me in the Bible where the work of believing is one of the works that Paul says can not justify a person."
See how this fundamental premise--a flawed premise--gives strength to the 'predestined election' argument so popular in the church these days? Expose the flawed premise and that argument can't stand any longer.
I wish Chopper would read this, and read it with an open receptive heart. I don't see how he could argue with the point I'm making about 'believing' somehow being a work that is included in the works that Paul says count nothing toward justification. That's exactly contrary to what Paul says DOES justify a person.
Sorry Jethro, I couldn't get right back to answer you.
First thing I noticed was that the NIV, changes the Greek text. In the Greek, it does not say "the works that God requires".
It's says, "the works of God". So does Young's Literal Translation. So I looked in my old 1974 NIV, it says, "the work of God".
28 Then they asked him, “What must we do to do the works of God?”
29 Jesus answered, “The work of God is this: to believe in the one he has sent.”
30 So they asked him, “What sign then will you give that we may see it and believe you? What will you do?
(John 6:28-30 NIV)
So they want to know what they must do to be able to do the works that God does.
He turns that around on them and tells them that the work of God, is to believe in the one He has sent.
Now they get it, because they say, What work are you going to do, so that we may see and believe? "What will you do?"
So there was no work for them to do, just believe in Him and His work.
Eph 2:8 For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:
I have looked at this scripture every way I know how. What is the gift?
I finally realized it doesn't matter, we all agree that salvation is a gift. If salvation is a gift, than no part cannot be a gift.
If I baked you a cake as a gift but you have to provide the icing and put the icing on, is that cake still a gift, or is it partly of yourself?
You even said that God gives us that faith. In fact, I think at one point you said that faith was a gift.
Faith is believing, is trusting in something. I
have faith that the sun will rise over the mountains in the morning. I
believe that the sun will rise over the mountains in the morning. I
trust that the sun will rise.....
I don't have to work at believing something I just do, for different reasons.
I surely didn't work to believe in Jesus. He did all the work, I just received the blessings of His work.
You have mentioned people who say they are born again (saved). But they keep living their old lifestyle and think it's OK.
I wonder, are they recognizing Jesus as their Savior, the man that died for them, the man with the holes in His hands. But they are not recognizing the risen Lord. That He is their Lord, their Master. They need to open their other eye and see the Lord.
But I have confidence in the Holy Spirit and His power, that if they are saved (justified in Christ) then they are also sanctified in Christ, and He will accomplish the work He began in them.
I believe that the only way that cannot happen, is if they were not saved to begin with or they just totally reject Him. And when I say totally, I mean that they will cut off their own hand to get free of Him and they will never regret their decision.
But as long as there is a smoldering flax, the Holy Spirit will be ready to bring it to a burning flame. There's a scripture about that but I don't remember where it is.