Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Fri May 06, 2022 3:07 pm
I wrote: "Personally, I am pretty profoundly suspicious of those -- it is a Protestant conceit in the main, isn't it? -- that salvation occurs in one sole moment and, according to the definition, cannot be lost. I simply do not buy it."
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu May 05, 2022 10:14 pm
Let's explore that: why not? What makes that seem "suspicious" to you?
The notion is, of course, central to Christianity and not just Protestantism.
I would say that. But you just excluded the Catholics, among others, if you say that.
Protestants put all their emphasis on the saving moment.
They don't, actually. They only emphasize the first moment as the
doorway to salvation; but none of them theologically argue that it is the totality of the
experiencing of salvation. And that's a good analogy: a doorway "gets you into" something; but to live and grow, you need a whole house in which to live afterward. That's more typical of the Protestant view.
But the only important question is, "What is the
Biblical view?"
Once saved, always saved. They have their logical means of explaining why they see it that way (related to Christ's sacrifice at Cavalry) and thus it is presented rationally.
Both rationally and Biblically.
What I think is suspicious, and what I cannot go along with, has to do with the way I think of sovereignty.
"Sovereignty" is a word with different meanings to different theologies. What you're talking about is Calvinism, which uses the word to argue that God is a Deterministic and autocratic entity. But their view is a minority position, and one not demonstrable based on Scripture. Instead, they do it as a kind of simple-minded deduction, as in "If God is all powerful, He must also have predetermined everything." But I hope you can see through their error...it's terribly obvious.
So again I turn back to the core question: What is salvation?
You mean, "sovereignty."
On "salvation," there is much more agreement. Even the Calvinists will tell you it's "...by grace, through faith in the Lord Jesus Christ." (Ephesians 2:8-9)
...it is not proper that a free man see himself as having been granted freedom from some other source or authority.
You're mistaking what "free" means.
It does not mean "self-created," obviously. It also cannot mean "self-sustained," or "capable of infinite options," obviously. No human being, even empirically, is any of those things. Nobody made himself, nobody sustains his own life, independent of food, clothing and oxygen, and nobody is capable of doing absolutely everything he might want or imagine. It would be silly to suppose any of those meanings, obviously.
What "free" means is "free to choose among available life options," and particularly, "free to choose one's own moral course of life and destiny." And you are free to do that. That's for sure.
A free man must refer to himself and decide for himself and inside himself Am I correctly oriented? Am I serving myself and the people around me correctly and well enough? Or am I deceiving myself about who I am and what my effect is?
That is precisely right. But that is exactly what I am encouraging you to do.
These are internal decisions and they can only be decided by a competent, free individual.
Internal? They may be made in the "internal workings" of a man, but they don't stay there. They issue in attitudes, actions, relationships and consequences. And a free man is one who chooses and then takes the consequences of his own choices -- he is not somebody who is above all consequences.
Salvation is much better presented as something you must constantly work for.
Let's see if that's true. The Bible says it's not, but let's test that theory anyway.
How much work must a man do in order to please God? We need to know that, because otherwise, we cannot possibly say that your way is "much better," than anything.
Who gives a damn really if someone shouts "I've been saved"'?
If that's what salvation was, then nobody needs care.
And I believe that the notion of 'partnership with a God' and not 'subservience to a God' is a more powerful position to take and to have.
Have you asked God if He regards you as an appropriate "partner"? Do you think a righteous God should?
If you do, you're a very confident person, or else you have an exceedingly low estimation of the character of God.
This is the old problem of intellectual pride. It is what I said before: man compares himself to other men, and preens himself on his own intellectual accuity. He impresses himself, thereby, so he thinks he must impress God. And his pride is wounded when anybody points out to him that the achievement of finding himself "better than other men" is paltry and unrealistic, and that he has failed to grasp exactly how much above him, both in intellect and in righteousness, the Supreme God of the universe actually is.
He's like a man trying to swim the Pacific, proud of himself when he considers that so many others drowned in the first two miles, and that he has swum for thirty more. But he drowns anyway: and his progress, viewed from space, is not even distinguishable from the poor paddlers who barely made it off the shore. He simply fails to consider that the gap he is proposing to swim is far too great for even the greatest person.
But the truth is quite obvious: the best of us is nowhere near the wisdom and righteousness of God. And if we took God seriously for five minutes, we'd know it. We'd see that there can be no other realization.