Derf
Well-known member
You think the Jews are saved by the law, since James talked about grace being added to the law, right?Why do you think that I think that? Because I don't.
You think the Jews are saved by the law, since James talked about grace being added to the law, right?Why do you think that I think that? Because I don't.
You think the Jews are saved by the law, since James talked about grace being added to the law, right?
Why is that in conflict with what I said you were saying? James was writing to Jews, according to you. James was writing to those following the "kingdom gospel", according to you. James was not writing in the past with respect to the kingdom gospel Jews, since he was a kingdom gospel Jew, according to you. So James wrote that they could be saved by keeping the law, according to the post I'm currently responding to.NO.
The Gospel of the Kingdom and the plot twist.
So if you can commit to that, I'll read it, I promise. I mean generally, especially if two or more MAD's here can make that commitment, I'll read it. You have that commitment from me Idolater.theologyonline.com
The problem I've noticed is that people don't catch the tense of what we say, and then get confused when we say what we say.
The Bible teaches that the Jews WERE, past tense, saved by keeping the law, in that they USED TO HAVE TO to keep the law their entire life ("endure to the end") to achieve salvation, and that this dispensation of law continued into the period AFTER God cut off Israel, and turned to the Gentiles, at the conversion of Paul on the road to Damascus, but that method was eventually, for lack of a better word, "turned off", so that both dispensations existed simultaneously, the covenant of law, where one achieves salvation (the salvation of the Jews being the return of Christ to establish His Kingdom) by keeping the law, which includes faith in God, and the dispensation of Grace, where one is saved unto eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord by faith alone, and immediately, no works required on our part, because God did all the work.
Jews that are saved today are saved under the dispensation of the grace of God.
Jews that were saved after Paul's conversion, who were ministered to by the Twelve and the church in Israel, were saved under the New Covenant.
That's why you see Paul taking offerings to help out the church in Jerusalem, because they still fully expected Christ to return, which is literally the salvation of the nation of Israel!
Why is that in conflict with what I said you were saying?
You think the Jews are saved by the law,
The Bible teaches that the Jews WERE, past tense, saved by keeping the law
So why, during the time of James, was James pushing a gospel that relied on the law to save,
because they still fully expected Christ to return, which is literally the salvation of the nation of Israel!
when the author of Hebrews says the law can't save?
I typed that wrong, or my phone corrected it wrong. My intent was to keep the conversation about the past, to deal with what you were saying.You're still missing it.
You said:
So when you said that grace added to law equals law, aren't you saying the Jews of James' time were saved by the law?I corrected you:
You keep speaking in present tense.
I'm talking in past tense.
How is that so hard to understand?
Answered:
So now...
Because the law alone cannot save. It requires the under-girding of grace, as Paul states. This is something that the unbelieving Jews did not (or perhaps refused to) understand (and is what Romans 9-11 is all about!).
In the Old Testament, without grace, God would have sent anyone who broke His laws to hell.
But because God was looking forwards to the cross, He implemented sacrifices as a way to "get back on track" for His creation, since He knew, as Paul stated, that men are simply unable to keep the law perfectly.
How about after One, by grace, furnishes a Law?No, that's how it works.
The moment you add law to grace, it becomes law.
After the Lord appears to Him? (v1)Read Genesis 15 for me, please.
What did Abraham do in that chapter, regarding the covenant he made with God?
I don't know what you are referring to.Second time I've asked you.
Use the "+Quote" button to respond to posts, or be more careful when you highlight portions that you want to quote. You're quoting the end of the link of the verse that I posted, and it does this.
Agreed, but only after hearing from the Lord and seeing visions."Abraham believed God, and it was accounted to him for righteousness" is as plain as can be.
Not at all, but it was his actions that proved Abe's faithfulness.You are rejecting it.
I don't agree with your POV that belief doesn't breed action.Irrelevant.
Submission to God, and all that entails, is necessary for salvation.We're talking about what is necessary to be saved.
Nah..."Isn't it nice that God gives us chances to illustrate our own faith/belief ?"...was just a thought.Rabbit trail.
Apart from the works of the Law.Stop putting words in my mouth, and stop adding to the scriptures.
We are saved by faith apart from works. PERIOD.
Thanks be to God, that circumcision, tithing, fast keeping sabbath keeping, and dietary rules now have no bearing on salvation.But to him who does not work but believes on Him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is accounted for righteousness, just as David also describes the blessedness of the man to whom God imputes righteousness apart from works:
“Blessed are those whose lawless deeds are forgiven, And whose sins are covered;
Blessed is the man to whom the Lord shall not impute sin.” - Romans 4:5-8 http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Romans4:5-8&version=NKJV
Not really.Ripping what I said out of context.
1) Saying it doesn't make it so.1) Saying it doesn't make it so
2) How would you know? How many staunch athiests have you seen on their deathbeds who then pass away?
3) Of course you have to deny that it happens, because it runs counter to your entire worldview. If it were to happen, your entire worldview would be upended, because you believe that works must accompany faith for a person to get saved!
Bob Enyart's father acccepted Christ just before he died. Prior to that, he rejected God.
I'm not just making up the example. It does, in fact, happen.
But you have to reject reality, because your commitment is to your beliefs, rather than truth.
No.You're the one doing the demonizing! Can't you see that?!
The day of judgement has yet to occur.In the example I gave above, the former atheist had ZERO WORKS OF ANY KIND, yet he still went to Heaven, because FAITH IN GOD is what is needed to be saved, not works.
You "did something" when you listened to the gospel message.THAT'S WHAT GRACE IS!!!!
You are trying to gatekeep heaven, of all things, by requiring that people "do" something!
You are no better than the men from James!
The point is that thousands of years after the fact, we can see that Abram was called righteous for his belief.Fallen angels cannot be saved. They will be cast into the lake of fire at the end of this age.
It's not a matter of "if they repent."
You said it yourself. They won't submit to God. Ever. Their fate (to borrow a Greek term) is sealed.
This is a topic for a different thread however, and your position is actually anti-biblical:
For indeed He does not give aid to angels, but He does give aid to the seed of Abraham. Therefore, in all things He had to be made like His brethren, that He might be a merciful and faithful High Priest in things pertaining to God, to make propitiation for the sins of the people. - Hebrews 2:16-17 http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Hebrews2:16-17&version=NKJV
Either cede the point, or take it to another thread.
So when you said that grace added to law equals law, aren't you saying the Jews of James' time were saved by the law?
Judas Iscariot was with Jesus over 3 years and didn't believe.How could Abe not believe after seeing and speaking with the Lord and seeing the visions?
Judas truly was a fool, wasn't he.Judas Iscariot was with Jesus over 3 years and didn't believe.
(Mark 3:19) And Judas Iscariot, which also betrayed him:
The believing Jews were from the start "saved" by grace.The believing Jews of James' day (post Paul) were saved by grace, but their salvation was not achieved.
Their salvation is the return of Christ, and the establishment of His Kingdom.
Our salvation is not achieved yet either:The believing Jews of James' day (post Paul) were saved by grace, but their salvation was not achieved.
Their salvation is the return of Christ, and the establishment of His Kingdom.
Our salvation is not achieved yet either:
1 Thessalonians 5:8 KJV — But let us, who are of the day, be sober, putting on the breastplate of faith and love; and for an helmet, the hope of salvation.
1 Corinthians 15:19 KJV — If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable.
Galatians 5:5 KJV — For we through the Spirit wait for the hope of righteousness by faith.
Ephesians 4:4 KJV — There is one body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your calling;
Colossians 1:23 KJV — If ye continue in the faith grounded and settled, and be not moved away from the hope of the gospel, which ye have heard, and which was preached to every creature which is under heaven; whereof I Paul am made a minister;
Titus 1:2 KJV — In hope of eternal life, which God, that cannot lie, promised before the world began;
1 Peter 3:15 KJV — But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts: and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear:
Romans 8:24 KJV — For we are saved by hope: but hope that is seen is not hope: for what a man seeth, why doth he yet hope for?
If we already see our salvation, then hope isn't necessary. But Paul repeatedly says (and Peter agrees) that we have hope of our salvation.
The believing Jews were from the start "saved" by grace.
Don't you consider the fact that Jesus even came to be "by grace"?
Jesus gracefully took all our past sins on Himself.
Jesus, by grace, endured the sufferings and death we all deserved.
Jesus gracefully provided all we require to live as He lived.
I feel you err in thinking one cannot hope for the impossible.You are imposing a modern day definition onto the Scriptural word 'hope'.
hope: to desire without any basis for expecting fulfillment.
That is not the meaning used anywhere in the NT.
The word hope in NT Greek is 'elpis'
ἐλπίς
elpis
el-pece'
Fromἔλπω elpō which is a primary word (to anticipate, usually with pleasure); expectation (abstract or concrete) or confidence: - faith, hope.
Total KJV occurrences: 54
My hope(confident expectation) is based on GOD's certain promises to me in Scripture.
My hope is my trust in what GOD has said.
From Gen 6:8, and Noah..."But Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord."The start of what?
Does that overshadow the fact that by grace He came to us humans?Jesus was circumcised.
Yes, gracefully He did.Yes, that's part of grace, but Jesus came for the lost sheep of the House of Israel.
It is only irrelevant to those without knowledge of the true over arching grace of God.Irrelevant.
It is my Gentile salvation tooThe salvation of the Jews was the return of Christ, and the ushering in of His Kingdom.
Paul did indeed reveal what had happened at the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ most adequately.The Body of Christ was a mystery kept secret from the foundation of the world, and was not revealed until Saul's conversion.
You don't "expect" something that has already come to pass. If I've already had my breakfast, I'm not in some kind of expectation that I will get to have breakfast today. I don't need to have "confidence" that breakfast will happen when it has already happened. "Promises" are about something that hasn't yet occurred. We don't go around trusting in "promises" when the thing that was promised is already fulfilled.You are imposing a modern day definition onto the Scriptural word 'hope'.
hope: to desire without any basis for expecting fulfillment.
That is not the meaning used anywhere in the NT.
The word hope in NT Greek is 'elpis'
ἐλπίς
elpis
el-pece'
Fromἔλπω elpō which is a primary word (to anticipate, usually with pleasure); expectation (abstract or concrete) or confidence: - faith, hope.
Total KJV occurrences: 54
My hope(confident expectation) is based on GOD's certain promises to me in Scripture.
My hope is my trust in what GOD has said.
You don't "expect" something that has already come to pass. If I've already had my breakfast, I'm not in some kind of expectation that I will get to have breakfast today. I don't need to have "confidence" that breakfast will happen when it has already happened. "Promises" are about something that hasn't yet occurred. We don't go around trusting in "promises" when the thing that was promised is already fulfilled.
Your hope is that what God said will come true. You trust that He is able to deliver on His promises. If what God has promised has already come to pass, then we are all living in Heaven with Jesus in bodily form. I think you can see that's not true.
It seems to me that you are arguing with someone other than me.You don't "expect" something that has already come to pass. If I've already had my breakfast, I'm not in some kind of expectation that I will get to have breakfast today. I don't need to have "confidence" that breakfast will happen when it has already happened. "Promises" are about something that hasn't yet occurred. We don't go around trusting in "promises" when the thing that was promised is already fulfilled.
Your hope is that what God said will come true. You trust that He is able to deliver on His promises. If what God has promised has already come to pass, then we are all living in Heaven with Jesus in bodily form. I think you can see that's not true.
Exactly! That was my point.The idea is that the promises God makes are as good as fulfilled.
"Are saved" from what?Or are you saying that God can't deliver on His promises when He promises something?
Our hope is in Him. We fully expect that we are saved when we place our trust in Him.
But the fulfillment isn't fulfilled yet. It's still a promise, and we still hope it will be fulfilled, according to Paul.The fact is that He promised to save us if we placed our trust in Him, and He fulfilled that promise when we did.
again ?Manifest that confession.
so you keep "all the law" or do you pick and choose the ones you want to keepJesus, (Matt 22:40)
but you like keeping some of the law for boasting purposes , but not all of the lawI agree, though you have changed the subject.
Judged at the time of deathThat verse doesn't prove what you say.
no , nor can youCan't you?
and David had to keep the lawAgreed.
no but I will let JR answerGod did, as grace was around since Noah, but Law didn't come around until Moses.
Gen 17:10 This is my covenant, which you shall keep, between me and you and your offspring after you: Every male among you shall be circumcised.Yes, in spite of there being no Law of Moses.
what verse in acts 2 did away with the law as in specifically says the law was done away with ,Are you saying that salvation without the Law did NOT happen when Jesus was raised from the dead?
Yikes, the 3000 converts baptized into Christ on the day of Pentecost will be surprised.
BTW it was an audience of almost all Jews so the abolishing of the law would have been a huge dealI don't think they were still depending on any Law for their salvation.
you're a works salvation kinda guy , not made righteous by faith aloneAgreed, it is an action and not a work of the Law of Moses.
Neither is the acceptance of the gift of repentance from sin.
Or baptism in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of past sins.
Or receiving the gift of the Holy Ghost.
Thanks be to God !
no.You are so correct about labeling determining nothing.
Labeling someone as faithful is a loot point.
Their actions will determine their faithfulness.
(Romans 7:15 [MKJV]) For that which I do, I know not. For what I desire, that I do not do; but what I hate, that I do.Amen to that.
Belief doesn't leave room for disobedience or doubt.
so do you have to keep the whole law or just those 5 laws to stay saved ?The law of Christ, or, the law of liberty, is to love God with all your heart, strength, soul, and mind, and to love your neighbor as you love yourself.
Doing that will encompass forgoing adultery, murder, and the rest of the unrighteous acts Paul lists in Gal 5 and Eph 5.
And the ones he didn't spell out, like drug abuse or child molesting.
sons don't get kicked out of the family for disobedienceSons don't disobey God their Father.
I love Jesus , Romans 8:15He is the "Boss".
You do love Him...right?
God wrote it downHow do you know Abe' was faithful?
in the 1st covenant he believedAre not his faithful actions written of?
demons don't have faithI think you got the order mixed up, plus the definition of the present day covenant we have today.
"Faith alone" is a misnomer.
The devils believe.
the moment people die their eternal fate is sealed as faith will no longer be possible because they will know there is a GodI hope for that day too.
you missed the Plot changeBe a follower of those who follow Christ in order to be found in the book of life on the day of judgement.
Israel was cut off when Paul received his dispensationUnbelieving Israel was cut off.
do I need to add these to the list of Laws hoping must keep to stay saved ?What works do you refer to?
Helping the old lady across the street?
Stealing from the blind?
"I have seen plenty of men and women turn from their conversion, and from their love of Christ."Yes, I did...?
Yes, He sees the pure hearts of the converted, but also the black hearts of the traitors.