SaulToPaul 2
Well-known member
Why? Why am I to please give you my interpretation?
Jerry and I probably agree on 90-95% of doctrines, but he will not be satisfied until I am ground into powder and bowing in submission.
I cannot understand that.
Why? Why am I to please give you my interpretation?
Salvation:
1. Blotting out of sins
2. Resurrection
In the Body of Christ we have both of these now. We were crucified with Christ, buried with Christ, forgiven, and risen with Christ. We are saved now. It cannot be lost.
The little flock, that church of Acts 2, had remission of sins. They looked to the 2nd coming for the blotting out of sins and being raised. This is when they are saved. They could not lose salvation, as they were still looking ahead to it. They could lose their position and miss out on being saved at the end.
If everyone understood this, TOL would be a much happier place. Mix it all together and you have arguments, backbiting, accusations, name calling.
Accept that Andersen and O'Hair might be wrong.
The twelve and their followers had no reason to expect the Atonement and their salvation until the Second Coming. It was in full accord with prophecy.
Why? Why am I to please give you my interpretation?
Who says? Who are you? Everyone's parent?
Geez, what a pest of a husband, father, friend, neighbor, employee, client, shopper, driver - all around pain - you must be.
:e4e:
The little flock, that church of Acts 2, had remission of sins. They looked to the 2nd coming for the blotting out of sins and being raised. This is when they are saved. They could not lose salvation, as they were still looking ahead to it. They could lose their position and miss out on being saved at the end.
I've read before that he who has the Son has eternal life.
And if they did not continually abide in the Son?
Jerry and I probably agree on 90-95% of doctrines, but he will not be satisfied until I am ground into powder and bowing in submission.
I cannot understand that.
Either way, practicing 1 John 1:9 today is dispensational error.1. To practice 1 Jn 1:9 for the reason John said to (conditional forgiveness and cleansing) is to put oneself back under a principle of law and is a fall from grace by denying God's provision for the Body, and so is itself sin.
2. To practice 1 Jn 1:9 despite the reason John said to (purportedly, in order to "maintain fellowship," which John did not say and which we of the Body cannot even break) STILL doubts God's provision for the Body AND twists His Word, so is still sin.
I just got off work after severe storms here last night, so couldn't post. Unless I missed it, Jerry, you did not respond to this:
Either way, practicing 1 John 1:9 today is dispensational error.
If I am wrong, show me.
PS
I am all for confessing to our Father when I allow the old man off his leash, but I do not do so for the reasons John gave (forgiveness and cleansing) nor for the reason human tradition gives (to stay in fellowship with our Father).
It isn't worth the effort. I'm not changing my mind.
You aren't changing yours.
We shall find out at the judgment seat which is correct.
I just got off work after severe storms here last night, so couldn't post. Unless I missed it, Jerry, you did not respond to this:
Either way, practicing 1 John 1:9 today is dispensational error.
Paul nowhere told us to "keep our feet clean" or "keep short accounts" by confessing our sins.
If you believe confession maintains that forgiveness and cleansing (and if you are honest and take John at his word, you have to) then not only are you using the same logic of Lordship Salvationists but are preaching salvation conditionally obtained/maintained by the work of confession.
That's a false gospel.
So how about entry into the earthly Kingdom = entry into life? You going to keep ignoring that?
John gives us the proof; he did not say "If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to keep us in fellowship with Him."
The issue isn't fellowship but FORGIVENESS AND CLEANSING, whereas Paul says we're 100% forgiven and clean in Christ -- as righteous before God as the Son is.
Where I take issue is when someone tries to transfer doctrine that is specific to a prior dispensation into the current one, and implies or states that believers today should be practicing it. That's what you're doing with 1 John 1:9, seems to me.
I just got off work after severe storms here last night, so couldn't post. Unless I missed it, Jerry, you did not respond to this:
Either way, practicing 1 John 1:9 today is dispensational error.
If I am wrong, show me.
PS
I am all for confessing to our Father when I allow the old man off his leash, but I do not do so for the reasons John gave (forgiveness and cleansing) nor for the reason human tradition gives (to stay in fellowship with our Father).
Let us look to see to whom 1 Corinthians was addressed:"Unto the church of God which is at Corinth, to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus, called to be saints, with all that in every place call upon the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, both their's and our's" (1 Cor.1:2).Paul's words in 1 Corinthians were addressed not only to those in the church at Corinth but also to "all that in every place call upon the name of Jesus Christ our Lord."
Since all of the Jewish believers in every place called on the name of the Lord Jesus then it cannot be denied that what is said to the saints apply to all the Jewish believers and tis is what Paul told them all:"For as the body is one, and hath many members, and all the members of that one body, being many, are one body: so also is Christ. For by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free; and have been all made to drink into one Spirit" (1 Cor.12:13).Paul certainly believed that all the Jewish believers in every place were members of the Body of Christ. But you do not! Tell me why you think that Paul was in error.
He told us to judge ourselves, and that is exactly the same thing as confessing our sins to ourselves:
Are we of the Body required to confess sins in order for them to be forgiven and ourselves kept clean before our Father, per 1 John? Yes or no.
That's the only issue here worth discussing, in my opinion. Nothing else directly impacts us, as far as I can see.
John told his readers to confess their sins to themselves in order to be forgiven and cleansed?
Are we of the Body required to confess sins in order for them to be forgiven and ourselves kept clean before our Father, per 1 John? Yes or no.
That's the only issue here worth discussing, in my opinion. Nothing else directly impacts us, as far as I can see.
Are we of the Body required to confess sins in order for them to be forgiven and ourselves kept clean before our Father, per 1 John? Yes or no.
Yeah, likewise on my end; but Jerry has been to the Holy Grail, spoken to the Yeti about the Missing Link; that remaining 5-10%, lol