Is MAD ethics and or morals void? Is MAD ethics even Christian?

Right Divider

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It might not be in scripture, but @Clete's point is a valid one--that unless we are somehow forced to love Him for eternity, or our free will is somehow curtailed, people who once believed in Christ (including being subject to His mandates in eternity), might decide they no longer need Him or want Him. And if they do--at any time in eternity--they should be able to do so.
So you think that eternal life is "maybe eternal life"? Got it.

1Thess 4:17 (AKJV/PCE)​
(4:17) Then we which are alive [and] remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord.

Sounds permanent to me.

Don't bother replying, you're on ignore and I just peeped in and confirmed my correct judgment.
 

Derf

Well-known member
So you think that eternal life is "maybe eternal life"? Got it.

1Thess 4:17 (AKJV/PCE)​
(4:17) Then we which are alive [and] remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord.

Sounds permanent to me.
And permanently "in the air", too. So, according to your interpretation, we will forever be with the Lord in the way that we met Him, so we'll be floating there forever.
Don't bother replying, you're on ignore and I just peeped in and confirmed my correct judgment.
Thank you!!
 

way 2 go

Well-known member
I reject Calvinism, but the truth is that we do not know who is saved and who is not. So it's entirely possible that some people that we think are saved... are not.
which is why I posted this ,


Jesus on the other hand says : depart from me I never knew you

(Matthew 7:22-23) [22] Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works? [23] And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity.

God knows and we do not , no matter how good the act .

You said that the "choice" comes on the "day of redemption"... which has NOT yet come. So you have NO counter examples whatsoever and no scriptural support of this "choice event".

I cannot find this "choice" in the scripture. I do see judgments. One for believers and one for the rest.

I don't see the verse where it says the chosen and faithful will have an opportunity to choose death on judgement day


(Revelation of John 20:6) Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection: on such the second death hath no power, but they shall be priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with him a thousand years
 

Nick M

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I would say his point is that heaven is not a prison. He might boot people out later, like a large percentage of angels as mentioned in the scriptures.
 

Derf

Well-known member
which is why I posted this ,


Jesus on the other hand says : depart from me I never knew you

(Matthew 7:22-23) [22] Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works? [23] And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity.

God knows and we do not , no matter how good the act .
Are you saying we don't know if we will be rejected and told to depart from Him? or that we don't know whether others will? The former seems to fit the scenario of the passage, where they thought they would be accepted. Same for the pharisees, scribes, lawyers, priests, etc., that Jesus spoke to. They no doubt, assuming they believed in resurrection, thought they would be resurrected to heavenly bliss.
I don't see the verse where it says the chosen and faithful will have an opportunity to choose death on judgement day
Interestingly, neither do the wicked have an opportunity to choose death on resurrection day.
 

way 2 go

Well-known member
I would say his point is that heaven is not a prison. He might boot people out later, like a large percentage of angels as mentioned in the scriptures.
no.

no more death for the faithful
everlasting life for the faithful

Dan 12:2 And many of those who sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt.

Mat 25:46 And these will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life."

Rev 21:4 And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away

John 3:16: "For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life."

you have no chapter and verse just hypothetical
 

way 2 go

Well-known member
Are you saying we don't know if we will be rejected and told to depart from Him? or that we don't know whether others will? The former seems to fit the scenario of the passage, where they thought they would be accepted. Same for the pharisees, scribes, lawyers, priests, etc., that Jesus spoke to. They no doubt, assuming they believed in resurrection, thought they would be resurrected to heavenly bliss.
Jesus is saying depart from me to sinners

(Matthew 7:22-23) [22] Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works? [23] And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity.

there is no verse saying a saved person will choose eternal damnation on judgement day


Saul when he was killing Christians believed he was doing the Lords work Acts 26:9-11
then
when Saul was saved he became Paul and had the holy Spirit that assured him of his salvation Ephesians 1:13-14

Romans 8:16 The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God

It's not just intellectual belief

Romans 8:38-39 [38] For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, [39] Nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.


Interestingly, neither do the wicked have an opportunity to choose death on resurrection day.
no they already chose before they died
 

Clete

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Non-sequitur
Saying it doesn't make it so.

Is Paul wrong when he calls us believers Christ's body?
It's a metaphor. We are members of body of believers called "the Body of Christ". We are not literally Jesus' body parts.

Nobody said that.
Your question implied it (at least potentially so). We do not add anything to God, nor is God diminished by our absence. God, by His very nature, cannot be added to or taken from in the sense your question implies.

Duh... Paul does that quite a lot. That does not change what the metaphor means.
Then my point stands.

That is irrelevant.
Quite the contrary. It is THE point!

Do you think that Satan is a believer in Christ? i.e., trusts in Christ for eternal life?
That was precisely the point of bringing Satan up, RD! You and Way 2 Go are the ones couching this in terms of "believer" and "unbeliever". The point of bringing up Satan was precisely about pointing out that there is more than one way such terms are used.

I know that you are personally aware of what I'm about to say here but for the sake of thoroughness...

The words "believer" and "unbeliever" are being treated as if they describe a single, simple state. They do not. The sort of "belief" we are talking about here implies love, trust, submission, and fellowship. Or to put it into a single word, we are talking about allegiance to God. Satan knows that God exists but it this allegiance that is missing.

I am saying that if, over the course of a person's life, one's love for God is turned into hatred and their allegiance shifts in favor of evil rather than good then, when that person finds themself standing before God then their allegiance toward God may be renewed and it may not be. God CANNOT force allegiance. Not because He is weak but because doing so is a contradiction.

You know very well what I mean when I say "believer" and Satan is clearly not in that group.
What I know or don't know isn't the point. The disagreement on this issue has stemmed almost entirely from mischaracterizations of the position, large chucks of which have sprouted from the misuse of terms. In such situations, being explicit is valuable. Thus, the point was to force clarity.

That is also irrelevant.
I cannot possibly be irrelevant, RD. It is precisely the whole point!

You've said it before and so have I, it's NOT our continuing behavior that determines our eternal destiny. ONCE we TRUST IN CHRIST, we are SAVED. It's non-revoke-able.
It is the seal of the Holy Spirit that is non-revokeable. WHY? Paul tells us why. It is because that seal was put in place as an earnest payment. God would have to forfeit Himself if the transaction is not completed. Paul says explicitly that we are sealed unto the day of redemption. Why does he say that? He doesn't say that we are sealed for eternity, he says we are sealed unto the day of redemption.

When we trust in Christ, that is not forced upon us. That is the choice that we make... NOW.
True!

You are trying to force "unto" to mean "until".
That is precisely what it does mean except that it's more than merely a point in time, it is a specific event and we will be delivered safely to that event with our salvation fully intact.

I assumed that Bob must have taught you this idea.
If you can refute it, I'll hear it gladly!

Based on reading the scripture, #4 seems like the right one.
Well why stop with that single sentence?! Make the argument!

Again, where in the scripture does this idea come from? The Bible seems to give assurance of eternal life the moment that a person trusts in Christ for their salvation.
And rightly so!

You understand that I am not suggesting that it would be common place for people to reject their salvation at the day of redemption. I would expect that the overwhelmingly vast majority will respond to being in God's presence with profound humility and with ineffable grief over the evil they allowed to persist in their lives and with the deepest gratitude for the eternal life they have been given in spite of that evil. The exceptions would serve only to prove the rule, not negate it.

I reject Calvinism, but the truth is that we do not know who is saved and who is not. So it's entirely possible that some people that we think are saved... are not.
Of course!

I dispute your "millions of counter examples"

You said that the "choice" comes on the "day of redemption"... which has NOT yet come. So you have NO counter examples whatsoever and no scriptural support of this "choice event".

I cannot find this "choice" in the scripture. I do see judgments. One for believers and one for the rest.
By "counter examples" I had in mind all the people you just admitted exist. Those that we think are saved but are not actually saved. I also had in mind people such as Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, Nancy Pelosi, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Pete Buttigieg, all of whom believe themselves to be Christians and who may well have had a saving faith in Christ at some point in their lives but who now hate everything good and love everything evil.

Hillary Clinton identifies as a Methodist. Today, she is as evil a person as can exist on Earth and has been for decades, but do you know for a fact that she never made a profession of faith when she was a young woman? I don't!

For the sake of argument, let's suppose that she did. Assume Hillary Clinton made a genuine profession of faith at some point in her life and was saved under Paul’s gospel, sealed by the Holy Spirit, and will be delivered to the day of redemption. On that day, one of three things will happen...

Option 1: She joyfully embraces God as He truly is

If this is your answer, then you're conceding my core point without realizing it.

By taking this option, you'd be effectively admitting that what matters is not the profession alone, but whether the will ultimately aligns with God’s righteousness once truth is fully revealed. That means the decisive factor is what one loves when the truth is known.


Option 2: She hates God’s righteousness and rejects Him

This answer would explicitly endorse my position by acknowledging that a person can be sealed and delivered, but still refuse fellowship with God when confronted with who He actually is. At that point, the only remaining question is whether God forces eternal fellowship on someone who despises Him...


Option 3: God forcibly alters her will so that she embraces Him

This is the option that I think most Christians implicitly assume without ever admitting it.

This option is the equivalent of saying that love, allegiance, and worship are manufactured by divine fiat, not freely given. That reduces heaven to a kind of moral reprogramming, not a real relationship.

Options 1 & 2 acknowledge my position, either tacitly or explicitly. Option 3 denies free will, which collapses the concepts of love, relationship, righteousness, faith, allegiance, etc. and turns God into either a kidnapper who holds people against their will or


I am reasonably certain that those three options exhaust every rational possibility but, as I said, if you can refute it or show me another option then I'll be happy to read all about it.
 

Clete

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I would say his point is that heaven is not a prison. He might boot people out later, like a large percentage of angels as mentioned in the scriptures.
I wouldn't go so far as to say that "He might boot people out later" because the conditions that make rejection possible are not indefinitely self-sustaining once truth, clarity, and rightly ordered love are fully established. In our eternal state, ignorance is removed, deception is gone, trauma no longer distorts desire, sin is no longer reinforced by fleshly weakness and Truth Himself is continuously present.

Under those conditions, moral drift has no fuel source. Moral drift is a feature of fallen epistemology and disordered desire, not of clarity and fullness of life. And while full clarity does not eliminate the possibility of rejection, as the angelic fall demonstrates, it does, however, eliminate the conditions for gradual moral drift that might result in a situation where God "might boot people out later". The bible tells us that Satan was a murderer from the beginning. Thus rebellion, if it occurs under full revelation, occurs decisively, not incrementally. Scripture gives no reason to believe that those who end up in God's Heaven will later erode away over time.

Indeed, at the day of redemption, believers are transformed, healed, clarified, and perfected in such a way that their perception of God and goodness is no longer distorted, and therefore their desire for God is radically strengthened. This is why no one denies that MOST (i.e. virtually all) people who encounter God in truth will respond with joy, gratitude, and allegiance. Those who would choose otherwise would surely be a tiny minority and serve to prove the rule rather than negating it.

It's the difference between saying that “rejection of God will be unthinkable in practice” vs. “rejection of God will be impossible in principle.” The former preserves relationship, the later empties every moral concept of its meaning.
 
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Right Divider

Body part
Saying it doesn't make it so.

It's a metaphor. We are members of body of believers called "the Body of Christ". We are not literally Jesus' body parts.

Your question implied it (at least potentially so). We do not add anything to God, nor is God diminished by our absence. God, by His very nature, cannot be added to or taken from in the sense your question implies.

Then my point stands.

Quite the contrary. It is THE point!
The metaphor means that we are connected to the Head in the way that body parts are. We will not be "broken off".

I'm stunned that you're having issue with this.
That was precisely the point of bringing Satan up, RD! You and Way 2 Go are the ones couching this in terms of "believer" and "unbeliever". The point of bringing up Satan was precisely about pointing out that there is more than one way such terms are used.
You're being dishonest Clete. You know very well exactly in "what way" I'm using the term and it's NOT "someone believes that God exists" and YOU KNOW IT.

I'm talking about members of the BODY OF CHRIST.

Eph 5:30 (AKJV/PCE)​
(5:30) For we are members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones.​

How much more clear can Paul make it? God will not lop off body parts of Christ.
I know that you are personally aware of what I'm about to say here but for the sake of thoroughness...

The words "believer" and "unbeliever" are being treated as if they describe a single, simple state. They do not. The sort of "belief" we are talking about here implies love, trust, submission, and fellowship. Or to put it into a single word, we are talking about allegiance to God. Satan knows that God exists but it this allegiance that is missing.

I am saying that if, over the course of a person's life, one's love for God is turned into hatred and their allegiance shifts in favor of evil rather than good then, when that person finds themself standing before God then their allegiance toward God may be renewed and it may not be. God CANNOT force allegiance. Not because He is weak but because doing so is a contradiction.
Again, you talking about a theory that cannot be supported with scripture. It is pure conjecture.

The Bible speaks of permanent assurance of those that TRUST IN CHRIST for their ETERNAL LIFE.

What I know or don't know isn't the point. The disagreement on this issue has stemmed almost entirely from mischaracterizations of the position, large chucks of which have sprouted from the misuse of terms. In such situations, being explicit is valuable. Thus, the point was to force clarity.

I cannot possibly be irrelevant, RD. It is precisely the whole point!

It is the seal of the Holy Spirit that is non-revokeable. WHY? Paul tells us why. It is because that seal was put in place as an earnest payment. God would have to forfeit Himself if the transaction is not completed. Paul says explicitly that we are sealed unto the day of redemption. Why does he say that? He doesn't say that we are sealed for eternity, he says we are sealed unto the day of redemption.
Yes, Paul DOES say that:

1Thess 4:17 (AKJV/PCE)​
(4:17) Then we which are alive [and] remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord.
Paul leaves no room for some "choice" to be made.

Well why stop with that single sentence?! Make the argument!
Did you not read the read of my post? I did make a valid argument that you seem to have completely ignored.

Here it is AGAIN:
I dispute your "millions of counter examples"

You said that the "choice" comes on the "day of redemption"... which has NOT yet come. So you have NO counter examples whatsoever and no scriptural support of this "choice event".
By "counter examples" I had in mind all the people you just admitted exist. Those that we think are saved but are not actually saved. I also had in mind people such as Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, Nancy Pelosi, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Pete Buttigieg, all of whom believe themselves to be Christians and who may well have had a saving faith in Christ at some point in their lives but who now hate everything good and love everything evil.
This does not support your claim of a "choice event after death". You have no idea if any of those people were ever "saved" to begin with.

You claim that BELIEVERS (i.e., saved people) have some "chance" to "choose damnation" after their death. You have done nothing to support this claim.
Hillary Clinton identifies as a Methodist. Today, she is as evil a person as can exist on Earth and has been for decades, but do you know for a fact that she never made a profession of faith when she was a young woman? I don't!
So if Hillary identified as a tomato, you'd take her word for it? Do you think that most people that identify as Methodists are saved?

I thought that you said that believers are "sealed by the Holy Spirit UNTO THE DAY OF REDEMPTION". And yet Hillary did not make it. What does that term even mean then?

Please, please, please.... show us the scripture that demonstrates one of Christ's body members being dismembered.

P.S.
2Tim 2:10-13 (AKJV/PCE)​
(2:10) Therefore I endure all things for the elect's sakes, that they may also obtain the salvation which is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory. (2:11) [It is] a faithful saying: For if we be dead with [him], we shall also live with [him]: (2:12) If we suffer, we shall also reign with [him]: if we deny [him], he also will deny us: (2:13) If we believe not, [yet] he abideth faithful: he cannot deny himself.​
 
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Clete

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The metaphor means that we are connected to the Head in the way that body parts are. We will not be "broken off".

I'm stunned that you're having issue with this.
It seems you are reacting to something that I am not saying.

You're being dishonest Clete. You know very well exactly in "what way" I'm using the term and it's NOT "someone believes that God exists" and YOU KNOW IT.
You know better than to accuse me of this. I meant every word I said. You and I are not the only two people reading this exchange. Just as importantly, the way you are using it is incompatible, logically, with a disagreement with my position as I think I have established.

Would you call Hillary Clinton a believer? I wouldn't! I wouldn't call her a believer because she isn't one. She might have been at one time but she sure as Hell isn't one today. If she ever was a believer, if she ever was a member of the Body of Christ, then you and I agree that she remains a member of that Body to this day and that she will find herself present at the day of redemption. What differs between us is what we say happens during the day of redemption. Does Hillary just revert back to her hypothetical younger self that submitted to God? If so, by what means? The answer to that question determines whether you agree with my position on this or not.

I'm talking about members of the BODY OF CHRIST.

Eph 5:30 (AKJV/PCE)​
(5:30) For we are members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones.​

How much more clear can Paul make it? God will not lop off body parts of Christ.

Again, you talking about a theory that cannot be supported with scripture. It is pure conjecture.
There is no conjecture here at all. It is based on the definition of the most important terms in the Christian faith and all of ethics for that matter and I have repeatedly quoted the passages of scripture I am using.

The Bible speaks of permanent assurance of those that TRUST IN CHRIST for their ETERNAL LIFE.


Yes, Paul DOES say that:

1Thess 4:17 (AKJV/PCE)​
(4:17) Then we which are alive [and] remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord.
Paul leaves no room for some "choice" to be made.
Argument from silence that has already been addressed. Any exceptions that occur would prove the rule, not negate it.

Did you not read the read of my post? I did make a valid argument that you seem to have completely ignored.

Here it is AGAIN:


This does not support your claim of a "choice event after death". You have no idea if any of those people were ever "saved" to begin with.
This is effectively the Calvinist argument. The fact is that I do have an idea. It is not impossible, in principle, to tell whether someone have been saved. If someone professes to be a Christian that is evidence that at least give me the idea that they might be saved. It's far away from proof. Indeed having proof may well be impossible for us to have short of having a very close personal relationship with the person in question.

In any case, if I don't know whether they were ever saved or not, neither do you. By your own standard, Hillary Clinton might well be as saved as you and I are. And she may well be! The question is whether she will choose to remain so. I suspect that she wouldn't and I am here stating that God isn't going to force her.

You claim that BELIEVERS (i.e., saved people) have some "chance" to "choose damnation" after their death. You have done nothing to support this claim.
I have argued it very clearly.

So if Hillary identified as a tomato, you'd take her word for it? Do you think that most people that identify as Methodists are saved?
That is, in fact, irrelevant.

I thought that you said that believers are "sealed by the Holy Spirit UNTO THE DAY OF REDEMPTION". And yet Hillary did not make it. What does that term even mean then?

Please, please, please.... show us the scripture that demonstrates one of Christ's body members being dismembered.
You are no longer responding to what I said and you've ignored the meat of the argument.

You need to cool off and come back when you can be clear minded. I suggest that you respond directly and only to the following....


For the sake of argument, let's suppose that she did. Assume Hillary Clinton made a genuine profession of faith at some point in her life and was saved under Paul’s gospel, sealed by the Holy Spirit, and will be delivered to the day of redemption. On that day, one of three things will happen...


Option 1: She joyfully embraces God as He truly is
If this is your answer, then you're conceding my core point without realizing it.
By taking this option, you'd be effectively admitting that what matters is not the profession alone, but whether the will ultimately aligns with God’s righteousness once truth is fully revealed. That means the decisive factor is what one loves when the truth is known.


Option 2: She hates God’s righteousness and rejects Him
This answer would explicitly endorse my position by acknowledging that a person can be sealed and delivered, but still refuse fellowship with God when confronted with who He actually is. At that point, the only remaining question is whether God forces eternal fellowship on someone who despises Him...


Option 3: God forcibly alters her will so that she embraces Him
This is the option that I think most Christians implicitly assume without ever admitting it.
This option is the equivalent of saying that love, allegiance, and worship are manufactured by divine fiat, not freely given. That reduces heaven to a kind of moral reprogramming, not a real relationship.


Options 1 & 2 acknowledge my position, either tacitly or explicitly. Option 3 denies free will, which collapses the concepts of love, relationship, righteousness, faith, allegiance, etc. and turns God into either a kidnapper who holds people against their will or Calvin's version of God who alters our will by fiat.


I am reasonably certain that those three options exhaust every rational possibility but, as I said, if you can refute it or show me another option then I'll be happy to read all about it.
 

Right Divider

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@Clete One of your examples of a believer becoming an unbeliever is Hillary Clinton.

Based on that, I have no idea that you think that "sealed by the Holy Spirit unto the day of redemption" means.
 

Clete

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@Clete One of your examples of a believer becoming an unbeliever is Hillary Clinton.
It is a stretch, I grant, and while it is a distinct possibility, it was presented as a hypothetical for the sake of argument.

"For the sake of argument, let's suppose that she did. Assume Hillary Clinton made a genuine profession of faith at some point in her life and was saved under Paul’s gospel, sealed by the Holy Spirit, and will be delivered to the day of redemption. On that day, one of three things will happen..." - post #89​


Based on that, I have no idea that you think that "sealed by the Holy Spirit unto the day of redemption" means.
Of course you do. It means to me just what it means to you. It means that those who are so sealed will be delivered safely to the day of redemption, as Paul explicitly states.
It means, contrary to what the Arminians teach, that nothing anyone thinks, says or does is able to separate them from the presence of the Holy Spirit. They can grieve the Holy Spirit, they can ignore the Holy Spirit, that can even learn to despise the Holy Spirit, but they cannot break God's seal and they WILL be preserved unto the day of redemption.

2 Corinthians 1:22
2 Corinthians 5:5
Ephesians 1:14
Ephesians 4:30
 

Right Divider

Body part
It is a stretch, I grant, and while it is a distinct possibility, it was presented as a hypothetical for the sake of argument.

"For the sake of argument, let's suppose that she did. Assume Hillary Clinton made a genuine profession of faith at some point in her life and was saved under Paul’s gospel, sealed by the Holy Spirit, and will be delivered to the day of redemption. On that day, one of three things will happen..." - post #89​

Of course you do. It means to me just what it means to you. It means that those who are so sealed will be delivered safely to the day of redemption, as Paul explicitly states.
And yet your example fails that. How was Hillary "delivered safely to the day of redemption"?
 

Clete

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That seems to make the concept meaningless.
How so?

Then how would someone not be "delivered safely unto the day of redemption"?
All saved persons will be. All of them!


Do you acknowledge the possibility of a back-slidden Christian?

If not then what do you do with I Corinthians 3:1–3, Galatians 5:4 & Galatians 6:1?


If you do acknowledge the existence of back-slidden Christians, are you suggesting that such a back-slidden Christian is no longer saved or do you acknowledge that the seal of the Holy Spirit is still intact?

If the former then what do you do with 2 Corinthians 1:22, 2 Corinthians 5:5 & Ephesians 1:14?

If the later then in what way does my example fail?
 

Right Divider

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Do you acknowledge the possibility of a back-slidden Christian?
That does not mean "unsaved".
If not then what do you do with I Corinthians 3:1–3, Galatians 5:4 & Galatians 6:1?
What do I need to do with them?

Are carnal CHRISTIANS unsaved?

Do you think that "fallen from grace" mean that saved people can become unsaved?
Gal 6:1 (AKJV/PCE)​
(6:1) Brethren, if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual, restore such an one in the spirit of meekness; considering thyself, lest thou also be tempted.​
Do you think that this "restoration" means "saved again"?
If you do acknowledge the existence of back-slidden Christians, are you suggesting that such a back-slidden Christian is no longer saved or do you acknowledge that the seal of the Holy Spirit is still intact?
No, I'm arguing the exact opposite. I'm claiming "once saved, always saved".

Again, I don't understand what you mean by "sealed". They will make it to the day of redemption, but still might not be redeemed... I don't get it.
 

Clete

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No, I'm arguing the exact opposite. I'm claiming "once saved, always saved".
We agree!

I ask again....

In what way then does my example fail?

Forget using Hillary Clinton as a specific example. Perhaps that's too much of a hypothetical for your mind to wrap itself around. Just keep it generic if that helps. Just assume a severely backslidden Christian finds himself before God on the day of redemption and respond to the following...

On that day, one of three things will happen...

Option 1: She joyfully embraces God as He truly is
If this is your answer, then you're conceding my core point without realizing it.
By taking this option, you'd be effectively admitting that what matters is not the profession alone, but whether the will ultimately aligns with God’s righteousness once truth is fully revealed. That means the decisive factor is what one loves when the truth is known.

Option 2: She hates God’s righteousness and rejects Him
This answer would explicitly endorse my position by acknowledging that a person can be sealed and delivered, but still refuse fellowship with God when confronted with who He actually is. At that point, the only remaining question is whether God forces eternal fellowship on someone who despises Him...

Option 3: God forcibly alters her will so that she embraces Him
This is the option that I think most Christians implicitly assume without ever admitting it.
This option is the equivalent of saying that love, allegiance, and worship are manufactured by divine fiat, not freely given. That reduces heaven to a kind of moral reprogramming, not a real relationship.

Options 1 & 2 acknowledge my position, either tacitly or explicitly. Option 3 denies free will, which collapses the concepts of love, relationship, righteousness, faith, allegiance, etc. and turns God into either a kidnapper who holds people against their will or Calvin's version of God who alters our will by fiat.

I am reasonably certain that those three options exhaust every rational possibility but, as I said, if you can refute it or show me another option then I'll be happy to read all about it.

Again, I don't understand what you mean by "sealed". They will make it to the day of redemption, but still might not be redeemed... I don't get it.
Making it to the day of redemption is what it means to be redeemed. To be sealed means that God has marked that person as His, and that He has obligated Himself to deliver that person safely to the day of redemption. The seal secures arrival. That is what I mean by “they will make it to the day of redemption.”

Now, that raises the real question:

What happens on the day of redemption?

As I’ve already said, I believe that glorification and full revelation will result in most people joyfully embracing God forever. But I do not believe God forces eternal fellowship on someone who, even in that moment, freely chooses to reject Him.

I am not saying they “make it to the day of redemption but still might not be redeemed” in the legal or salvific sense. I am saying that being redeemed and delivered is not the same as being forced to remain eternally aligned with God afterward.

It is the difference between being saved and being kept against your will.

God saves and seals those who have put their trust in Him. That doesn't guarantee that this trust will remain throughout a person's life and while God guarantees that even severely backslidden Christians will be brought to the day of redemption, God does not hold people against their will.
In short, I think you and I believe almost exactly the same thing. The only difference is what we believe can happen on the day of redemption. My doctrine, and I think yours as well, requires the preservation of the will. Love and all other relational and moral realities become meaningless if someone is in Heaven against their will.

You, I think, are suggesting that no such person exists. That there could never be a case where someone has been sealed, glorified, and yet has come to hate God so deeply that they would rather walk away than stay. And maybe that turns out to be true in practice. Maybe such a person never actually exists. But that is not the same thing as saying such a person could not exist as a matter of principle, which is the distinction I am making.

As I say above, there are only three real possibilities for the several backslidden who find themselves before Christ's Bema seat. I see no way to deny my position without denying free will.
 
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