musterion
Well-known member
If by this it is meant that all that are genuinely saved will repent, then, yes, sure it is.
It's asked from the standpoint of those (not myself or other MADs) who make repent = stop sinning, thereby making "stop sinning" a condition or requirement of being saved along with believing the Gospel (assuming they're even preaching the true Gospel, which they often don't).
In other words, a sinner cannot believe, repent, accept the gospel and come to Christ unless God first sovereignly and graciously gives that sinner new life by the power of his Word and Spirit (as in Eze. 36:26).
And we both already know where that leads: to a slandering of the character of God when He damns for unbelief those He did not chose to quicken unto belief.
On the other hand if it is meant that a person somehow is able to muster up repentance all by themselves, then, the answer is no.
But that is exactly what LS says to everyone who hears or reads an LS presentation of the gospel. I need not tell you how common "Be willing to turn from your sin AND believe the gospel" is these days.
Granted, LS is Calvinistic and so assumes the person 'really' believing has been enabled to do so by God, while those are 'seem' to believe but really aren't have a spurious faith. But the bottom line, either way, is it adds "stop sinning" to faith in Christ's death, burial and resurrection AS a condition of salvation, both before and after belief (i.e., fruit inspectors). That's one problem. The other is misdefining repent as "stop sinning" instead of simply "change of mind" as the word literally means.
It is God who grants repentance, not man. Repentance is a Divine gift.
Disagree because, yet again, for the hundredth time, we have a major theological problem if that's true -- God damning people for something they're not doing when He chose not to enable them to do it.