Dear kmoney,
I'm actually sad for you also. Not because I don't think you are saved. But because you think that because I don't adhere to a particular doctrine you think I'm either not saved at all or at least badly deceived.
I'm really basic, if you've done Romans 10:9-10, then you're saved. I happen to share this view that you mentioned above with you, in this way, according to this reasoning:
So long as you've done Romans 10:9-10, then the Lord may lead you to hold any number of views that diverge with whatever we call orthodoxy at any given moment in time. He has a purpose for everything He brings Us through, the Lord. We don't always - or hardly ever - know ahead of time why He's leading Us this way or that way, and sometimes we even lose all perceptible faith in Him at all, but if we've done Romans 10:9-10 then we're still saved, and it's actually the Lord living in Us Who is - for His own glorious purposes - driving Us to do, say, and believe whatever it is that we do, say and believe, all the time.
That's just what I think.
However, I think a large amount of scripture don't make sense if Jesus is God and I see no reason why Jesus must be God in order for salvation to be possible. So if I have to lean one way or the other I guess I'd lean toward the anti-divinity side. If you want to say I deny that Jesus is God I guess that's fine, but I just wanted to clarify.
That's one of the most level headed explanations for Unitarianism I've ever seen, kmoney. :up:
Consider this. Before the Lord came, the hierarchy of mankind went like this: The Father, Man, Woman, Child. The hierarchy within the subgroup Man went something like: Priest/Prophet/King (depending upon a lot things, either one of these might be at the top at any given moment in time), the rest of us plebs.
Since the Lord came, since the Gospel has been revealed, the new hierarchy is: The Father, the Son (Prophet, Priest and King; the risen Lord Jesus Christ), Man, Woman, Child. Now speaking purely fleshly, it makes sense to me that the old hierarchy was broken, which is why it had to be fixed, and between the pure spirit of the Father and the pure flesh of Man, there had to be a mediator, Who was both Spirit and flesh, both God and Man, so that, as opposed to Blaise Pascal, who said that there is a God-shaped vacuum within Man that can only be filled up with God, Paul implied that there is a Man-shaped vacuum that can only be filled up with God, and this Man/God is the risen Lord Jesus Christ.
That's just what I think.
Anyway, good post.
In Him,
-Jed