Right. There's no magic number or score.
Agree. It is a process. A constant renewal of the mind centered on Christ. And if Christians realized that there would be a lot less judging of others and more concentration on one's self.Zobel said:
Right. There's no magic number or score.
I just want to say that I agree with all of that and like your comparison of ontological vs juridical. I think that is spot on and entirely consistent with scripture and the tradition of the church.dermdoc said:Agree. It is a process. A constant renewal of the mind centered on Christ. And if Christians realized that there would be a lot less judging of others and more concentration on one's self.Zobel said:
Right. There's no magic number or score.
Zobel said:
No my Church is the Orthodox Church.
and of course I agree with the words of Christ. I disagree with you on what the words "come to the Father" and "by me" mean.
FTACo88-FDT24dad said:I just want to say that I agree with all of that and like your comparison of ontological vs juridical. I think that is spot on and entirely consistent with scripture and the tradition of the church.dermdoc said:Agree. It is a process. A constant renewal of the mind centered on Christ. And if Christians realized that there would be a lot less judging of others and more concentration on one's self.Zobel said:
Right. There's no magic number or score.
But it seems like all of that mitigates against the idea of a salvation that can't be "lost."
If man's will can't beat God's desires, then man doesn't have free will. So yes, man's will beats God's desires. Otherwise you end up in a situation where God must be at the very least indifferent to serial killers, because Him wanting them to do otherwise would override their free will and prevent it.Quote:
Scripture also says God desires all men to be saved. Can man's free will beat God's desires?
ramblin_ag02 said:If man's will can't beat God's desires, then man doesn't have free will. So yes, man's will beat's God's desires. Otherwise you end up in a situation where God must be very indifferent to serial killers, because Him wanting them to do otherwise would override their free will and prevent it.Quote:
Scripture also says God desires all men to be saved. Can man's free will beat God's desires?
Just for clarity, that does not apply to God's Will. God's Will is the fundamental force of reality, and nothing can withstand it. Our free will only exists due to God giving us an inferior likeness of His Will and giving us the metaphysical elbow room to exercise it.
Quo Vadis? said:Zobel said:
No my Church is the Orthodox Church.
and of course I agree with the words of Christ. I disagree with you on what the words "come to the Father" and "by me" mean.
You are in the body of Christ but we do not grant you the rank of Catholic
dermdoc said:FTACo88-FDT24dad said:I just want to say that I agree with all of that and like your comparison of ontological vs juridical. I think that is spot on and entirely consistent with scripture and the tradition of the church.dermdoc said:Agree. It is a process. A constant renewal of the mind centered on Christ. And if Christians realized that there would be a lot less judging of others and more concentration on one's self.Zobel said:
Right. There's no magic number or score.
But it seems like all of that mitigates against the idea of a salvation that can't be "lost."
Scripture also says God desires all men to be saved. Can man's free will beat God's desires?
I know CS Lewis thought so.
ramblin_ag02 said:If man's will can't beat God's desires, then man doesn't have free will. So yes, man's will beats God's desires. Otherwise you end up in a situation where God must be at the very least indifferent to serial killers, because Him wanting them to do otherwise would override their free will and prevent it.Quote:
Scripture also says God desires all men to be saved. Can man's free will beat God's desires?
Just for clarity, that does not apply to God's Will. God's Will is the fundamental force of reality, and nothing can withstand it. Our free will only exists due to God giving us an inferior likeness of His Will and giving us the metaphysical elbow room to exercise it.
Zobel said:
This is outrageous! It's unfair!
Zobel said:
This is outrageous! It's unfair!
FTACo88-FDT24dad said:dermdoc said:FTACo88-FDT24dad said:I just want to say that I agree with all of that and like your comparison of ontological vs juridical. I think that is spot on and entirely consistent with scripture and the tradition of the church.dermdoc said:Agree. It is a process. A constant renewal of the mind centered on Christ. And if Christians realized that there would be a lot less judging of others and more concentration on one's self.Zobel said:
Right. There's no magic number or score.
But it seems like all of that mitigates against the idea of a salvation that can't be "lost."
Scripture also says God desires all men to be saved. Can man's free will beat God's desires?
I know CS Lewis thought so.
Derm, it's a great question. Forgive me if any of this seems pedantic. Not my intent.
Jesus tells us unambiguously that the two greatest commandments are love of God and love of neighbor. How do we love God? By surrendering to his love for us. In our broken world, we needed a savior in order to be truly free to choose. Man's free will was a gift from our creator before the fall and after the fall our creator once again gives us a free gift of salvation. In our broken world, true freedom is not radical autonomy but being free from the effects of sin. This is where God's grace steps in and makes it possible for us to once again be free to choose him. God gives us that initial gift that puts us back in a right relationship with him and continues to offer us the grace we need to stay in a right relationship with him, but thereafter we must choose, just as Adam and Eve, who were not yet living with the effects of sin, were free to choose.
Free will is the precondition for authentic agape love, which is the love God is, but also the love God desires from us. Yes, God desires that we all be saved because God loves us, but he doesn't violate the one thing absolutely necessary for our love for him to be authentic: our free will. We can choose to not love God and neighbor.
This priest says it pretty well:
https://www.facebook.com/share/r/XNxYnUvz4vAUDw2W/?mibextid=UalRPS
Quo Vadis? said:Zobel said:
No my Church is the Orthodox Church.
and of course I agree with the words of Christ. I disagree with you on what the words "come to the Father" and "by me" mean.
You are in the body of Christ but we do not grant you the rank of Catholic
TSJ said:Quo Vadis? said:Zobel said:
No my Church is the Orthodox Church.
and of course I agree with the words of Christ. I disagree with you on what the words "come to the Father" and "by me" mean.
You are in the body of Christ but we do not grant you the rank of Catholic
I think the meme fits better in reverse. The council is the 4 patriarchs and Anakin is Rome.
TSJ said:Quo Vadis? said:Zobel said:
No my Church is the Orthodox Church.
and of course I agree with the words of Christ. I disagree with you on what the words "come to the Father" and "by me" mean.
You are in the body of Christ but we do not grant you the rank of Catholic
I think the meme fits better in reverse. The council is the 4 patriarchs and Anakin is Rome.
Quote:
Hey, that's my meme. You can't turn my own meme against me
Quo Vadis? said:
Hey, that's my meme. You can't turn my own meme against me
Jim Hogg is angry said:
Ecumenicalism is antiChrist. There is one way, one truth, and one life (Jesus Christ). John 14:6
I absolutely agree, and I'd add something even more specific....if we spent more time thinking about others in terms of charity (how can we help someone, how can we make someone's day, support) instead of trying to make ourselves feel better because we only view them through a lens of what they're doing wrong or how bad they act, etc, I think we'd feel a great deal less anxiety.dermdoc said:Agree. It is a process. A constant renewal of the mind centered on Christ. And if Christians realized that there would be a lot less judging of others and more concentration on one's self.Zobel said:
Right. There's no magic number or score.
dermdoc said:FTACo88-FDT24dad said:I just want to say that I agree with all of that and like your comparison of ontological vs juridical. I think that is spot on and entirely consistent with scripture and the tradition of the church.dermdoc said:Agree. It is a process. A constant renewal of the mind centered on Christ. And if Christians realized that there would be a lot less judging of others and more concentration on one's self.Zobel said:
Right. There's no magic number or score.
But it seems like all of that mitigates against the idea of a salvation that can't be "lost."
Scripture also says God desires all men to be saved. Can man's free will beat God's desires?
I know CS Lewis thought so.
I have no idea. Will leave that up to God.FTACo88-FDT24dad said:dermdoc said:FTACo88-FDT24dad said:I just want to say that I agree with all of that and like your comparison of ontological vs juridical. I think that is spot on and entirely consistent with scripture and the tradition of the church.dermdoc said:Agree. It is a process. A constant renewal of the mind centered on Christ. And if Christians realized that there would be a lot less judging of others and more concentration on one's self.Zobel said:
Right. There's no magic number or score.
But it seems like all of that mitigates against the idea of a salvation that can't be "lost."
Scripture also says God desires all men to be saved. Can man's free will beat God's desires?
I know CS Lewis thought so.
Thinking about your first statement that God desires all men to be saved got me wondering if you think someone who lives a life of Christian charity by living a life full of all those things that Jesus says will be the criteria by which we will be judged in Matthew 25 (i.e. the way, the truth and the life) but doesn't even know the name of Jesus and has never "invited Jesus into his heart as his personal lord and savior" will be a sheep or a goat on the last day?
Curious what others think as well.
I hope I've made my view on that crystal clear. Those are the sheep. The Matthew 25 passage specifically mentions people from "all the nations". I see no reason to think that means "all the nations with Christians in them", and therefore some of the sheep will be people from "all the nations" that aren't ChristianFTACo88-FDT24dad said:dermdoc said:FTACo88-FDT24dad said:I just want to say that I agree with all of that and like your comparison of ontological vs juridical. I think that is spot on and entirely consistent with scripture and the tradition of the church.dermdoc said:Agree. It is a process. A constant renewal of the mind centered on Christ. And if Christians realized that there would be a lot less judging of others and more concentration on one's self.Zobel said:
Right. There's no magic number or score.
But it seems like all of that mitigates against the idea of a salvation that can't be "lost."
Scripture also says God desires all men to be saved. Can man's free will beat God's desires?
I know CS Lewis thought so.
Thinking about your first statement that God desires all men to be saved got me wondering if you think someone who lives a life of Christian charity by living a life full of all those things that Jesus says will be the criteria by which we will be judged in Matthew 25 (i.e. the way, the truth and the life) but doesn't even know the name of Jesus and has never "invited Jesus into his heart as his personal lord and savior" will be a sheep or a goat on the last day?
Curious what others think as well.