Since salvation requires turning to Christ, you are turning from something... right?
Can you imagine what kind of a state you'd be in if as soon as you turned to Christ, you immediately realized everything that was sin in your life?When God saved me, I knew that Jesus died for all of my sins. I just didn't know what all of my sins were at that moment. As I grew and learned that something was sinful, I turned from it.
Let me put it this way. They do non stop shacking up in order to get saved.Hypothetically - Let’s say you are pastor and you have an unsaved, unmarred couple (living together) attending your church. They one day ask for an appointment and sit in your office asking for you to lead them through the plan of salvation. Do you think they can be saved while continuing to live together in sin and not confessing such?
What is confession? Think it all the way through here!Agreed. However, the only actual requirement is confession, not the actual turning from sin.
On a happy note, the pastor never had to mention the shacking up. Minutes after leading them to Christ, the young couple asked the pastor if they should get married, and he said yes, ASAP. However, had said had the Holy Spirit not prompted that move, he would have waited until God moved in their lives.If they are truly saved, God will deal with them about it and make it clear that things cannot remain the way they were. If it comes to the attention of the pastor, he needs to counsel them to "Make the matter right," either move out and stop shacking up or get married ASAP.
I think he’s saying we should alter pre-salvation behaviors because it’s the command of God for a Christian lifestyle, however, recognizing (confessing) sin is the requirement for salvation (not the actual abandonment of sin).What is the change in question?
Now do the word strepho.
Much of the debate came from the proponents of "Free Grace" of which Chafer is party to along with Zane Hodges, Bob Wilkin, Chuck Swindoll, and Charles Ryrie. Dallas Theological Seminary has been one of the hotbeds of "Free Grace" thinking.It’s a long-standing theological difference in people from two different camps regarding the issue of what it means to repent. People in your pastors camp teach the doctrine of the carnal Christian (sometimes to an extreme). The opposing view is usually from people in the reformed branch of theology like John MacArthur. A lot of the doctrine of carnal Christianity and cheap Grace started with Lewis Sperry Chafer. You can Google his name and those terms like cheap grace, or carnal Christian and get the background. A different way of answering your question is those from your pastors view believe that the lordship
salvation/repentance side of the equation (MacArthur for instance) are teaching a Catholic version of work’s salvation, which often is a misrepresentation of their view.
….I think his undergraduate came from a Churches of Christ school, but he attended more traditional IFB schools (PCC/BJU) for graduate school.
I know that he didn’t go straight into the ministry after college. I don’t think he felt the calling until he was around 25 years old and out of college for a few years. I don’t think his undergrad was ministry related. His graduate degrees came from PCC and BJU after he felt called to ministry. In fact, before being called to ministry, a coworker was the one who led him to assurance of salvation, because up until that point, he only “hoped” to get to heaven.If that is accurate it sure is an unusual pedigree for an IFB and merits expanded explanation. I can’t imagine he was IFB when he elected to pursue education through a “water dog” (baptismal regeneration) school.![]()
From what I'm to understand, that is a common position among C of C adherents.a coworker was the one who led him to assurance of salvation, because up until that point, he only “hoped” to get to heaven.
I believe Repentance is turning from your old life and the things you believed in to Christ and what he did on the cross. I believe once a person is saved he will have the Holy Spirit inside him and will desire to do right as he understands what God expects.Sanctification is a process. It takes people time, post-salvation, to shed their old cultural beliefs/practices.
Good thing this preacher did not ask them to cleanup their lives and confuse that with salvation.
As necessary as baptism.Do you agree that turning from sin is necessary for salvation?
False equivalence.As necessary as baptism.
How so?False equivalence.
There would be none.If we had to give up all our sins before we could get saved there would be very few true Christians.
You can be saved without being baptized, not without repentance.How so?
The message preached is 'Repent and be baptized.'
It can be said that if you are saved, you will repent and be baptized!You can be saved without being baptized, not without repentance.
Saying one cannot be saved without repentance is saying one cannot be saved without obedience, and baptism is part of obedience. In fact, it's the first part.You can be saved without being baptized, not without repentance.