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Can One Have Faith In Christ Apart From Scriptural Revelation

Discussion in '2003 Archive' started by Mark Osgatharp, Jul 8, 2003.

  1. Baptist Believer

    Baptist Believer Well-Known Member
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    For some reason, I am not allowed to edit my own post... :mad:

    This statement was a typo. Let me make the clarification:

    Assurance – Most of the time God provides assurance to me through the scriptures. Sometimes I have received assurance from God in very direct and specific ways through other people, not the scriptures.
     
  2. Dr. Bob

    Dr. Bob Administrator
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    After a message is posted on a thread, the poster has about 30 minutes to edit and correct information. After that, it is permanently in cyberspace!

    We used to allow changes at any time, but some members so abused and attacked the BB by sabotaging posts or erasing them and making whole threads unreadable that a rule was put in place.

    Thanks for understanding.
     
  3. Mark Osgatharp

    Mark Osgatharp New Member

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    I agree - it requires a personal revelation from God in order to come to faith in Christ. But the basis of faith is knowledge of the Scriptures. God enables us to believe the Scriptures with certainty. When I say "certainty" I don't mean certainty because I investigated it and found it out - I mean certainty because God said so.

    Truth, verity, certainty - they all mean the same thing. If something is reliable it is true and certain. I don't have to understand all the mysteries of a thing to know it is certain.

    For example, I know of a certainty that "without the shedding of blood there is no remission of sin." I don't have to understand all the reason why.

    However, I think you misunderstand the Paul's concept of mystery. The mysteries of which Paul spake were secrets that had been revealed to him so he might reveal them to others - not something that couldn't be understood.


    Faith does not have room for growth. When you know enough about something to have faith in it, there is no room whatsoever for a change in that matter. Our lack of faith, however, most certainly has room for growth in knowledge and faith.

    It seems to me - correct me if I'm wrong - that you are saying we must always allow that anything we "believe" may later be modified by new information and therefore we can never say that we know anything with certainty.

    I don't know where the Scriptures speak of the "Spirit of the commandments." A commandment is a commandment - period. There may be times when one commandment takes precedent over another when it is without question that keeping one requires the breaking of another.

    For example, saving life, whether animal or human, was obviously more critical than observing the Sabbath. This is evident from the fact that the same Law which commanded the Sabbath (on penalty of death for breaking it) itself commanded you to rescue your neighbor's livestock if at any time you saw it in danger. But we must be very cautious in our application of this principle lest we just decide we don't want to keep a commandment and then try to justify it on the grounds of "love."

    If you use "rules" here to mean human rules, then I would heartily agree that fundamentalists are frequently guilty of setting up their own rules in addition to and even in opposition to God's rules; but I don't think they are any more guilty of this than non-fundamentalists.

    A good example of non-fundamentalist extra-biblical rules is the rabid insistance on the necessity of institutional education for the ministry that pervades liberal circles.

    You have still really given me no reason to reject the principles of fundamentalism. Just because some who profess allegiance to the Scriptures do not in fact practice it is no reason for me to question the authority and inerrancy of the Scriptures themselves.

    Mark Osgatharp
     
  4. j_barner2000

    j_barner2000 Member

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    my take is this.... there is a general revelation which is found in nature, conscience, human experience etc. that is good enough to let us know God is out there but not sufficient unto salvation

    then there is personal revelation... this is from God moving in your life to stir your soul. He gives us the faith to believe in Him. So the Holy Spirit revealed the need for a savior, and He gave me the faith to accept His free gift of Grace. The Gospel is sufficient to save you.. not the written Bible. It can be found in the Bible, but often is found observed in a believers life first and then the Holy Spirit draws us to Himself ...
     
  5. Mark Osgatharp

    Mark Osgatharp New Member

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    j_barner2000,

    How could a person observe the gospel in a believer's life without some sort of verbal testimony from that believer of the things contained in the Scriptures.....specifically?

    Mark Osgatharp
     
  6. j_barner2000

    j_barner2000 Member

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    by the love of Christ exhibited in our lives. They see that we are different and the Holy Spirit allows us to exhibit His glory and love and grace through our lives. Of course we need to explain the Gospel to them. But the Scripture is the written Word of God and is inerrant. And Scripture points to the Living Word of God who is Christ Jesus our Savior. Our lives should be lived in such a way as to clearly exhibit the Gospel, which is the good news about the Living Word who is alive in us. As Paul said we need to be crucified with Christ and it should be He who lives in us. That is how they will see the Gospel in our lives. I knew no Scriptures (had not read any, had no time for that till after I was saved) when I was saved, but I saw someone who lived the Gospel and shared it with me. I read the Scripture after recieving the Gospel.
     
  7. Mark Osgatharp

    Mark Osgatharp New Member

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    Which means you did not merely observe the gospel in their lives but heard it spoken from their lips.

    Mark Osgatharp
     
  8. j_barner2000

    j_barner2000 Member

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    OK I see where you are coming from. The Gospel in not nessescarily the Scripture.

    Many of The people saved in Christ's day had not heard scripture, but still he said your faith has saved you...

    So Faith in Christ is the important ingredient. Not the Scripture. Hearing the Gospel, which is contained in the Scripture. But the Scripture has no power to save us. Only Christ Jesus can do that, and I don't think He is limited to use The written word to do it. He can doo all things. But saving faith does not come from the written word... It comes from the Living Word.
     
  9. Mark Osgatharp

    Mark Osgatharp New Member

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    There can be no faith in Christ without a knowledge of what the Scriptures say about Him. This knowledge may come through an individual rather than from reading the Scriptures, but the knowledge still comes from the Scriptures.

    And in the sense that what God's people preach comes from the Scriptures, Jesus is limited to the Scriptures. It is a self-imposed limitation, but a limitation nonetheless.

    Mark Osgatharp
     
  10. j_barner2000

    j_barner2000 Member

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    OK I understand what you are saying... But what about Saul's conversion... He attributes it to a personal encounter with the Saviour (which is personal revelation). His knowledge of the scripture led him to kill Christians... Teach me.
     
  11. Sola-Scriptura

    Sola-Scriptura New Member

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    Everyone in history has been saved through the preaching of the Gospel by a servant of Christ, except the 12 and the Apostle Paul. These alone were called directly by Christ in person. No one else will have this experience, ever! Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the Word of God, not the dictated written Word necessarily, but by the Living Word through the Gospel.
     
  12. JesusisGod2

    JesusisGod2 New Member

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    Mark: With all due respect; didn't YOU give your life to God when YOU got saved? :confused:

    I did not say that I had never heard of Jesus. I said I had never read the scriptures and did not know what being 'saved' was all about.

    I know my salvation is one thing that no one (including myself) can mess up or take away from me and I stand by my life-changing experience.

    I doubt the thief on the cross had ever read the scriptures, but he was hanging next to the Word and he was assured of a place in Heaven when he cried out to Jesus.

    Blessings,
    Sue
    </font>[/QUOTE]Hi sue, my salvation experience is very similar, I had never read the bible either (that I am aware of as I think back) went to church when young but never really paid much attention.

    One day I went to a speggetti supper at a church with my dad and quite truthfully didnt even know he was saved (He to was new) well anyway the cooks talked as they cooked (atsa Louie, Ima Phil) and after words having no real understanding of God but realizing I needed Him got on my knees and asked Jesus in my life.

    My "revelation" was others sharing.

    It says in John 5:44 "That no one can come to Me (Jesus, The Word) except the Father, Who hath sent Me, draw him, ; and I will raise him on the last day."

    So it appears to me that revelation of who God was came to me first before I even ever read His word, but after words I was led to His word, and as I read His word His faith also was revealed to me and as I continue to read my faith increases. so it is true faith comes from reading the word of God but initially it is a gift and continues to be a gift.

    there are many who read Gods word all thier life and still never get saved, (could be wrong motives or somethingi dont know.)

    It is written that by grace you are saved through faith and that (faith) not of yourselves it is a gift (revelation?) from God.

    The very faith God gives us in order to be saved is a gift and then we are led to th Son.

    I do believe sometimes revelation comes apart from Gods word but never contrary to it.

    [ July 11, 2003, 01:23 PM: Message edited by: JesusisGod2 ]
     
  13. Mark Osgatharp

    Mark Osgatharp New Member

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    j_barner,

    1. Paul lived when God was still imparting knowledge directly.

    2. Paul had come under the preaching of the gospel from Stephen who correctly applied the Scriptures in contrast to Paul's misunderstanding of Scripture.

    3. I do not deny that a "personal revelation" is required for salvation; to the contrary, I believe that a personal revelation is absolutely essential to salvation.

    What I am saying is that the knowledge on which God's revelation to us is based comes from the Scriptures and that it has always been so since the Scriptures were given in their finality. The revelation is not a revelation of knowledge apart from the Scriptures, but a revelation of the truth of the knowledge contained in the Scriptures.

    Mark Osgatharp
     
  14. Mark Osgatharp

    Mark Osgatharp New Member

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    JesusisGod,

    "Faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God."

    Mark Osgatharp
     
  15. Artimaeus

    Artimaeus Active Member

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    "Can One Have Faith In Christ Apart From Scriptural Revelation" No. We don't know anything about Christ except from what scriptures reveal. the answer to the question is a little easier to see if it is phrased only slightly differently. "Can One Have Faith In Christ Apart From The Revelation That Is In Scriptural" No. Everything necessary for salvation is in scripture and no part of salvation is outside of scripture. Faith is Christ isn't apart from scripture so, how can salvation be apart from scripture?
     
  16. j_barner2000

    j_barner2000 Member

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    thanks guys. I got it now. the suggested rephrasing clarifies it even more. I for 1 love this board. I have learned something from everyone here. God bless all of you, bretheren in Christ.
     
  17. Baptist Believer

    Baptist Believer Well-Known Member
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    I agree - it requires a personal revelation from God in order to come to faith in Christ. But the basis of faith is knowledge of the Scriptures. </font>[/QUOTE]I disagree, but the issue may be more of semantics than an actual disagreement of fact.

    It takes personal revelation from God (and acceptance of that revelation), but the written word is not required. Again I point you to Abraham – the father of our faith.

    God gives us faith – the ability to trust – but faith is not the same thing as “certainty” – that is, a belief that has no room for growth.

    Truth, verity, certainty - they all mean the same thing.
    </font>[/QUOTE]I think this is the crux of our disagreement – I define “certainty” as completeness of understanding. I define “truth” as reliable information. On this basis, I do not believe that Christians have the right to claim “certainty” because all of us are on the road of discipleship, growing in knowledge and faith. That’s why we should be humble with each other and learn from each other instead of looking for opportunities to condemn each others convictions.

    Yes. We can have faith in things we don’t understand – which is good since there are many things of God which we cannot grasp with our fallen and finite minds.

    Faith does not have room for growth. When you know enough about something to have faith in it, there is no room whatsoever for a change in that matter.
    </font>[/QUOTE]I cannot disagree more strongly. The Christian life is a growth from faith to faith, where we grow in our ability to trust God and to live by faith.

    The Bible, especially the New Testament, illustrates growing in faith on nearly every page. For instance:

    2 Thessalonians 1:3 We are bound to thank God always for you, brethren, as it is meet, because that your faith groweth exceedingly, and the charity of every one of you all toward each other aboundeth...

    Yes, you understand the broad principle I’m trying to communicate, but let me clarify your statement:

    I believe that as we grow in the faith and knowledge of God we will come to deeper understandings of the call of Jesus and the Christian life. Our faith will be refined as our life is transformed and we will realize that our faith assumptions need to be refined and enhanced by the Holy Spirit. As far as “certainty” goes, we live by faith and not “certainty”. We may not understand many things in our faith journey (for instance your previous example about the shedding of blood relating to remission of sins), but we can trust them without having to have complete understanding (certainty). I don’t understand why gravity works or the cause of it (no human knows), but there is no denying the reality of it.

    I did not intend to capitalize the “s”, but the BaptistBoard would not allow me to edit it when I noticed my error.

    And that’s what I meant by the spirit of the commandments. The commandments are for the benefit of humanity – to give life abundantly and to teach of God.

    Yes. We must also be careful of falsely judging fellow believers when they act according to the impulse and guidance of the Holy Spirit to do good works. We cannot know another’s motivation, so we should be very careful about judging according the appearances.

    If you use "rules" here to mean human rules, then I would heartily agree that fundamentalists are frequently guilty of setting up their own rules in addition to and even in opposition to God's rules; but I don't think they are any more guilty of this than non-fundamentalists.
    </font>[/QUOTE]Certainly all believers fall into this trap but, in my opinion, biblical “conservatives” and “fundamentalists” have more of a tendency to do this because of their zeal for the scriptures.

    Sure, that’s a valid point. Yet at the same time there is quite a bit of merit and obvious practical value in an “institutional” education for vocational ministry. The problem comes in when that standard is made absolute and inflexible. In my church, our vocational minister who directs our mission program does not have a seminary education. He has many years of vocational experience in administration and banking but has always had a heart for mission work. A few years ago our church extended an offer for him to come onto staff full-time and coordinate all of our mission sites and mission emphasis projects for our congregation.

    Would a seminary education have benefit for him? Yes, I think so. Is it essential for him to fulfill his ministry? No, I don’t think so.

    That was never my intent.

    The “authority” or “inerrancy of the scriptures” have never been the subject of discussion in this thread.

    I always get a very strong impression from you that you do not believe that I trust the scriptures and their authority. If that impression of your attitude is correct, they I need to inform you that you are profoundly mistaken.
     
  18. Mark Osgatharp

    Mark Osgatharp New Member

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    I have already answered this point in noting:

    a. Abraham lived before the Scriptures were given when God was imparting knowledge apart from the written word and,

    b. The revelations made to Abraham were actually called "the scriptures" by Paul in Galatians and, therefore, whatever revelations were made to Abraham are tantamount to the Scriptures.

    I am not interested in arguing about semantics. All I mean to say is that in order to have "faith" in something you have to believe that it is absolutely, unquestionably, and irrevocably factual.

    For example, I believe that "Jesus is the Christ." Now I may learn some more things about Jesus than that he is the Christ, and in that sense my faith can grow.

    But if I believe that "Jesus is the Christ" I cannot allow that I may someday get some information that would lead me to believe he is not the Christ.

    </font>[/QUOTE]When I say "Faith does not have room to grow" I do not mean we cannot grow in faith. What I mean is that if I have faith in some particular truth of God's word I cannot allow that it can ever be modified.

    Yes, faith can grow because we can learn more of the Scriptures and therefore have more to believe. When we do, we may find out that what we thought was faith was in reality erroneous opinion. But we will never find out that something the Scriptures taught turned out not to be true.

    Yes, you understand the broad principle I’m trying to communicate, but let me clarify your statement:

    I believe that as we grow in the faith and knowledge of God we will come to deeper understandings of the call of Jesus and the Christian life. Our faith will be refined as our life is transformed and we will realize that our faith assumptions need to be refined and enhanced by the Holy Spirit. As far as “certainty” goes, we live by faith and not “certainty”.</font>[/QUOTE]But living by faith is living by certainty. Because the only things we can possibly have faith in are the things that God has said, and the things that God has said will always, without fail, certainly, truthfully, factually, be accurate, true, right, certain and in accordance with reality.

    Faith can be refined only in the sense that it can be increased in volume as we learn more about God. Faith can never be refined in the sense of us finding out that what we formerly believed turned out to be innacurate.

    Therefore the concept of what you call "faith assumptions" is contradictory an unbiblical. No real faith is based on "assumptions" but rather on the explicit statements of truth from God.

    We can judge a fellow believer when he acts contrary to the teachings of the Scripture, no matter how loudly he claims he is being "led of the Spirit."

    For example, a woman may assume God called her to be a pastor. But the Scriptures teach that Jesus Christ commanded women to be silent in the church. Therefore, I can judge a woman to be in error if she makes the claim of being called into the pastoral ministry.

    I may not know her motive for assuming that she was called to do something which God does not call women to do; but I can know that her motive is not pure, for pure motives never lead to wrong actions.

    I am distinctly under that impression when you make such statements as those above which seem to pit Christ and the Holy Spirit the Scriptures. It seems to me you fail to realize the indespensible position of the Scriptures in determining the will of Christ and leadership of the Holy Spirit which is clearly enunciated in such passages as this:

    "Now to him that is of power to stablish you according to my gospel, and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery, which was kept secret since the world began, but now is made manifest, and by the scriptures of the prophets, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, made known to all nations for the obedience of faith."

    The ramifications of this passage on our discussion are too obvious to need elaboration!

    Mark Osgatharp
     
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