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Gospel of Christ vs Gospel of John Piper

Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by IfbReformer, Oct 17, 2007.

  1. IfbReformer

    IfbReformer New Member

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    So then you would agree with him that habitual obedience is required to enter heaven. Ok - I guess we will have to agree to disagree. I totally agree that Abraham, based on what we know in the scriptures was a habitually obedient man with only certain moments of failure in his life. We can show other Saints, both Old and New who exhibited habitual obedience in their lives as well.

    This is not a debate about whether faith produces works, or whether it is possible for a Christian to live a habitually obedient life. Faith will always produce works in any true believer, and being habitually obedient to God is possible through the power of the Holy Spirit.

    However - the real debate is this - is this habitual obedience not only possible, but REQUIRED for salvation? Piper says yes,and I guess according to your comments so do you.

    I would then ask you what you do with the Corinthians who "fell asleep"(where killed by God) for abusing communion, what you do with many New Testament passages where Paul is rebuking Christians(not unbelievers) for doing wrong things or living in wrong ways. What about Solomon? Was his life one of habitual obedience? Did'nt he spend most of his days following after his wives(and in the end he may have repented) but his life was certainly nothing like Abrahams.

    And How could the Bible call Lot righteous when we see almost nothing from him but failure? His one defining act of faith was leaving Sodom but even then he failed right afterwards with his daughters.

    It is a sad but real fact, that there are many believers(both Old and New Testament) who were much less than habitually obedient yet there were still saved because of their faith.

    IFBReformer
     
  2. swaimj

    swaimj <img src=/swaimj.gif>

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    IFBReformer,
    Thanks for your responses and for expressing your concerns. I think that you and I probably agree broadly on this issue. I think that you have a very specific and narrow concern with what Piper is saying and it is possible that it is valid. I have not read for myself what he is teaching and I have not weighed the evidence, so I am going to back off. I don't know enough of this to know if I agree with Piper or not. It is an interesting topic and at some point I will try to investigate it.
     
  3. russell55

    russell55 New Member

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    Because it's not word games. The words Piper choses have meaning different meanings than the ones you were using to sum up what you think he is teaching.

    The end result may look the same, but it isn't the same because the reasoning behind it is different.

    Because true faith isn't just believing a set of facts. It isn't just professing something to be true. True faith produces good works. Those who have true faith are new creation. New creatures do the good works prepared beforehand for them to do. Professing Christians who haven't done the good works prepared for them show that they aren't really new creatures. They show that while they claim to have faith, they don't have true faith.

    I agree with this. If someone isn't habitually obedient, then they are habitually disobedient, are they not? Do people who are habitually disobedient have true faith?

    Once again, you've switched words on Piper. He uses declare and you use determine. Big difference. Our works don't determine who is saved or lost (as in being the grounds for the judgment), but they do declare (or show) who is saved or loss. As such they can be the criteria for judgment without being the grounds for that judgment.

    So you are saying that it is possible for a true believer to live a life of habitual disobedience?

    Of course it's all of God's grace and mercy, but God's grace is grace that works within us producing an obedient walk of faith, so much so that our faithful obedience reveals or declares our true state. God's grace plants God's seed within those who are being saved, and that seed produces results. The one graciously born of God does not practice sin (or does not life a life that is habitually disobedient.) Everyone who is a child of God practices righteousness (or lives a life of habitual righteousness). It's this practice of sin or practice of righteousness (or habitual sin or habitual righteousness) that reveals who is a child of God and who is a child of the devil:

     
    #23 russell55, Oct 18, 2007
    Last edited by a moderator: Oct 18, 2007
  4. BrotherJames

    BrotherJames New Member

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    1 John 2:4 (King James Version)
    He that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him.

    Someone use this verse? You can't you you're saved and lie, cheat, steal, hate, fornicate, etc. There HAS to be a change, but some people are deeper in sin then others, and might take a little longer. No? (Sorry if I restated facts, I skipped to page 3 :laugh: )
     
  5. TCGreek

    TCGreek New Member

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    Aren't you confusing Piper's emphasis on the Fruit of Justification for the Root of Justification?
     
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