Thanks brother. I'm not concerned that you gave me a 'like' and there was no need for you to rush in to the thread in the manner you did. No matter what my thread title was, or the content, you CHOSE to be combative and malicious.
Now, in the future be sure to notate the attacks against me, and not just what you subjectively see from me in my 'tone' (before you ever even speak to me) and be sure to address that 'other' behavior as well? Or, is it just because I'm from a different camp that you went off on me first post?
I also want you to be aware I'm not going to hang my head in shame concerning the truths of DoG that I adhere to, so it's going to bleed through in whatever I post because this is a theological forum. Your theology will as well. What I am really sensing is actually animosity for me due to my position coming from you. :)
By the way FGT is much more than you make it out to be. In its official stance it is grave error and your description of it is somewhat surreptitious and a bit short of the reality of what it teaches and allows. I tell what I believe no holds barred. Anyhow there has been provision in this thread for what FGT really teaches in all its error without dressing it up, and there is no need for anyone to continue to tell me I am a liar, or have a bad tone because I am direct.
Furthermore Scripture doesn't distinguish between disciples/believers nor does Scripture separate and categorize sanctification away from salvation, FGT does that. The system is in error and is a newcomer on the scene. Many teach it and are unaware they've adopted this error from popular speakers.
Tone down your attitude and how you address me and we could possibly get along. You've chosen not to in the past and the decision is still yours. Just keep in mind I'm not going to let you blame your behavior on me and a thread I made. It's frankly a lame excuse and as a believer I am sure you are above that. :)
Free Grace Theology
Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by agedman, Dec 22, 2015.
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Iconoclast Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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I hope all of us are learning something! :)
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Ludicrous! There is an obvious difference between a believer and a disciple which this example points out with clarity. A child is not ready to be a disciple. -
What good is repentance? Is it something we shouldn't worry about? I ask because if you can be saved without repentance we must not need it. Can we really be saved and still follow Satan's lead?
Can we be save without faith?
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agedman said: ↑The reformed consider that God not only initiates, but in every aspect brings about the salvation of a person. That the person has no claim of initiating nor in any manner making a self willed decision of salvation. That God / Christ is not just the "author" but also the "finisher" of salvation.Click to expand...
Now there are other "sticking points" that this thread may travel, but what I have attempted by this OP is to show that FGT may fit the Reformed thinking far better than some may have understood it could fit.Click to expand...
Then again, it may not.Click to expand... -
Iconoclast Well-Known MemberSite SupporterInternet Theologian said: ↑It is alive and well brother. It is what FGT is all about. People can deny it all they want but this is what it officially teaches. No need to be in denial or remain naìve about its real tenets, nor pretend the things it preaches do not exist.
I fully expect, as in the other thread to be ridiculed, maligned, called a liar and attacked over this.Click to expand... -
Acts 3:26 Unto you first God, having raised up his Son Jesus, sent him to bless you, in turning away every one of you from his iniquities.
So I've read through this thread and I'm still not sure what's being debated lol. Sounds like a lot of people talking past each other. Lots of accusing going on, too. Does a person have a hatred of sin upon conversion? Absolutely, we've been given God's nature. Does that mean we will recognize every sin we do and are capable of doing and stop doing it immediately? Get real...Every epistle has the continual reminder of the old man's desires and what the new man's desires should be and then exhorted to walk in them. -
Revmitchell Well-Known MemberSite SupporterJonShaff said: ↑Acts 3:26 Unto you first God, having raised up his Son Jesus, sent him to bless you, in turning away every one of you from his iniquities.
So I've read through this thread and I'm still not sure what's being debated lol. Sounds like a lot of people talking past each other. Lots of accusing going on, too. Does a person have a hatred of sin upon conversion? Absolutely, we've been given God's nature. Does that mean we will recognize every sin we do and are capable of doing and stop doing it immediately? Get real...Every epistle has the continual reminder of the old man's desires and what the new man's desires should be and then exhorted to walk in them.Click to expand... -
JonShaff said: ↑Acts 3:26 Unto you first God, having raised up his Son Jesus, sent him to bless you, in turning away every one of you from his iniquities.
So I've read through this thread and I'm still not sure what's being debated lol. Sounds like a lot of people talking past each other. Lots of accusing going on, too.Click to expand...
Does a person have a hatred of sin upon conversion? Absolutely,Click to expand...
we've been given God's nature. Does that mean we will recognize every sin we do and are capable of doing and stop doing it immediately?Click to expand...
Get real...Click to expand...
Every epistle has the continual reminder of the old man's desires and what the new man's desires should be and then exhorted to walk in them.Click to expand... -
Iconoclast said: ↑Of course no one on BB believes such things. Just ask themSneakySneakySneakyo_Oo_Oo_OClick to expand...
Let's also not forget the 'No one teaches these things, you're a liar, give me links, give me proof, no one teaches these things'!!!!!!!!!!!!
I still don't buy that false pretense. They've heard it. They probably TEACH it themselves. -
Internet Theologian has charged those who believe Free Grace Theology with "grave error"
He posted an article by Bob Wilkin and charged us with "Sandemanianism", which in a nutshell says that saving faith is merely the intellectual assent to a proposition.
Correct me if I'm wrong; the charge comes from this statement in Bob Wilkins brief article, where he summarizes:
"Faith in Christ is intellectual assent. Stripped of its pejorative connotation, "intellectual assent" is a good definition of what faith is."
The problem here is that "Internet Theologian" doesn't want to drop his pejorative stance.
The Reformed author, R. C. Sproul in his article, Faith Defined, denotes three concepts that define faith identified by the Reformers
Notitia: [facts] defined as the content of faith, or those things that we believe. In order to believe, we must know something about that someone, who is the Lord Jesus Christ.
Fiducia: [trust] Sproul defines as our conviction that the content of our faith is true. You can know about the Christian faith and yet believe that it is not true.
Assensus: [assenting to truthfulness] defined as the assent of the intellect to the truth of some proposition
Bob Wilkins notes the first two aspects of faith early in the paragraph when he states: "Everlasting Life is a free gift (which the Lord Jesus fully paid for by his death on the cross for our sins) which is received by faith alone in Christ alone, apart from works of any kind." Wilkins continues… "The Free Grace position has its first characteristic that simply by believing in Jesus a person has eternal life. It advocates for faith alone, in Christ alone, nothing added, and no strings attached."
The charge of Sandemanianism fails. Wilkins agrees with the Reformed theologians here.
Sproul notes additionally:
Justification by faith alone has been opposed by Roman Catholicism, which says that a combination of our faith and good works provides for our justification. One impetus for this understanding has been Rome’s fear that the doctrine of justification by faith alone would encourage people to live immoral lives. Rome fears that this doctrine might lead some to think that the casual acceptance of Jesus without any change in one’s life is the kind of faith that justifies.
Isn't this what the Internet Theologian fears, that Free Grace believers revel in their sin. It seems the Roman Catholic Church and Internet Theologian have the same fear; that people will believe, will know that Christ alone, without works rescued sinners from their hopeless state and gave them new life.
John MacArthur in his book Hard to Believe, states our assurance of faith comes not from our belief but from our works. He too fears that grace will lead to lawlessness. He once again places the burden of righteousness on us rather than on Christ.
"Don't believe anyone who says it's easy to become a Christian. Salvation for sinners cost God His own Son; it cost God's Son His life, and it'll cost you the same thing. Salvation isn't the result of an intellectual exercise. It comes from a life lived in obedience and service to Christ as revealed in the Scripture; it is the fruit of actions not intentions…" Mac Arthur, Hard to Believe p. 93
Free Grace Theology does not teach believers are free to sin: it teaches that our assurance rests not on our actions but on our belief.
For the believer, sin has a cost.
"The Bible also teaches that the Christian, being indwelt by the Holy Spirit, is possessed with a new standard of what is good or bad. His conduct either grieves, or does not grieve, the Holy Spirit. There is limitless suffering of heart in the path of the child of od who sins lawlessly. ... It is concluded, the, that the true child of God cannot sin lawlessly without great suffering and that suffering is due to the presence of the divine seed or nature in the Christian, which could never be experienced by unregenerate men who have not the Spirit (Jude1:19), constitutes a ground of distinction between those who are the children of God and those who are not. Lewis Sperry Chafer, He that is Spiritual
I've been rather forceful confronting Internet Theologian, his posts have been many and his charges against Free Grace Theology have been severe.
I'd have hoped that he would have learned a bit from the words of those that started the thread that some understanding could be obtained. ... there is some hope.
Enough
Rob -
Martin Marprelate Well-Known MemberSite SupporterDHK said: ↑And is a little child at the point of maturity in his life "to forsake mother and father, and his own brothers and sisters also", even to "hate them" to follow Christ. Will he forsake all to follow Christ?
Ludicrous! There is an obvious difference between a believer and a disciple which this example points out with clarity. A child is not ready to be a disciple.Click to expand...
Secondly, the answer is YES!! If children are not of an age to fosake whatever will keep them from Christ, they are not yet Christians and shouldn't be treated as if they are.
That's why I'm a Baptist and not a Presbyterian. -
Hello brother Deacon,
Deacon said: ↑Internet Theologian has charged those who believe Free Grace Theology with "grave error"Click to expand...
He posted an article by Bob Wilkin and charged us with "Sandemanianism", which in a nutshell says that saving faith is merely the intellectual assent to a proposition.Click to expand...
Correct me if I'm wrong; the charge comes from this statement in Bob Wilkins brief article, where he summarizes:
"Faith in Christ is intellectual assent. Stripped of its pejorative connotation, "intellectual assent" is a good definition of what faith is."
The problem here is that "Internet Theologian" doesn't want to drop his pejorative stance.Click to expand...
But let's continue as you attempt to prove faith as mere mental assent to facts, even quoting Sproul. :)
The Reformed author, R. C. Sproul in his article, Faith Defined, denotes three concepts that define faith identified by the Reformers
Notitia: [facts] defined as the content of faith, or those things that we believe. In order to believe, we must know something about that someone, who is the Lord Jesus Christ.
Fiducia: [trust] Sproul defines as our conviction that the content of our faith is true. You can know about the Christian faith and yet believe that it is not true.
Assensus: [assenting to truthfulness] defined as the assent of the intellect to the truth of some propositionClick to expand...I agree with this, but none of that proves faith as mere mental assent as FGT does, and as both Sandeman and Hodges, others and yourself believe. The above is not an exhaustive treatment of faith. You do agree with this, correct, that this is not the end all of what faith is?
The end result of faith, the evidence of salvation is belief in the facts of the Gospel, something a person cannot believe merely by self, it is not innate so your attempt to make conclusions is incomplete brother. Faith did not secure salvation, it is not the cause, and this is what you are implying in your argument.
The argument you present is redundant and goes nowhere. In FGT true converting faith is denied as it need no evidence, there is no behavior needed (fruit). Is this also your definition of saving faith brother? It is the FGT position, it must also be yours, so while you attempt to explain faith theologically, what it actually looks like in reality according to your belief falls well short of Scripture support.
Faith is the gift of God; Romans 12:3, Php 1:29, comes from God not self, not of mental ability to believe in facts; Romans 10:17, and is the same power that raised the Christ of God from the dead, Eph.1:19.
The Reformers also believe this concerning faith so your above is only a part of the story, not the whole story brother. This is the point I am making - it, faith, is not mere mental assent as Sandeman who is claimed by FGT and Hodges among others teach. This is what you are attempting to make faith out to be yourself. Do a search on mental assent or faith for the complete story, and look at the Scriptures provided (below) and what it says true faith looks like, what it does, the Gospels true effect on a person as well in the Scriptures. These are all what faith is, not just mere assent to facts as you are arguing.
Bob Wilkins notes the first two aspects of faith early in the paragraph when he states: "Everlasting Life is a free gift (which the Lord Jesus fully paid for by his death on the cross for our sins) which is received by faith alone in Christ alone, apart from works of any kind." Wilkins continues… "The Free Grace position has its first characteristic that simply by believing in Jesus a person has eternal life. It advocates for faith alone, in Christ alone, nothing added, and no strings attached."Click to expand...
I take it you also adhere to this scenario as well? Yes? No?
Also, we must as handling the Word of God truthfully, 2 Timothy 2:15 add what true belief looks like in its complete package. Your position is so wrought in Finneyism and Sandemanianism/decisional salvation that you cannot see its error. John 1:13, Romans 9:16, James 1:18 each refute this false teaching brother. You are mitigating the Gospel down into a truncated version and caricature, basing its cause on man.
The position of FGT thus far and in your argument is taking John 20:31 to an extreme, divorcing it from context. John 8:30 and following is the proper context brother of true faith.
Do you stop at John 8:30 and claim those that believed as eternally saved? You have to because thus far this is what you are arguing. These men made claim of mental assent as believers. Were they saved brother Deacon? Do tell. Use your system in that passage, show me and others how they are saved in its context please. FGT claims these as saved, apparently using its system to do so.
The charge of Sandemanianism fails. Wilkins agrees with the Reformed theologians here.Click to expand...
(part 1) -
(part 2)
Sproul notes additionally:
Justification by faith alone has been opposed by Roman Catholicism, which says that a combination of our faith and good works provides for our justification. One impetus for this understanding has been Rome’s fear that the doctrine of justification by faith alone would encourage people to live immoral lives. Rome fears that this doctrine might lead some to think that the casual acceptance of Jesus without any change in one’s life is the kind of faith that justifies.
Isn't this what the Internet Theologian fears, that Free Grace believers revel in their sin.Click to expand...
It seems the Roman Catholic Church and Internet Theologian have the same fear; that people will believe, will know that Christ alone, without works rescued sinners from their hopeless state and gave them new life.
John MacArthur in his book Hard to Believe, states our assurance of faith comes not from our belief but from our works. He too fears that grace will lead to lawlessness. He once again places the burden of righteousness on us rather than on Christ.
"Don't believe anyone who says it's easy to become a Christian. Salvation for sinners cost God His own Son; it cost God's Son His life, and it'll cost you the same thing. Salvation isn't the result of an intellectual exercise. It comes from a life lived in obedience and service to Christ as revealed in the Scripture; it is the fruit of actions not intentions…" Mac Arthur, Hard to Believe p. 93
Free Grace Theology does not teach believers are free to sin: it teaches that our assurance rests not on our actions but on our belief.Click to expand...
For the believer, sin has a cost.
"The Bible also teaches that the Christian, being indwelt by the Holy Spirit, is possessed with a new standard of what is good or bad. His conduct either grieves, or does not grieve, the Holy Spirit. There is limitless suffering of heart in the path of the child of od who sins lawlessly. ... It is concluded, the, that the true child of God cannot sin lawlessly without great suffering and that suffering is due to the presence of the divine seed or nature in the Christian, which could never be experienced by unregenerate men who have not the Spirit (Jude1:19), constitutes a ground of distinction between those who are the children of God and those who are not. Lewis Sperry Chafer, He that is Spiritual
I've been rather forceful confronting Internet Theologian, his posts have been many and his charges against Free Grace Theology have been severe. I'd have hoped that he would have learned a bit from the words of those that started the thread that some understanding could be obtained. ... there is some hope.
Enough
RobClick to expand...
Brother with all due respect you do not even see this. In the above you are arguing for Sandeman and a false system all the while thinking you are denying it. It is plain that FGT adheres to his teachings, they come out and document this, and you are spending much time denying the official stance! Goodness sake brother.
I have asked pertinent questions above, on Sandeman, faith, and John 8 for you to examine and for you to use your system of beliefs to show us your stance on John 8:30.
Thanks for your time brother! -
Internet Theologian said: ↑easy-believism. . .is based in Sandemanianism. I assume you are aware of Robert Sandeman and his heresy.Click to expand...Iconoclast said: ↑I found this;
http://www.christiandoctrine.com/christian-doctrine/heresy-and-error/1337-sandemanianism "The Origin of Sandemanianism"Click to expand...
I also found something!
Some poster named 'preacher4truth' over at the doghouse, barking about that obscure sect too.
Imagine that!
The-DoG-House - Sandemanianism
preacher4truth said:Is this the heresy that is propagated with the easy-believism gospel? . . .Has anyone been acquainted with Sandemanianism?Click to expand... -
Revmitchell Well-Known MemberSite SupporterJerome said: ↑I also found something!
Some poster named 'preacher4truth' over at the doghouse, barking about that obscure sect too.
Imagine that!
The-DoG-House - SandemanianismClick to expand... -
Now, here is some more from Sproul that will help crystallize his belief concerning faith, and that it is not simple mental assent as presented by brother Deacon:
...in chapter 14 the confession lays out the key prerequisite for salvation. The title of the chapter is 'Of Saving Faith' and it begins with these words: 'The grace of faith, whereby the elect are enabled to believe to the saving of their souls, is the work of the Spirit of Christ in their hearts...' Take careful note of those first four words. The confession does not simply speak of faith. Rather it calls our attention to 'the the grace of faith'. It calls faith a grace because it comes to us as a gift of God - something we cannot buy, earn, or merit in any way. The usual definition for grace that we have in theology is 'God's unmerited or undeserved favor'. So faith is a manifestation of the grace of God. Simply put, those who are saved are enabled or empowered to believe to the end of the salvation of their souls. Faith is not seen as an accomplishment of the human spirit. IN fact, faith is not something that is naturally exercised by a fallen human being...Augustine was saying that God makes His requirements of people who are fallen, who have a corrupt nature, who lack the ability to create faith in their own hearts. Before Adam fell, he had the ability to respond in faith to God without the supernatural assistance of grace. But after the fall , according to Augustine, man lacks the ability, so grace is an absolute prerequisite for us to meet the requirements. The theology of the Westminster Confession is Augustinian throughout. When it addresses saving faith, it is echoing the teaching if Augustine and the church throughout the ages, saying that the faith that is required to please God is not something that we can conjure up out of our own strength. If we are to have saving faith, God the Holy Spirit must change the disposition of our hearts.' 'What is Faith?' - R. C. Sproul
We can see here that faith is not what Deacon has described in his brief quotation. It does not represent the big picture of what Sproul and the Reformed believe, nor is it an accurate description of biblical faith by any means.
The quotes were somewhat taken out of context and make it appear as if Sproul and Reformed doctrine agrees with not only FGT concerning faith, but the views of Sandeman as well. This is simply not the case.
If a person has saving faith all the glory goes to God and not to the person in some exercise of mental assent. -
LoL @ exercise of mental assent. Now THAT is a strawman. Faith is a trust/belief/surrender of one's will....a yielding of one's will.
Edited for IT. I'm still waking up! -
JonShaff said: ↑LoL @ exercise of mental accent. Now THAT is a strawman. Faith is a trust/belief/surrender of one's will....a yielding of one's will.Click to expand...
Hey bro they are the ones arguing that is what faith is (FGT, Deacon, others) not me sir! And definitely not Scripture!
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