I will look at it here in a few when I get some time. I do not just want to glance over it.. I will get back to you
I will make one correction.
I believe we are dead in sin. and we can not be made alive until that penalty is removed.
Ok, yes, you have said that.
Hence justification (made right with God) must precede regeneration.
Yes, you have said that.
That is my issue Not so much that we must call out for it.. I have witnessed people who while Our heads were bowed receive Christ. and I saw an amazing change in them in the days weeks and years ahead. so I know it was sincere.
What does sincerity have to do with being saved? If salvation is based on any one's own sincerity, we are all lost forever. Only the Spirit of God can be that sincere and constant.
makesends said:
The problem is in perception, then. You say you called out to him and so were saved. You assume your act of calling out was seminal to the salvation.
Did the tax collector call out?
The question is not whether he called out—of course he did. The question is whether his calling out produced his salvation, or was he already regenerated and saved prior to calling out.
(Just in case someone asks: This story can be looked at as something other than how you are using it, but that is beside the point. I'm trying to answer the point you mean to make.)
makesends said:
I say your will was changed prior to calling out.
Actually I became bankrupt (poor in spirit) I was desperate. I was so afraid of what eternity held for me that I was at a point I did not think I had any hope. I was like the last person alive from an overturned boat in the middle of the ocean. with 60 foot waves crashing all around me, And no land in site.
Did you ever ask how you knew enough to be desperate enough to call out for help? I'm saying, that desperation was
from being made aware, woken up, transformed. Your particular aware
experience of the situation is far from the only fact, and it is necessarily untrustworthy as the way things happened.
and when the savior came, and offered to save me, I called out. Yes lord. Save me, I want your grace gift. Because without it, i will die.
makesends said:
It is not your calling out that saved you.
No, It was God that saved me
I had no joy when I called out. or fellowship. Like the tax collector I was lost. No hope. Bankrupt.
Like I said before, your experience of what happened is necessarily NOT definitive.
The savior offered me life. and I received it in hop and faith. Because I had no place else to turn
Where did your hope and faith come from? Are you starting to get my point? I'm going to skip to the bottom.
Actually it was your wording.
You said we are not saved by a willed act.. By definition. it must then be a caused act. or unwilled act..
I was thinking of this this morning while I was trying to wake up. If I remember right, you think you are born again, THEN you will to act in faith and recieve salvation is this not correct?
So we both believe our sins were forgiven by a willed act.
Its just you think you were born again first. then understood enough to call out in faith?
I think and act of God helped me understand, and in faith acted and then was born again
do you believe they happen simultaneously as many calvinists do?
again, It is the words. not the thesis.
this is a logical fallacy in itself.
Is that a new charge of fallacy? See below.
"from my point of view"
again, if i already have it, I do not need to ask for it.
this just does not make any sense to me..
and I guess answers my question above.
Your asking for fellowship. Not asking for justification (forgiveness of sin)
This is still in the steps of trying to get your 'fallacy' charge resolved. I'm not trying yet, to get you to agree to my thesis. This is not arguing the question of the OP nor even any tangent from the OP. It is all for the purpose of trying to get me to see that you are correct that what I said was fallacious, or to get you to see that what I said did logically follow.
SO: Given my assumptions, I still think that my assertion logically follows.
SO: Again,
GIVEN MY ASSUMPTIONS, do you still think that what I said was logically fallacious? If you do, please restate for me just what it is that I claim, that you were saying was a fallacy.
I'm not asking if you agree with my thesis. I'm not asking if you agree with anything I said. I'm asking if what I said does or does not follow what I assumed in getting there.
Take a look again at what you said was a fallacy, back days ago. If you still see that fallacy, even given my doctrinal assumptions, say so. If not, say no, that it was not a fallacious reasoning, given my assumptions.
If we need to, I am happy to point out the assumptions from which I draw my conclusions, but they are very many, though there are some core assumptions that may do the job for you.