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Justification by Faith Alone

It’s obvious you do not listen to people. Then again!!!
I dont really, especially people who dont know what they talking about. In the Matters of Justification/Salvation Faith serves the purpose of directing us to its object, which is Christ. When scripture says we are Justified by Faith, we can just as well say we are Justified by Christ.

Faith believes we are Justified by the blood of Christ Rom 5:9 thats why it says in Rom 3:25

Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God

Faith in His Blood that Justified us, gave us remission of sins.

If you dont believe that, your faith is in vain, its not in His Blood
 
Thank you for your thoughtful response and for sharing your perspective on justification by grace through faith. I appreciate your passion for Scripture and your view that the Bible tells one unified story of God’s redemptive plan from beginning to end. I’m glad we agree on this! Let me address your points and questions, seeking to clarify where our interpretations align or differ, always aiming to honor the truth of God’s Word.

I do apologize for the extra time my response has taken, I am rather unfocused this last week (wars can be distracting) and I apologize for it as it brought to bear on our conversation. I willl attempt to be more focused and provide faster response times in the future.
Good Morning!

Do not fret, yes wars can be distracting, being retired military. Anytime my brothers and sisters in arms are sent to harms way can be disturbing. Not to mention the possible repercussions, so I understand.

Also it is better if you take your time. I rushed on one past as I had to leave and I am not sure it was clear.

Grace is always given I hope all is well
You cite John 1:11–12, emphasizing that “as many as have received him” are given the right to become children of God. However, your rendering of the text deviates from Scripture. The accurate translation is:

“He came to his own, and his own people did not receive him. But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God, who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.” (John 1:11–13, ESV)

This passage shows that we “receive” Christ through faith, a core Reformed doctrine of salvation by grace through faith. Crucially, verse 13 clarifies that this faith is not of human origin—“not of the will of man, but of God.” Even the “natural children” (Israel) are not God’s children until adopted into the New Covenant through faith, which is provided by God alone. This underscores that faith is a divine gift, not a human initiative (Ephesians 2:8).
This is one of the major points of frustration for me in this chatroom. I keep being told my rendering deviates from scripture, then being told I somehow believe my faith came from human origin, or it came within me, or I of my own will just magically produced my own faith.

This is not true, and I have stated it multiple times i do not think I ever said it to you so this is not saying you have not listened, I do not even know if you have read my words to other members and I would be a fool to assume you have. Just sharing my frustration

I believe Jesus when he said it is the work of God we believe in the one he sent (john 6) ie its not my work’

Here in John 1, I was just trying to show the difference between who in israel (his own) were given the power or right to become children of God and who did not

The ones who recieved him.

John makes it clear. We are not made children by blood. My parents being saved or children of God does not make me a child of God

Not by the will of the flesh. I can not will myself to heaven for one I am guilty, and unqualified to be a child of God. And second, nothing I can do can make be qualified, I can not force God to save me or forgive my sins, the thought we can do this is foolish, Yet sadly it does appear many think this,, (think of the jews in Jesus day, namely the pharisee who pumped his chest thinking he was qualified)

Not by the will of man, My parents can not save me, and I can not will my loved ones become children of God

In all these, I may be able to hope. But I have o power to do anything

I think of a few examples

Adam and Eve - God came and clothes them with the death of an animal (the first type of christ)
Abraham, God told him to go, And God would give him a son and this son would have an heir which would be the source of blessing for all the families of the earth, Abraham believed God And God accounted it to him as righteousness
Noah - God said I am going to flood the earth. But I will save you and your family, Noah had faith and the rest is history

If we go to Heb 11 we see all the witnesses of faith, and they all have 1 thing in common

They were given a promise
They trusted God. So recieved that promise
In faith, they did what God asks (please notice not all of them did it perfectly)

We also see the example Jesus himself gave in John 3. The bronze serpent (a type of christ)

If you remember the story.

1. The people rebelled against God.

Numbers 21: And the people spoke against God and against Moses: “Why have you brought us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? For there is no food and no water, and our soul loathes this worthless bread.”

Sounds a lot like mankind, God gave us everything we need, but we rebelled against God.

2. God responded

So the Lord sent fiery serpents among the people, and they bit the people; and many of the people of Israel died. ...

Just like their rebellion caused a reaction from God our rebellion caused a response from God. Adam died. As did all of mankind, for as in adam all die.. then of course, we sin in rebellion also. And the poison of sin has us in deaths grip, as we are dead. And unless we are made alive (born again) we will remain dead for all eternity

3. The people come to moses, and confess they have sinned and God is punishing them for that sin.

7 Therefore the people came to Moses, and said, “We have sinned, for we have spoken against the Lord and against you; pray to the Lord that He take away the serpents from us.” So Moses prayed for the people.

Notice, the people confessed willingly. But this was not enough. God could have just forgiven them, but something had to be done to complete the picture or type of Christ. Because the wage of sin is death. And we can not just confess our sin and think we get away with it Also, we can not pay for our sin, and make up for it in a way it can be forgiven, a price had to be paid.

4. So what is Gods answer?

8 Then the Lord said to Moses, “Make a fiery serpent, and set it on a pole; and it shall be that everyone who is bitten, when he looks at it, shall live.” 9. ;So Moses made a bronze serpent, and put it on a pole;

A few things to see here

1. Moses (a type of christ) must work. He must provide a means of salvation for the people.
2. This offering, or this sacrifice or work, was given to everyone who is there (remember, they represent us, we all have sinned and fall short. The world. Not just a few select people
3. The people had to respond (whenever they were bit, if they looked, they would live)
4. Where did this response come from? From the same source that Adam and Eve, Abraham, Noah, and all people of all ages The response came from God, He is the one to whome proved himself trustworthy He is the one to whom time and time and time again all throughout scripture shows he can be trusted. The greek word for faith is a confident faith, a faith that trusts a faith that is based in evidence (not blind faith) It did not come from the will of the flesh. The people did not will themselves to be saved because they looked. You could say as with all the great witnesses of faith, it was not their work that saved them (looking) it was their faith that saved them,, The action taken was the result of faith Noah spent 100 years building the ark. It was not all that works that saved him, He was saved the moment he trusted God. It was his faith in a God who is trustworthy, that caused him to do the work (the old saying we are saved by grace through faith alone, but faith is never alone comes to mind, and this answers James

5. What was the final result - God offered salvation to everyone there (the world) did everyone get saved?

and so it was, if a serpent had bitten anyone, when he looked at the bronze serpent, he lived.

So it was. Although Gods offer was to everyone only those who had faith were saved. The others. Suffered their just condemnation and died (a picture of the second death)

Remember, Jesus used this OT type of christ nicodemus would have completely understood, to explain to nicodemus a spiritual truth of how one is born again.

Just as moses lifted the serpent (so everyone may be saved) Jesus would also be lifted. So everyone may be saved (the world)

Just like these children of Israel were given the death penalty when they were bitten by a snake (a punishment sent from God) we are all dead in sin, which was jesus point, we must be born again

And just like the children of Israel who all suffered their same death sentence, they had to respond to the work of God in order to be saved.

It’s not so much looking to the cross that saved us, it was our faith. Again, faith causes action.

Remember jesus made this comment, he who believes is not condemned he who does not believe is condemned already

Those who believed looked, and they were saved
Those who did not trust God, (did not believe) died of the poison of the serpent that bit them

The tax collector was saved the moment he had faith, but he acted. He fell to his knees and called out

The Pharisee was offered the same salvation (jesus) sadly. He did not think he needed saved, so instead of looking to the cross in faith. He pumped his chest thinking he saved himself (the same fate of those who did not look to the serpent, because they did nto believe or trust God, or moses for that sake.

I want to keep us focused on one topic at a time. So I will break my answers and answer one question or comment at a time, in hopes it will keep us focused.

I am on vacation at my daughter’s house visiting grandkids and helping them out with an issue so I may be slow myself. But I will respond to all you said. May God bless you
 
@Eternally-Grateful

This is my observation over several years on various forums when it comes to the subject of which comes first; faith or regeneration. It is the same with Open Theists, Unitarians, or any persuasion of prevenient grace---enough grace given to all without exception because of the work of Christ in his life and on the cross----so that all without exception now have the ability to accept or reject the gift of salvation offered. Christ died and paid for the sins of everyone (and at the same time didn't actually pay for them). And that anything less than this, i.e. God electing only some for salvation, those he knew intimately before creation and predestined them to come to Christ, and gave them to him, and those are the ones he died for, taking their sins upon himself----is unjust. Therefore, in that reasoning, God would not do such a thing.

The reasoning and the doctrine then is based on, not Scripture alone as it should be, but on an emotional response to an idea.

But this is what I observe in the insistence and unmovable position of faith being the instrument of the new birth, rather than the other way around. If one were to acknowledge that the Bible does indeed say that the gospel is foolishness to the natural (unregenerated) man, and he cannot understand it; that it does indeed say that only those God grants to come to Christ can come and will come; if it does indeed say that God makes a person alive while they are dead in their sins; if it does indeed say that no one can see or enter the kingdom of heaven unless they are born again; if all those things are acknowledged as true, the Bible is saying that the new birth is what brings faith, and not faith that brings the new birth.

And if that is true, if that one thing is true that regeneration precedes faith chronologically, meaning the one (faith) comes with regeneration but it does not come before regeneration and result in God's then regenerating, then grace is not prevenient, but effectual. Doing exactly what God sends it to do----save who it is meant by God to save, placing them in the Son. And since not all are saved, then the solution to that mystery can only lie in the fact that God is doing the choosing of where to apply the work of Jesus.

In order for that not to be true, great effort has been made by "theologians" of the prevenient grace camp, taught, and believed, to restrict all possible usages of certain words to the one that fits man's choosing whether or not to accept salvation.

"Salvation" in Eph 2:8 becomes the gift, not faith. "Grace" in the same passage is applied to only salvation and faith is the human cooperation (choice of accepting or rejecting).

"Gift" is restricted to one meaning and application, and the position of choice, in order to support prevenient grace over effectual grace, becomes something offered, and reasoning that ignores a doctrine of God at this particularly point, is defined on a human level only, as in, "If someone offers you a gift, you have a choice of whether or not to accept it".

"Foreknew" as seen in Romans is restricted to only the one meaning, even though it has another meaning when speaking of God's foreknowing in many, if not all, lexicons and concordances and in the Greek language. As a support to prevenient grace, it only and always means God seeing who will accept the gift.

"World" is restricted to its one usage, "every person in the world without exception", even though it has more than one usage and context and a sound doctrine of God, the full counsel of God on the subject (Scripture interpreting Scripture), is what determines its usage.

"Believe" and "repent" always become "choose to believe and choose to repent".

So it is always effectual grace and intentional atonement (rather than universal atonement) and God's freedom of will over man's will to do as he pleases for his purposes, that prevenient grace is arguing against. If faith is the instrument of regeneration by God, then man and his will come first, and he gets to keep his free will to choose his own eternal destiny. Pride intact.
 
You cite John 3:16–18, emphasizing “whoever believes” is not condemned, while those who do not believe are “condemned already.” but your rendering again paraphrases the text, so here’s the accurate translation:

John 3:16-18 "For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him. Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only Son of God." (ESV)
I see you use the ESV, This about the same rendering I use in the NKJV
I agree that unbelief is the proximate cause of final condemnation,
It says whoever does not believe is condemned already because they do not believe. Where do you see the word proximate?
as it rejects the only remedy for sin—Christ’s righteousness (John 16:8–9; Romans 10:3). However, your view seems to imply that salvation is a universal offer that humans accept through their own initiative.
Its right there in the txt.

He was not sent to judge the world. But that the world might be saved through him

In the greek, it shows something that is a possibility. It is not an assurance. If he died for only the elect. Then the word in greek would be written different.
Scripture however, teaches that the gospel is preached to all (Matthew 28:19), but it is effectual only for the elect, whom God draws (John 6:37: “All that the Father gives me will come to me”). John 6:44 reinforces this: “No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws them.” Faith is the means by which God applies justification, not the cause of it (Romans 5:9; Galatians 2:16).
Many are called few are chosen. I thought of this right way.

But again, To see example usedi n the passage, see my last response and the bronze serpent

John 6 also says it is the will of the father that whoever sees and believes will be given life. Same in john 5. And again, the picture of the bronze serpent is in agreement, Moses did the work that could have saved everyone but only those who trusted God were saved,

Again, He who believes is not condemned, He who has not believed is condemned already because they do not believe,
You liken faith to looking at the bronze serpent (Numbers 21:8–9; John 3:14–15), suggesting that “anyone who seeks out this healing” by looking in faith is saved.
I think it is more than this, as I said, it is because they had faith. Their faith was the means of receiving Gods provision of salvation. As apposed to those who did not believe, who rejected Gods provision
I agree that this analogy beautifully illustrates salvation through Christ. However, it underscores God’s initiative: God provided the serpent, commanded the Israelites to look, and enabled their response.
Again, I never apposed this idea. We are in agreement here. God is the one who initiated..
Not everyone looked, despite the innate human instinct to survive, because not all were enabled by God’s grace.
Here is were we disagree. God did initiate by grace. Moses even told them, if you get bit this will save you. Look and you will live..

They did not look because they did not believe, Not because God kept them from looking.
Similarly, faith in Christ is a gift (Philippians 1:29), given to the elect, who then look to Him in faith and live. If faith were a human initiative, why didn’t everyone look at the serpent, especially after witnessing its healing effects? This shows that even the act of “looking” is a response rooted in divine grace, not a self-generated act.
Because they did not believe

The serpent was there. They did not believe, they were too proud. As romans 1 says, God did not keep trueth from them, They hid the truth in their heart.

Another thing, they did not think they would die. Or they thought they could Dave themselves. The jews rejected christ because they did not think they needed him. If you do not think you re in danger you will not react.

There is multiple reasons they did not look.

The thought God told moses to lift this up and tell everyone that this could save them, yet God kept people from looking I can not wrap my mind around a loving God would not do this

Will break this up again
 
You didn’t directly address John 6:28–29, but I raised it in my previous post, and it’s worth revisiting. When the crowd asks, “What must we do, to be doing the works of God?” Jesus replies, “This is the work of God, that you believe in him whom he has sent” (John 6:28–29, ESV). If belief were a human initiative, Jesus would have said, “You must believe,” but He attributes faith to God’s work. We know Christ because God reveals Him to us (Matthew 16:16–17), not because we are wiser or make better choices than others. Without divine revelation, we would remain lost (1 Corinthians 2:14).
Once again, I have never said it is human initiative. Since this is the first time you and i have discussed this, i will give you a break.

But please in the future. Understand I do not think it is human initiative, i have stated this so many times, I have lost count. I pray you are different than the other person who refuses to acknowledge this to the point I have had to stop looking at any response she makes to me.
Scripture repeatedly teaches that true knowledge of Christ as the Son of God requires divine revelation. For example, Jesus tells Peter, “This was not revealed to you by flesh and blood, but by my Father in heaven” (Matthew 16:17). Similarly, Paul’s faith came “by revelation from Jesus Christ” (Galatians 1:12; cf. John 6:44–45; 1 Corinthians 2:10–14). This keeps us humble, grounding our faith in God’s initiative, not our effort (1 Corinthians 4:7).
Again, I do not deny this It is God who initiates. it is God who draws. It is God who convicts. it is god who teaches, It is God who did the work (the cross)

I did nothing.

It is the work of God. That I BELIEVE.

I still must believe.

Or I can reject. At which case, i will remain condemned
I’m grateful for your zeal for God’s Word. However, Scripture teaches that faith is a divine gift, ensuring that salvation is entirely of God’s grace (1 Corinthians 1:30). The gospel is preached to all, but it is effectual only for the elect, whom God draws to Christ (John 6:37). We don’t boast in our faith but praise God for revealing Christ to us (2 Corinthians 4:6). Salvation is by God’s grace, not man’s effort, so that no one may boast (Ephesians 2:9)
It is by Grace through faith

It is not by my effort. I repeat one more time, i do not think I saved myself. And i did not come to faith by My will or by my effort.
You asked:



You ask why unbelievers are judged for lack of faith rather than sin (John 3:18) and whether the Great White Throne judgment (Revelation 20:11–15) is based on works or faith.

Sin is the root cause of condemnation (Romans 3:23; 5:12), incurring God’s wrath (Ephesians 2:3). Unbelief seals final condemnation by rejecting Christ’s righteousness (John 16:8–9; Hebrews 2:3).
Yes, Because the price of sin was paid ion the cross. For everyone. Not just some.

The only thing left is will we recieve him, or will we not recieve him (john 1)
At the Great White Throne, the unsaved are judged “according to their works” (Revelation 20:12), which reflect their lack of saving faith, as true faith produces good works (James 2:17). In Matthew 7:22–23, those boasting of “great works” are rejected for lacking faith in Christ’s righteousness (Romans 10:3).
100%. We agree..

Like I said, we are so close to agreement, it is just a thin line..

Thats why I call you my sister.. we believe we are saved by Grace through faith

In Christ's unfailing love,
Hazelelponi
And mercy, what a great God we have
 
In the greek, it shows something that is a possibility. It is not an assurance. If he died for only the elect. Then the word in greek would be written different.


Οὐ γὰρ ἀπέστειλεν ὁ Θεὸς τὸν Υἱὸν εἰς τὸν κόσμον

  • Οὐ – particle, negation, not
  • γὰρ – particle, for (explanatory conjunction)
  • ἀπέστειλεν – verb, aorist active indicative 3rd person singular of ἀποστέλλω, "he sent"
  • ὁ Θεός – noun, nominative masculine singular, "God" (subject of the verb)
  • τὸν Υἱόν – noun, accusative masculine singular of ὁ υἱός, "the Son" (direct object)
  • εἰς τὸν κόσμον – prepositional phrase:
    • εἰς – preposition, "into"
    • τὸν κόσμον – noun, accusative masculine singular, "the world"
✅ Translation of the phrase: “For God did not send the Son into the world…”


ἵνα κρίνῃ τὸν κόσμον

  • ἵνα – subordinating conjunction, “in order that” / “so that”, introducing a purpose clause
  • κρίνῃ – verb, aorist active subjunctive 3rd person singular of κρίνω, "he might judge"
  • τὸν κόσμον – noun, accusative masculine singular, "the world" (direct object of κρίνῃ)
✅ Purpose clause: “…to judge the world”


ἀλλ᾽ ἵνα σωθῇ ὁ κόσμος δι᾽ αὐτοῦ

  • ἀλλ᾽ – adversative conjunction, contraction of ἀλλά, "but"
  • ἵνα – "in order that" (again, purpose clause)
  • σωθῇ – verb, aorist passive subjunctive 3rd person singular of σῴζω, "he might be saved"
  • ὁ κόσμος – noun, nominative masculine singular, "the world" (subject of σωθῇ)
  • δι᾽ αὐτοῦ – prepositional phrase:
    • δι᾽ – preposition, "through" (form of διά used before a vowel)
    • αὐτοῦ – pronoun, genitive masculine singular, "him" (referring to the Son)
✅ Purpose clause: “…but in order that the world might be saved through him.”


Full Translation (Literal)

“For God did not send the Son into the world to judge the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.”

Theological Implication

  • Two ἵνα clauses (purpose statements) show contrast:
    • Not to condemn, but to save.
  • The aorist subjunctive verbs (κρίνῃ and σωθῇ) express purpose/result.
  • The contrast (ἀλλ᾽) is emphatic and highlights God's saving intention in the sending of the Son.

Is 55: 10-11 "For as the rain and the snow come down from heaven and do not returned there but water the earth, making it bring forth and sprout, giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater, so shall my word be that goes out from my mouth: it shall not return to me empty, but it shall accomplish that which I purpose, and shall succeed in the thing for which I sent it."

The "world" in that passage: Creation.
Romans 8: 19-21 For the creation waits with eager longing for the revealing of the sons of God. For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of him who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to corruption and obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God.


It is assured, not simply a possibility. . How does Christ dying for only the elect make it not an assurance? As it says also in Romans 8: 22-24 For we know the whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of childbirth until now. And not only the creation, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies. For in this hope we were saved. Now hope that is seen is not hope. For who hopes for what he sees?

The "might be" in the John verse is no more "iffy" than is the "hope" in the Romans verse. Both are promises of God.
 
John 3:17 "that the world might be saved through him."
ἵνα σωθῇ ὁ κόσμος

ἵνα---- (in order that) purpose/result

σωθῇ ---aorist passive subjunctive,
3rd singular of σῴζω (to save)

The subjunctive here express the goal or intended result of God sending the Son.
It does not imply failure or doubt.
A more precise rendering in modern English would be "so that the world would be saved through him."

NIV For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.

BSB For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through Him.

NASB For God did not send the Son into he world to judge the world, but that the world should be saved through Him.

ASV For God sent not the Son into the world to judge the world; but that the world should be saved through him,


@Eternally-Grateful
 
Good Morning!

Good evening. I just wanted to give you a heads up, but I'm only about half finished responding to your first post.

I wanted to again apologize for the time, it's just harder doing all this on a phone, I am absolutely going to check out a voice to text app... I can talk SO much faster. I just need a system that can understand me. . lol. I am not sure what kind of human they were understanding when I first tried one. Ha!

At any rate, glad you're having a great vacation with the family and I hope you're getting lots and lots of hugs from the kids!

I'm off to bed soon and I'll finish up the replies in the morning. You take care.


In Christ's love
Hazelelponi
 
@Eternally-Grateful

It is the work of God. That I BELIEVE.

Yeah but its the work of God that causes one to believe.

Ezk 36:27

27 And I will put my spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments, and do them.

He causes them He saves to walk by Faith 2 Cor 5 7

(For we walk by faith, not by sight

Ps 65:4

4 Blessed is the man whom thou choosest, and causest to approach unto thee, that he may dwell in thy courts: we shall be satisfied with the goodness of thy house, even of thy holy temple.

They are caused to approach in Faith

Its Gods work in a man that causes him or her to do of His Good pleasure Phil 2:13

13 For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure.
 
Good evening. I just wanted to give you a heads up, but I'm only about half finished responding to your first post.

I wanted to again apologize for the time, it's just harder doing all this on a phone,
Oh wow. I tried doing this on a phone,I can not imagine, it’s hard enough on an IPAD which I use a lot. When I use my phone, it iss almost impossible to respond to long posts. Will pray you find something better
I am absolutely going to check out a voice to text app... I can talk SO much faster. I just need a system that can understand me. . lol. I am not sure what kind of human they were understanding when I first tried one. Ha!
HA HA!! I have not really tried much, I should learn, My new truck has Alexa. I need ot get with the times.
At any rate, glad you're having a great vacation with the family and I hope you're getting lots and lots of hugs from the kids!

I'm off to bed soon and I'll finish up the replies in the morning. You take care.


In Christ's love
Hazelelponi
Hope you rested well. I am just getting up. Need to get out of bed and get a cup of coffee..
 
@Eternally-Grateful



Yeah but its the work of God that causes one to believe.

Ezk 36:27

27 And I will put my spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments, and do them.

He causes them He saves to walk by Faith 2 Cor 5 7

(For we walk by faith, not by sight

Ps 65:4

4 Blessed is the man whom thou choosest, and causest to approach unto thee, that he may dwell in thy courts: we shall be satisfied with the goodness of thy house, even of thy holy temple.

They are caused to approach in Faith

Its Gods work in a man that causes him or her to do of His Good pleasure Phil 2:13

13 For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure.
Once again, God does not force you

When you claim it is the cause. your claiming the person was not free to decide if they wanted to believe or not.That it was in fact forced on them.

This may work for some people. But it does nto work for me

He gave me the ability to believe, an ability I did not have on my own or I could not bring up on my own. All the same, he empowered me to believe, He did not cause or force me to believe,
 
@Eternally-Grateful



Thats not what I said. I showed how God causes one to believe. Look at the scriptures I showed you, instead of imposing something not stated, thats dishonesty.
God caused

God forced

Prety much meanthe same

If I cause you to do something you would not normally do. I in effect controlled what happened to you.

We could say you were forced to do what you did.
 
God caused

God forced

Prety much meanthe same

If I cause you to do something you would not normally do. I in effect controlled what happened to you.

We could say you were forced to do what you did.
God forbid that he would ever control what happens to his creatures! (Sarcasm, in case there are lurkers who are not familiar with my posts.)
 
Good Morning!

Do not fret, yes wars can be distracting, being retired military. Anytime my brothers and sisters in arms are sent to harms way can be disturbing. Not to mention the possible repercussions, so I understand.


Also it is better if you take your time. I rushed on one past as I had to leave and I am not sure it was clear.


Grace is always given I hope all is well"


Thank you for your kind tone, and your careful effort to go point-by-point. I pray your time with your family is restful and blessed—and it’s good to know you’re taking the time to visit grandkids and help where needed. That’s a ministry all its own. I also want to say I appreciate your step-by-step approach; in a thread like this, where deep truths are being handled, that’s the best way forward.


This is one of the major points of frustration for me in this chatroom. I keep being told my rendering deviates from scripture, then being told I somehow believe my faith came from human origin, or it came within me, or I of my own will just magically produced my own faith.


This is not true, and I have stated it multiple times i do not think I ever said it to you so this is not saying you have not listened, I do not even know if you have read my words to other members and I would be a fool to assume you have. Just sharing my frustration


Let me begin with this:


I do not believe you're denying that faith is a work of God. You’ve quoted John 6 rightly—“This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent”—and I accept your affirmation that your faith is not self-generated. I also appreciate your desire to keep the Gospel central.

That said, my concern (and likely others’) is not what you deny, but how your language tends to functionally obscure God’s role. The way you paraphrase Scripture, omit critical verses, and structure your examples often shifts the emphasis away from divine initiative toward human response. Even if unintended, that pattern misrepresents the Gospel’s nature.

For example: You referenced John 1:12, emphasizing those who “received Him” were given the right to become children of God. That’s true. But your omission of verse 13 is more than incidental:

“...who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.”

Verse 13 is not an afterthought—it is the foundation of verse 12. The right to become children is entirely dependent on divine birth.

“But to all who did receive Him, who believed in His name, He gave the right to become children of God, who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.”

The Greek structure of verse 13 is precise and emphatic in excluding human causation:
  • οἳ οὐκ ἐξ αἱμάτων (not out of bloods)
  • οὐδὲ ἐκ θελήματος σαρκός (nor out of the will of the flesh)
  • οὐδὲ ἐκ θελήματος ἀνδρός (nor out of the will of a man)
  • ἀλλ’ ἐκ Θεοῦ ἐγεννήθησαν (but out of God they were born)
Each clause systematically eliminates every conceivable natural or human avenue for new birth:
  • Lineage (blood),
  • Personal desire or resolve (will of the flesh),
  • External influence or human agency (will of man).
The verb ἐγεννήθησαν (“they were born”) is aorist passive—highlighting that the action is something done to them, not something they performed. This is a grammatical demonstration of monergism.

Daniel Wallace, in Greek Grammar Beyond the Basics, notes that the passive voice here is significant in expressing “divine agency” with no human cooperation. In other words, man contributes nothing to regeneration.

This aligns perfectly with Paul’s teaching elsewhere:
  • Romans 9:16: “So then it depends not on human will or exertion, but on God, who has mercy.”
  • James 1:18: “Of His own will He brought us forth by the word of truth…”
  • 1 Peter 1:3: “He has caused us to be born again…”
  • Ephesians 2:4–5: “But God… made us alive together with Christ… by grace you have been saved.”

In fact, the entire nature of effectual calling rests on this foundation.

Louis Berkhof, in Systematic Theology, writes:

“Effectual calling is that act of God the Father, whereby He effectually calls a person from spiritual death to spiritual life… It does not merely make salvation possible; it accomplishes the very thing it declares” (pp. 466–468).

This isn’t just an invitation—it’s a resurrection.

This is the truth echoed in the threefold denial in John 1:13. Salvation is not by genetics, grit, or good intentions. It is by God’s sovereign grace.

To speak of receiving Christ without emphasizing the divine cause of that receiving is to place the weight on the wrong side of the equation. Your language often suggests the decisive factor lies in the person who chooses, not the God who raises the dead to life.


I believe Jesus when he said it is the work of God we believe in the one he sent (john 6) ie its not my work’


Here in John 1, I was just trying to show the difference between who in israel (his own) were given the power or right to become children of God and who did not


The ones who recieved him.


Okay, but how exactly does Scripture say we receive Christ?

The answer is: by grace through faith.
That faith—Scripture says—is revealed and granted by God.

I mentioned this in the post you're replying to: the recognition of Jesus as the Son of God, Lord, and Savior is not something we produce. It’s something that’s revealed to us by the Father (cf. Matt. 16:17, 1 Cor. 12:3). When that happens—when we truly believe it's really true and Jesus is Lord and Savior—we are saved. That’s what saving faith is: not mere intellectual agreement, but spirit-born trust in the finished work of Christ.

And that’s really it—faith alone in Christ alone. That’s all that is required for our justification. The moment we believe that Jesus lived, died, and rose again on the third day for our salvation, we are united to Him by faith and declared righteous in Him That’s the Gospel. After that, the believer will naturally desire to confess that faith and join with the brethren—but that’s fruit, not the root.


John makes it clear. We are not made children by blood. My parents being saved or children of God does not make me a child of God

Not by the will of the flesh. I can not will myself to heaven for one I am guilty, and unqualified to be a child of God. And second, nothing I can do can make be qualified, I can not force God to save me or forgive my sins, the thought we can do this is foolish, Yet sadly it does appear many think this,, (think of the jews in Jesus day, namely the pharisee who pumped his chest thinking he was qualified)


Not by the will of man, My parents can not save me, and I can not will my loved ones become children of God

Your inclusion of this story was excellent hyperlink. I agree wholeheartedly—the tax collector was justified not by works but by faith. But even here, we should ask: Why did he humble himself while the Pharisee exalted himself?

Jesus tells us in Luke 10:21:

“...You have hidden these things from the wise and understanding and revealed them to little children…”

The difference between the tax collector and the Pharisee is not that one chose better but that one was shown mercy and given humility by grace through His recognition of God.

I think it’s important to remember that when God reveals Himself—truly reveals Himself—it always humbles. Just ask Isaiah, who cried “Woe is me!” (Isaiah 6:5), or Job, who said “Now my eye sees you; therefore I despise myself, and repent in dust and ashes” (Job 42:5–6).

When the Lord grants that kind of sight, it undoes us. And that seeing isn’t something we produce or discover on our own—it’s something given. As Jesus told Peter, “Flesh and blood did not reveal this to you, but my Father who is in heaven” (Matt. 16:17). Or again, “God... has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ” (2 Cor. 4:6).

So the more clearly we see Him, the more clearly we see ourselves—and the more we are humbled. That kind of revelation doesn’t puff us up—it puts us on our faces. And that is a gift, not a badge.
 
In all these, I may be able to hope. But I have o power to do anything

Yes, I know—and this is exactly what I’ve been saying all along, ever since you seemed to try and blur that very point.

I actually carry a twelve-page handout with me—it’s Wayne Grudem’s chapter on sin. That’s my introduction to the Gospel: This is what you are.

It might not be the most popular approach, and I’m not sure it’s the best “intro” anyone’s ever thought of, but in today’s world, most people don’t even recognize their sin. And until they do—until they see the depth of their depravity—they can’t begin to understand the Gospel. We can’t grasp salvation until we see both God rightly and ourselves rightly.

I’m fairly certain the biggest problem with my little handout is that it reminds people they’re not who they’ve convinced themselves they are. But that’s kind of the point, isn’t it?

Sometimes I wonder if anyone else carries around twelve-page handouts on sin in their purse. Probably not. But I do. I’m that woman—the one who decided that if I’m going to be ready for anything, I might as well be ready to look someone in the eye and tell them, gently but clearly, that they have indeed sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.

Because here’s the thing: our biggest problem today is that we no longer recognize sin. And if we can’t see sin, we can’t see anything else clearly either. We think we just need a bit of moral spackle and we’re good to go—straight to heaven, no transformation necessary. Maybe a golf course when we get there, if we’re still not that interested in God.

But that’s not the Gospel. That’s not reality. If you don’t believe you’re sinning against God in action, attitude, and nature—constantly—then the cross doesn’t make any sense. Christ’s death becomes unnecessary in a world where we’ve convinced ourselves we’re already fine.

I'm sure I have digressed at this point, I'm just talkative I guess.

I think of a few examples


Adam and Eve - God came and clothes them with the death of an animal (the first type of christ)

Abraham, God told him to go, And God would give him a son and this son would have an heir which would be the source of blessing for all the families of the earth, Abraham believed God And God accounted it to him as righteousness

Noah - God said I am going to flood the earth. But I will save you and your family, Noah had faith and the rest is history


If we go to Heb 11 we see all the witnesses of faith, and they all have 1 thing in common


They were given a promise

They trusted God. So recieved that promise

In faith, they did what God asks (please notice not all of them did it perfectly)


Your reference to Abraham, Noah, and the Hebrews 11 saints, notes that they “received a promise” and responded. That’s true. But we must not forget: the call came first.

  • God came to Abraham before he believed (Gen. 12:1-4)
  • God warned Noah before he built.
  • The people in Numbers 21 heard the promise before they looked.
Faith was always a response to God’s initiative. As Romans 10:17 says, “Faith comes by hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ”

And the call is not effectual for everyone, but only for those whom God in His sovereign decree elected to salvation.


We also see the example Jesus himself gave in John 3. The bronze serpent (a type of christ)


If you remember the story.

It's a main focus of yours yes, and one I already replied to you concerning. Did you actually read my post before replying?

You know it's fine with me if you wait to respond until you have the time to read my posts and address what I said I'm in no rush. I spend hours responding to just one post in a thread like this, I'm not just hammering out the first thing that comes to mind. I am trying to make certain I'm understanding the points your making and respond to your points clearly and witth Scriptural accuracy.

Its more than a game to me. So please take all the time you would like.

1. The people rebelled against God.

As they are want to do

Eternally Grateful said:

Numbers 21: And the people spoke against God and against Moses: “Why have you brought us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? For there is no food and no water, and our soul loathes this worthless bread.”


Sounds a lot like mankind, God gave us everything we need, but we rebelled against God.


2. God responded


So the Lord sent fiery serpents among the people, and they bit the people; and many of the people of Israel died. ...


Just like their rebellion caused a reaction from God our rebellion caused a response from God. Adam died

Did Adam actually die the second death? That seems unlikely, considering the way God clothed him and sustained him afterward. He was punished, yes—cast out of the garden—but also covered. That doesn't look like final condemnation to me.

Also, I have to push back a little here: you're speaking of God as if He's reacting—like man's rebellion somehow took Him by surprise and forced His hand. But that doesn’t square with the rest of Scripture.

God didn’t just “respond” in the wilderness with serpents because things spiraled out of control. The serpent pole wasn’t Plan B. It was part of the plan all along—a typological image of Christ, lifted up for the healing of those who look to Him in faith (John 3:14–15). That didn’t emerge from chaos; it was decreed. Designed. It preached the Gospel before the cross.

We shouldn’t frame God’s dealings with mankind as if He’s perpetually reacting to our failures. Left to ourselves, of course we fall. But when we fall, it’s not because God lost track—it’s because He withheld restraint for His own sovereign purpose. That’s a hard truth, but a biblical one. Scripture tells us repeatedly that when man plunges into sin, it is often because God has given him over or withheld restraint:

That’s why I personally stay alert when I see even the tiniest bit of restraint lifted. It’s usually not random. It’s sometimes judgment—or sometimes mercy preparing the way for deeper understanding. But either way, it’s not reactionary. It’s intentional and it's to us to learn from it.


. As did all of mankind, for as in adam all die.. then of course, we sin in rebellion also. And the poison of sin has us in deaths grip, as we are dead. And unless we are made alive (born again) we will remain dead for all eternity

You mention that unless we are made alive, “we remain dead for all eternity.” But biblically, the consequence is far more severe than simply “remaining” in a state of death. Scripture doesn’t describe a neutral stagnation—it describes judgment. Those not made alive by the Spirit of God don’t merely stay dead—they are judged and cast into the second death, the lake of fire (Rev. 20:14–15). That’s not just theological terminology; that’s final condemnation.

Our physical death—the first death—is not the end. It functions as a legal threshold, leading into the courtroom of divine judgment. This is precisely why the tree of life was barred from Adam and Eve after the Fall (Gen. 3:22–24): not as a reaction, but as a covenantal consequence. As Kline notes in Kingdom Prologue, God “rejected Adam from the holy realm,” and this banishment was not merely punitive—it was juridical. The exile was part of God's covenantal execution of judgment upon sin .

Kline also helps clarify in his Kingdom Prologue: Genesis Foundations for a Covenantal Worldview that death in Scripture, especially post-Fall, should be understood primarily as covenantal separation from God, not just the cessation of biological life. He writes that “death is not annihilation but separation, exclusion from the divine Presence,” which frames the second death not as simple unconsciousness, but as active, eternal separation under judgment .

That ties directly into the biblical presentation of Adam as a federal head. In Adam, all died—not just biologically, but covenantally (Rom. 5:12–21). His transgression brought legal guilt and spiritual death to his posterity. So in Adam, we are not just dead—we are guilty. And the only escape from that judgment is not resuscitation, but regeneration. We must be born again. As Kline writes, this rebirth is a sovereign act of the Spirit reconstituting us in covenant with the Last Adam, Christ .

So to speak of the lost as simply “remaining dead” is to miss the weight of divine justice. They are not in limbo—they are under wrath. The wages of sin is death (Rom. 6:23), and apart from being raised with Christ by faith, the sinner perishes—not softly, but justly.

3. The people come to moses, and confess they have sinned and God is punishing them for that sin.


7 Therefore the people came to Moses, and said, “We have sinned, for we have spoken against the Lord and against you; pray to the Lord that He take away the serpents from us.” So Moses prayed for the people.


Notice, the people confessed willingly. But this was not enough. God could have just forgiven them, but something had to be done to complete the picture or type of Christ.

Yes, I agree this was a sovereignly decreed typology.

Because the wage of sin is death. And we can not just confess our sin and think we get away with it Also, we can not pay for our sin, and make up for it in a way it can be forgiven, a price had to be paid.

To be fair, creation was created for the Glory of God.

“Bring my sons from afar and my daughters from the end of the earth, everyone who is called by my name, whom I created for my glory, whom I formed and made.”

God declares that He created His people for His glory, which by implication includes the larger context of creation itself. It's not about having sin and some childish notion of "getting away with it", we are to display God's Glory, and He tells us how.

Sin is when we aren't doing that. That's what I am thinking lately, and is how I'm starting to understand it anyway. Wayne Grudem puts it this way (which I have incidentally memorized as it's a good definition) :

“Sin is any failure to conform to the moral law of God in act, attitude, or nature.”
But he adds that the root of sin is really this: not honoring God as God (cf. Rom. 1:21).

However, Berkhof builds on that:

“Sin is a lack of conformity to the moral law of God, either in act, disposition, or state... Sin is rooted in a failure to glorify God in the heart.”

And that’s exactly what it is. Sin is not merely the breaking of a rule—it’s the failure to reflect God’s glory, to live for His honor, to walk in worship, gratitude, and obedience.

In other words, sin is a betrayal of our very purpose.

The stars above fulfill their purpose—they shine and move at His command, and in doing so, they give Him glory (Nehemiah 9:6; Psalm 148:3). That is their worship.

But man did not glorify God. He rebelled—and that rebellion was not just an act, but a refusal to be what he was created to be. And in his fallen state, he cannot do otherwise. The natural man is incapable of fulfilling the very reason for his existence: to glorify God and enjoy Him forever.

4. So what is Gods answer?


8 Then the Lord said to Moses, “Make a fiery serpent, and set it on a pole; and it shall be that everyone who is bitten, when he looks at it, shall live.” 9. ;So Moses made a bronze serpent, and put it on a pole;


A few things to see here


1. Moses (a type of christ) must work. He must provide a means of salvation for the people.

2. This offering, or this sacrifice or work, was given to everyone who is there (remember, they represent us, we all have sinned and fall short. The world. Not just a few select people

3. The people had to respond (whenever they were bit, if they looked, they would live)


So what is God’s answer? Or rather—what was His plan from the very beginning? The answer is Christ. Not as a rescue mission prompted by man’s fall, but as the eternal purpose for which all things were made. “All things were created through Him and for Him” (Col. 1:16), and He was “foreknown before the foundation of the world” (1 Peter 1:20). Even when God called His creation “very good” (Gen. 1:31), the Hebrew ṭôb me’ōd—“abundantly good”—speaks not only to natural order, but to the fittingness of creation to accomplish His redemptive design in Christ.

As Meredith Kline wrote, “The divine purpose for creation was ultimately eschatological—it was forward-looking to the revelation of God’s glory through a consummate kingdom, with Christ as the last Adam ruling in it” (Kingdom Prologue, p. 30). This is why I hold to a Christ-centered hermeneutic. He is not a reaction to sin, but the eternal reason for creation itself

Prayerfully, this finds you and your family well. I do want to apologize if any part of my response was unclear—I truly do strive to be thoughtful and precise in how I express these things. And thank you for your patience; this reply took me several hours to write, but I hope it reflects the care and respect I have for the weight of these truths and for our conversation.

To Him who loved us and gave Himself for us,
to the One who calls dead hearts to life,
who opens blind eyes and gives sight to the soul—
be all glory, and honor, and praise,
now and forever. Amen.

In Christ,
Hazelelponi

@Eternally-Grateful
 
Good Morning!




Thank you for your kind tone, and your careful effort to go point-by-point. I pray your time with your family is restful and blessed—and it’s good to know you’re taking the time to visit grandkids and help where needed. That’s a ministry all its own. I also want to say I appreciate your step-by-step approach; in a thread like this, where deep truths are being handled, that’s the best way forward.
Odd that I was not not notified that you posted this. I fell on it by accident. I do not want to respond quickly or without careful thought. So I will put this someplace in which I can respond in kind. And then post back in this thread.. Please do not think I am ignoring you. As I may respond to simpler things in other threads or simpler comments in here before I post a response to this and your next response to me..

It is a blessed time with kids,, Hope to go to the creek today and swim, but storms are in the forcast.. We will see.

God bless you sister. And thank you for trying to understand.
 
God caused

God forced

Prety much meanthe same

If I cause you to do something you would not normally do. I in effect controlled what happened to you.

We could say you were forced to do what you did.
Yeah God caused ! read Ezk 36:27

27 And I will put my spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments, and do them.
 
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Yeah God caused ! Cant you read Ezk 36:27

27 And I will put my spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments, and do them.
Cause walk in his statutes.

Not cause to believe and recieve him

Did God cause Jonah to go to Ninivah?

How?

Did he force him?
 
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