What is destroyed is the body.
The body is the Temple, which the Holy Spirit indwells.
The Holy Spirit seals the believer until the day of redemption (Eph.4:30).
The believer can 'grieve' or 'quench' the Holy Spirit,(relationship issues) but never lose the Holy Spirit, since the Holy Spirit Himself has placed His own seal upon the believer until that individual is redeemed.
See also Rom.8:38-39 and Jude 24-25 for the role of the Father and Son in eternal security of the believer as well.
[ It would be the RCC view of Righteousness that would have the individual's righteousness 'fading' if he did not partake of the Sacraments. ]
And the Scriptures, as well. We first receive our righteousness at Baptism, as Paul writes in Romans 6. The Eucharist is "our daily bread", necessary for eternal life, according to Jesus Himself. The sacraments are visible instruments that manifest our relationship with Christ.
No, there is nothing in any 'sacrament' that adds grace to the believer.
The Lord's supper is a remembrance of what the Lord did on the Cross, until He returns (1Cor.11)
Amen!
"Being confident of this very thing, that he which hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ" -- Philippians 1:6
I disagree. Considering how Paul speaks here and throughout, destroying the body is of little consequence to him. What sort of threat would that be to a person causing hate and discontent within the community by telling them that they will die and now join Christ in heaven???
The Holy Spirit seals the believer until the day of redemption (Eph.4:30).
A seal is a mark, a "tatoo", something that says we are 'God's property'. It is not something that prevents you from falling away. Practically speaking, people who have been "sealed" have fallen away and are no longer Christian, so this reality proves that interpretation incorrect. Perhaps you should continue reading Ephesians, about 6 or 7 verses later...
The believer can 'grieve' or 'quench' the Holy Spirit,(relationship issues) but never lose the Holy Spirit, since the Holy Spirit Himself has placed His own seal upon the believer until that individual is redeemed
Scripture, please. This does not jive with real life, either. People who are family can disown each other and end their relationship.
See also Rom.8:38-39 and Jude 24-25 for the role of the Father and Son in eternal security of the believer as well.
I disagree with your interpretation. WE can fall away. Romans tells us that GOD will not abandon us, nor can anyone ELSE force us to leave God. WE can, though.
No, there is nothing in any 'sacrament' that adds grace to the believer.
Where is your evidence? Sorry, you are not authoritative enough in my mind to take you at your word when you make such declarations, especially without any proof or Scriptural evidence whatsoever...
Regards