Posted on 05/31/2017 1:41:09 PM PDT by ealgeone
Question: "Can a Christian lose salvation?"
Answer: First, the term Christian must be defined. A Christian is not a person who has said a prayer or walked down an aisle or been raised in a Christian family. While each of these things can be a part of the Christian experience, they are not what makes a Christian. A Christian is a person who has fully trusted in Jesus Christ as the only Savior and therefore possesses the Holy Spirit (John 3:16; Acts 16:31; Ephesians 2:89).
So, with this definition in mind, can a Christian lose salvation? Its a crucially important question. Perhaps the best way to answer it is to examine what the Bible says occurs at salvation and to study what losing salvation would entail:
A Christian is a new creation. Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come! (2 Corinthians 5:17). A Christian is not simply an improved version of a person; a Christian is an entirely new creature. He is in Christ. For a Christian to lose salvation, the new creation would have to be destroyed.
A Christian is redeemed. For you know that it was not with perishable things such as silver or gold that you were redeemed from the empty way of life handed down to you from your forefathers, but with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect (1 Peter 1:1819). The word redeemed refers to a purchase being made, a price being paid. We were purchased at the cost of Christs death. For a Christian to lose salvation, God Himself would have to revoke His purchase of the individual for whom He paid with the precious blood of Christ.
A Christian is justified. Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ (Romans 5:1). To justify is to declare righteous. All those who receive Jesus as Savior are declared righteous by God. For a Christian to lose salvation, God would have to go back on His Word and un-declare what He had previously declared. Those absolved of guilt would have to be tried again and found guilty. God would have to reverse the sentence handed down from the divine bench.
A Christian is promised eternal life. For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life (John 3:16). Eternal life is the promise of spending forever in heaven with God. God promises, Believe and you will have eternal life. For a Christian to lose salvation, eternal life would have to be redefined. The Christian is promised to live forever. Does eternal not mean eternal?
A Christian is marked by God and sealed by the Spirit. You also were included in Christ when you heard the message of truth, the gospel of your salvation. When you believed, you were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit, who is a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance until the redemption of those who are Gods possessionto the praise of his glory (Ephesians 1:1314). At the moment of faith, the new Christian is marked and sealed with the Spirit, who was promised to act as a deposit to guarantee the heavenly inheritance. The end result is that Gods glory is praised. For a Christian to lose salvation, God would have to erase the mark, withdraw the Spirit, cancel the deposit, break His promise, revoke the guarantee, keep the inheritance, forego the praise, and lessen His glory.
A Christian is guaranteed glorification. Those he predestined, he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified (Romans 8:30). According to Romans 5:1, justification is ours at the moment of faith. According to Romans 8:30, glorification comes with justification. All those whom God justifies are promised to be glorified. This promise will be fulfilled when Christians receive their perfect resurrection bodies in heaven. If a Christian can lose salvation, then Romans 8:30 is in error, because God could not guarantee glorification for all those whom He predestines, calls, and justifies.
A Christian cannot lose salvation. Most, if not all, of what the Bible says happens to us when we receive Christ would be invalidated if salvation could be lost. Salvation is the gift of God, and Gods gifts are irrevocable (Romans 11:29). A Christian cannot be un-newly created. The redeemed cannot be unpurchased. Eternal life cannot be temporary. God cannot renege on His Word. Scripture says that God cannot lie (Titus 1:2).
Two common objections to the belief that a Christian cannot lose salvation concern these experiential issues: 1) What about Christians who live in a sinful, unrepentant lifestyle? 2) What about Christians who reject the faith and deny Christ? The problem with these objections is the assumption that everyone who calls himself a Christian has actually been born again. The Bible declares that a true Christian will not live a state of continual, unrepentant sin (1 John 3:6). The Bible also says that anyone who departs the faith is demonstrating that he was never truly a Christian (1 John 2:19). He may have been religious, he may have put on a good show, but he was never born again by the power of God. By their fruit you will recognize them (Matthew 7:16). The redeemed of God belong to him who was raised from the dead, in order that we might bear fruit for God (Romans 7:4).
Nothing can separate a child of God from the Fathers love (Romans 8:3839). Nothing can remove a Christian from Gods hand (John 10:2829). God guarantees eternal life and maintains the salvation He has given us. The Good Shepherd searches for the lost sheep, and, when he finds it, he joyfully puts it on his shoulders and goes home (Luke 15:56). The lamb is found, and the Shepherd gladly bears the burden; our Lord takes full responsibility for bringing the lost one safely home.
Jude 2425 further emphasizes the goodness and faithfulness of our Savior: To Him who is able to keep you from falling and to present you before his glorious presence without fault and with great joyto the only God our Savior be glory, majesty, power and authority, through Jesus Christ our Lord, before all ages, now and forevermore! Amen.
I ask the question as unfettered free will is believed to be by some necessary to love and worship God, and without it, we are just automatons. So, to those who believe this, I would like to know if they believe that same free will exists in heaven, and if not, how do they reconcile it.
Well said!
ET; you'd best phone home; for the Book your organization put together long ago states otherwise!
It would appear that certain religions do not read the Prodigal Son story in the Bible they claim to have given to mankind. OR, if read to them, it is twisted to produce a different message than what The Author of the story was teaching.
Mixed multitudes. Goats and sheep. Wheat and tares. Four type of soil. Time shows the true nature of each, but it does not change it.
“Pauls letter to the Corinthians did not make being carnal a normative condition. There is no such category as carnal Christian.
Paul recognized carnality as a condition that actually existed in the Church.
It is never Gid’s ideal, but it is a reality for some believers.
Paul never describes these believers as losing their salvation.
There are the consequences of loss of rewards and a wasted life.
“Do you think God will allow His true children to live in sin? to live a carnal life? to go on sinning, without correcting it?”
Exactly. God chastens only his sons. They remain sons.
“And even in the case of more egregious sin Paul was addressing in Corinth, it was unthinkable that this could continue to go on.”
And yet it did so - that Paul took the next step, allowing the believer to be turned over to Satan with the hope of restoration of fellowship with the church and an obedient life in the future.
“So, yes, even Christians can commit very serious sins. But true, born-again believers can not continue in sin.”
Yet some do.
“Because it is possible for people to be convinced they are Christian, but actually be on their way to hell.”
Of course they can. This isn’t germane to the discussion of whether believers can live apart from active fellowship with God.
“Assurance is based in the evidences of being a true believer.”
Assurance is based on the sufficiency of Christ’s total payment of sin.
” It is never based merely on having said a prayer to receive Christ.”
Obviously.
“The test is having fruit, transformation, obedience, continuing in the faith, and an awareness of the indwelling Holy Spirit.”
Bearing fruit via the new Life of Christ inside is normative. It does not rule out times of living apart from God due to sin. Nor is bearing fruit equally in every season normative.
“So I return to my original point. A Christian is not someone who has merely, at some time or another, made some sort of decision for Christ”
Again, obvious, but different point.
“Because it is possible for people to be convinced they are Christian, but actually be on their way to hell.”
You seem to be arguing accurately, we’re we discussing the basis of salvation dear FRiend. In this thread, we are discussing the blessed assurance of a true believing Christian.
“People who profess faith in Christ but remain in sin, bear no fruit to God, demonstrate no grief over sin, but stubborn persistence in sin, are headed for hell.”
You can only see the outside, but not whether the Life of Christ is now present in the heart. You can guess and form a judgmental opinion, but god knows and we do not.
“Those who think they are just carnal Christians who will just miss out on some rewards but will escape hell because of the fire at the bema judgement need to realize they are LOST and still need to repent and believe the Gospel.”
Perhaps yes. Perhaps no. God knows the truth. We do not.
Best
I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God so that you may know that you have eternal life |
You are as witty as ever.
See 1 Cor 5; you are contradicting what Paul taught those Christians at Corinth.
I think they are still working on the amount of angels that can dance on a pin head problem.
Empowerment of Catholicism relies on that error quite heavily, for those convinced of that deceit are ever relying on the Org torenew them to GOD and never get it that faith in Christ Jesus has freed them from the Nicolaitan hierarchical enslavement.
My question is more germane to the question than angels dancing on the heads of pins, for if we are predestined, then none of the elect can lose their salvation; but if free will is necessary to love God in this life (which would allow for people to lose their salvation), why is it not in the next?
If you are planning on being in the sorting at The Great White Throne you are not yet born from above. Stop fiddling around and confess The Lord Jesus died for you in particular and shut up long enough for GOD to birth you into HIS family, so you will not be attending the GWT for sorting but as family witness to the Righteous Judgment of GOD.
and AMEN.
Beautifully explained! Thanks so much for joining the discussion. Selah!
No, the concept of losing one's salvation is a circular fallacy. Since God sees the end, why would he "save" someone he knows he's going to "unsave" later? What was accomplished? - nothing. The person was never saved.
The verse in Hebrews makes salvation a one shot deal. You blow it and you’re done for good. Can’t be saved again. Do you agree with that?
The verse in Matthew 24 is about the Tribulation period and is not applicable to someone who is saved by grace through faith in the church age. That verse has been misapplied by some religious institutions to hang a person’s salvation over their head.
12 Peter 2 may not even mean actual believers, but those who have been exposed to the Truth of the gospel and choose to reject it.
2 Timothy 2 Peter denied Christ and what was Jesus’ response?
James 5 is a tough one and could make a case for your point. I’d be interested in other’s take on it.
Colossians 1 doesn’t say the person wasn’t saved but that they will not be able to stand before God holy, blameless, and above reproach. IOW, standing before the judgment seat of Christ, they will hang their heads in shame for not living as they should have.
Galatians 4 talks about falling back into legalism. Doesn’t say the person isn’t saved any more.
Revelation 2 was written to the church body, not the individual believer.
Here is wisdom!
Interesting because I don't believe in free will.
We are either slaves to sin or slaves to God.
No one is a completely free and independent entity but God alone.
That said, even supposing that I had totally free will in the matter of getting saved and staying saved, I would gladly surrender that right to God once I got saved so as to not ever risk taking that free will and choosing against Him.
I would be and am happy to have Him seal me and protect me from myself, from my own stubborn nature and tendency to rebel and if possible, to do something so stupid as to turn my back on Him at the cost of my own soul.
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