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Post by gomer on Sept 2, 2022 4:07:38 GMT -8
One is doing one of two things......one is either 1) obeying God by serving "obedience unto righteousness" or one is 2) disobeying God by serving "sin unto death". There is no other option and that is why the NT puts obedience BEFORE salvation for nowhere ever in the NT gospel did God save disobedient, rebellious people. Again each person is either obeying or disobeying, no other option. You claim obedience is not required for salvation. That can only mean disobedience must be required for salvation which again is not found in the NT gospel of Christ for obedience is the reason people are lost not saved.....the NT teaches "obedience unto righteousness", NOT disobedience unto righteousness. Yes, one * IS* doing one of two things.......one is either trying to “ MAKE” Himself “ Worthy” Of Eternal Life by his or her Performance ( works) , or one realizes that he was “ MADE” Worthy by the Blood Of The Lamb, i.e. ,The Finished Work Of The Cross—- the difference is Heaven or Hell.... Turns out that “ Narrow” Gate is REALLY Narrow.....make sure you are on the Right Path......when you can sing the Hymn “ Nothing But The Blood” and actually “MEAN” it—— you will know that you are on that Right Path....God Bless.... The hymn says nothing about the blood of Christ unconditionally cleansing away sins of those living is disobedience/rebellion to God's will.
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Post by bloodbought1953 on Sept 2, 2022 22:28:55 GMT -8
Yes, I think all on this forum believes God saves.
Of course, any “ Christian” will say “Jesus Saves! “ ....
Unfortunately, 90 % Of The Christian World wont Leave it at that ......They instead day “ Yeah, sure— Jesus Saves——. * BUT*...... and where that “ BUT” ends, Legalism begins......People just feel Compelled to ADD to the Simple Gospel Of 1 Cor15:1-4 , which was something that Paul warned about in Galatians....
Yes, it’s “ Jesus Saves,* BUT* once you know THAT ya gotta keep the Commandments.....or live the Life....or tithe.....or go to church.....or make sure you repent of All Of your Sins Before you die.....or refrain from any “ Willful” Sins.......blah, blah , blah, blah......
It’s all just saying that even though Jesus might be “ Essential” for Salvation —- He Just is not “ Adequate” for Salvation.....those with this attitude are in reality trying to make themselves a “ Co- Savior”——- God won’t have it.......
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Post by bloodbought1953 on Sept 2, 2022 22:45:44 GMT -8
The issue is who does God save and why?
God saves ALL that will ” come to Him”.......wanna get Saved? All ya gotta do is ASK! ( ROM 10:13) ........who Asks? Only those with Contrite ( Repentant) hearts....Who has the Contrite Heart.....Those who have been blessed with “ eyes to see and ears to hear”........one must “ see and hear” that they are Lost and Hopeless Sinners that MUST have a Savior to make into Heaven.....You must not only HEAR the Gospel, you gotta have your “Heart Opened” to the reception of it—— you gotta be like “ Lydia, the Seller Of Purple” in Acts......it was said that God “ opened her heart” to believe the Gospel.....I Don’t Know why it would be different for anybody else....
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Post by bloodbought1953 on Sept 2, 2022 22:56:54 GMT -8
Since God has instructed man on how to be saved, then those who obey those instructions are in that sense saving themselves....Paul said we have "cleansed ourselves" (2 Cor 7:1). Peter said 'see you have purified your souls' (1 Pet 1). Obviously men do not cleanse/purify themselves by themselves apart from God, but by choosing to obey God's instructions on how to be cleansed/purified men are in that sense cleansing/purifying themselves.
You can “ obey” yourself to Hell, if you think your “ obedience” is what Saves you....Obedience us great—- God likes it and He will bless you for it.......He just won't SAVE you because of it.....The Bible could not be clearer that we are Saved by Grace Through Faith.....
There is only “ONE” Obedience that we must concern ourselves with, this side of the Cross ....That would be “ THE OBEDIENCE TO THE GOSPEL” that Paul warns about in Rom10:16—- you can the most “moral “, the best Commandment keeper, and the “ holiest” man on your block—— it you don’t have that obedience to the Gospel, ( 1Cor15;1-4) you are Lost.....
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Post by bloodbought1953 on Sept 2, 2022 23:10:39 GMT -8
The hymn says nothing about the blood of Christ unconditionally cleansing away sins of those living is disobedience/rebellion to God's will.
Purchase a Dictionary......go to the “ N” section.....find out what “ NOTHING” means.....
I can assure you that if you are Trusting in the Blood Of Jesus to Save you, you are DOING “God’s Will”........ The Disciples asked Jesus what the “Will Of The Father” was ——- Jesus told them..... “ The WILL Of the Father is to Believe in the One that He sent”...... Do THAT and God will put His Spirit in you and *HE* will go to work on that “ rebellion and disobedience”....He will concentrate on “ The Inside Of the Cup” as he Transforms you into the Image Of His Son.....something Only HE can do......You finish your Christian Walk the way that you started it—- by FAITH —-and God will take care of that “ Transformation” part thank only HE can do..... “ The JUST shall LIVE by Faith”....
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Post by resurrection33 on Sept 5, 2022 11:16:59 GMT -8
DEFINING LEGALISM by David McClister ( my emp) One of the more interesting issues in modern biblical scholarship is the attempt to attain a better understanding of the Jews of the first century, the Jews with whom Jesus and Paul dealt. In spite of the fact that these Jews are mentioned often in the New Testament, the fact is that we just do not know all that much about them. This is particularly true about the Jewish group that is most prominent in the New Testament, the Pharisees. They themselves left no historical documents which explain or describe how they understood their religion. It is true that their “descendants” (after the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD) left lots of documents behind (which eventually became the Mishnah, the Tosefta, and the Talmud), but very little of those documents describe the beliefs and practices of the Jews who lived in the first century. In fact, the pedagogical descendants of the Pharisees did not even call themselves Pharisees. In spite of this shortage of actual historical documents, it has long been assumed that the Pharisees were legalists. But there are two very important questions that go along with this. First, just exactly how do we know that the Pharisees were legalists? [We will leave this matter alone for now; discussing it would take us far from the point I am wishing to make.] The second question is even more important: just what is legalism in the first place? This question turns out to be difficult to answer. Legalism seems to be like a poem – no one can seem to define it, but everyone thinks they know it when they see it. However, it may surprise you to know that the English word “legalism” itself was not coined until 1645. Even more importantly, there is no Hebrew or Greek word in the Bible that means “legalism.” This latter fact is seldom appreciated. In all of the debates that Paul had with Judaizing teachers, in all the responses he had to their teachings, not once did he ever call them “legalists.” Why not? Because of the simple reason that every Jew – including Jesus, Paul, the Pharisees, and the Judaizers – believed that a person’s works, his deeds, his obedience to God, was without doubt part of a right relationship with God. Within Judaism, that was never at issue. No Jew in that day and age debated whether or not “works” were part of being right with God. Everyone agreed that they were.It was only after Martin Luther came up with his doctrine of “faith only” (which he, mistakenly, attributed to the apostle Paul) that the modern idea of “legalism” was born. Ever since that time, it has been common to refer to people who emphasize obedience to God in deeds (works) which are demanded by God’s word as “legalists.” But, as I pointed out above, in the days of Jesus and the apostles, whether or not people should actually obey God with deeds of righteousness was never an issue. One of the implications of this fact is that it is not accurate (it is, specifically, anachronistic) to describe Paul’s debate with the Judaizers as a debate over legalism. It simply was not part of the problem. They didn’t even have a word for it!In spite of the non-biblical foundation of the term, the word “legalist” is still thrown around quite liberally in religious discussions. Protestant evangelicals routinely refer to Roman Catholics as legalists. Liberal evangelicals routinely refer to conservative evangelicals as legalists. Some folks in denominational churches have called members of the Lord’s church “legalists,” and even within our fellowship I have heard some Christians refer to other Christians as legalists. In each of these scenarios, the term “legalist” has been applied simply because someone was emphasizing that we ought to be doing what God says we should do, to the chagrin of someone else. Someone might say that legalism is the idea that a person can be right with God simply on the basis of obeying God’s “rules.” Usually, this is said in some kind of context where faith is being presented as the only way to be right with God in the gospel. The legalist, therefore, is supposedly the person who believes that faith (“only”; defined as a mental activity) is not enough to save a person, but that such a person must also do certain things in order to be right with God. However, note this conversation: “They [in this context, Jews] said to Him, ‘What shall we do, so that we may work the works of God?’ Jesus answered and said to them, ‘This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent’” (John 6.28-29). Unless I have seriously misunderstood this passage, Jesus said that having faith is doing what God requires (“working the works of God”). Faith is, if you will, one of God’s “rules.” So is the person who believes in God being a legalist for doing so? I hardly think that’s what people who use the term “legalist” would say. So what is legalism? Is legalism a matter of being “too strict” about God’s demands? If so, where in the Bible is the list of things about which we should be strict and the things we can be lax about? Who decides when someone is being too strict? Or is legalism a failure to talk enough about the internal qualities a Christian must have, and talking too much about external obedience? If so, where in the Bible is the passage that tells me how much emphasis on external good deeds is too much? How can I measure when I have not emphasized the internal requirements of God “enough”? Am I a legalist simply because I don’t say it to another’s satisfaction? The fact is that both a right heart and good deeds are required before God. “I, the Lord, search the heart, I test the mind, even to give to each man according to his ways, according to the results of his deeds” (Jer 17.10). Or, is legalism the idea that “external” works, by themselves, will earn a person enough merit to get to heaven? I have to admit, I have never (in the thousands of pages of theological literature I have read in my lifetime) seen it defined that way, and I don’t believe I have ever met anyone who actually believes that. If no one defines it this way and no one believes it when stated that way, then the term “legalist” is nothing other than a straw-man, a caricature that has no correspondence to a real person or an actual doctrine.One modern scholar has put it this way: “…the term only has meaning within the context of a prior decision as to the relationship between faith and human response. … In Christian theology, the meaning of legalism varies with the soteriology of the individual user and his or her tradition” (K. Yinger, “Defining Legalism” Andrews University Seminary Studies 46 (2008) 91-108; at 96-97). Let’s put that into common English: the term “legalism” is so imprecise that it means nothing. It means whatever the person who is using the term thinks it means, or wants it to mean. But that’s not how communication is accomplished. We communicate when we both use words that we understand in the same way. When someone uses a word (like “legalism”) in a way that they alone define, then they are not actually communicating anything.Very often, I suspect that the charge of legalism, when it is hurled at us by denominational folks, simply means “you think that a person has to do something to be right with God, something more than just believing in Jesus.” In other words, “legalism” often means that I do not believe in the denominational doctrine of “faith only.” Even when Christians accuse each other of being legalists, the term turns out to be empty. Christians are sometimes accused (by other Christians) of legalism who are doing nothing other than being conscientious about obedience, just more so than the person who charges them with legalism. So the charge of legalism thus simply means “you are paying more attention to that particular aspect of obedience than I do.” To put it plainly, when someone says “you’re a legalist,” all it really means is “you do not conform to my idea of how Christianity saves us.” I suppose, then, that I’m a legalist. Whatever that means. focusmagazine.org/defining-legalism.php God gave us some rules to follow to keep us out of trouble. Some people call this "legalism."
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Post by bloodbought1953 on Sept 5, 2022 16:05:11 GMT -8
God gave us some rules to follow to keep us out of trouble. Some people call this "legalism."
“ Following the Rules” is Great! Every Rule that God gave us is for OUR OWN Benefit——A wise man will strive to obtain God’s blessings by being obedient to His Laws.......If a person makes the mistake of thinking that his “ Law- Keeping” Performance is what “ GETS” him Saved, and also is what “ KEEPS” him Saved —— * THAT” is where “ Following the rules” becomes Legalism......Those types are the ones that “ Fall From Grace”.....Lets hope that this sad description of a Confused Bible Reader is not tantamount to Damnation....
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Post by gomer on Sept 6, 2022 5:40:20 GMT -8
DEFINING LEGALISM by David McClister ( my emp) One of the more interesting issues in modern biblical scholarship is the attempt to attain a better understanding of the Jews of the first century, the Jews with whom Jesus and Paul dealt. In spite of the fact that these Jews are mentioned often in the New Testament, the fact is that we just do not know all that much about them. This is particularly true about the Jewish group that is most prominent in the New Testament, the Pharisees. They themselves left no historical documents which explain or describe how they understood their religion. It is true that their “descendants” (after the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD) left lots of documents behind (which eventually became the Mishnah, the Tosefta, and the Talmud), but very little of those documents describe the beliefs and practices of the Jews who lived in the first century. In fact, the pedagogical descendants of the Pharisees did not even call themselves Pharisees. In spite of this shortage of actual historical documents, it has long been assumed that the Pharisees were legalists. But there are two very important questions that go along with this. First, just exactly how do we know that the Pharisees were legalists? [We will leave this matter alone for now; discussing it would take us far from the point I am wishing to make.] The second question is even more important: just what is legalism in the first place? This question turns out to be difficult to answer. Legalism seems to be like a poem – no one can seem to define it, but everyone thinks they know it when they see it. However, it may surprise you to know that the English word “legalism” itself was not coined until 1645. Even more importantly, there is no Hebrew or Greek word in the Bible that means “legalism.” This latter fact is seldom appreciated. In all of the debates that Paul had with Judaizing teachers, in all the responses he had to their teachings, not once did he ever call them “legalists.” Why not? Because of the simple reason that every Jew – including Jesus, Paul, the Pharisees, and the Judaizers – believed that a person’s works, his deeds, his obedience to God, was without doubt part of a right relationship with God. Within Judaism, that was never at issue. No Jew in that day and age debated whether or not “works” were part of being right with God. Everyone agreed that they were.It was only after Martin Luther came up with his doctrine of “faith only” (which he, mistakenly, attributed to the apostle Paul) that the modern idea of “legalism” was born. Ever since that time, it has been common to refer to people who emphasize obedience to God in deeds (works) which are demanded by God’s word as “legalists.” But, as I pointed out above, in the days of Jesus and the apostles, whether or not people should actually obey God with deeds of righteousness was never an issue. One of the implications of this fact is that it is not accurate (it is, specifically, anachronistic) to describe Paul’s debate with the Judaizers as a debate over legalism. It simply was not part of the problem. They didn’t even have a word for it!In spite of the non-biblical foundation of the term, the word “legalist” is still thrown around quite liberally in religious discussions. Protestant evangelicals routinely refer to Roman Catholics as legalists. Liberal evangelicals routinely refer to conservative evangelicals as legalists. Some folks in denominational churches have called members of the Lord’s church “legalists,” and even within our fellowship I have heard some Christians refer to other Christians as legalists. In each of these scenarios, the term “legalist” has been applied simply because someone was emphasizing that we ought to be doing what God says we should do, to the chagrin of someone else. Someone might say that legalism is the idea that a person can be right with God simply on the basis of obeying God’s “rules.” Usually, this is said in some kind of context where faith is being presented as the only way to be right with God in the gospel. The legalist, therefore, is supposedly the person who believes that faith (“only”; defined as a mental activity) is not enough to save a person, but that such a person must also do certain things in order to be right with God. However, note this conversation: “They [in this context, Jews] said to Him, ‘What shall we do, so that we may work the works of God?’ Jesus answered and said to them, ‘This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent’” (John 6.28-29). Unless I have seriously misunderstood this passage, Jesus said that having faith is doing what God requires (“working the works of God”). Faith is, if you will, one of God’s “rules.” So is the person who believes in God being a legalist for doing so? I hardly think that’s what people who use the term “legalist” would say. So what is legalism? Is legalism a matter of being “too strict” about God’s demands? If so, where in the Bible is the list of things about which we should be strict and the things we can be lax about? Who decides when someone is being too strict? Or is legalism a failure to talk enough about the internal qualities a Christian must have, and talking too much about external obedience? If so, where in the Bible is the passage that tells me how much emphasis on external good deeds is too much? How can I measure when I have not emphasized the internal requirements of God “enough”? Am I a legalist simply because I don’t say it to another’s satisfaction? The fact is that both a right heart and good deeds are required before God. “I, the Lord, search the heart, I test the mind, even to give to each man according to his ways, according to the results of his deeds” (Jer 17.10). Or, is legalism the idea that “external” works, by themselves, will earn a person enough merit to get to heaven? I have to admit, I have never (in the thousands of pages of theological literature I have read in my lifetime) seen it defined that way, and I don’t believe I have ever met anyone who actually believes that. If no one defines it this way and no one believes it when stated that way, then the term “legalist” is nothing other than a straw-man, a caricature that has no correspondence to a real person or an actual doctrine.One modern scholar has put it this way: “…the term only has meaning within the context of a prior decision as to the relationship between faith and human response. … In Christian theology, the meaning of legalism varies with the soteriology of the individual user and his or her tradition” (K. Yinger, “Defining Legalism” Andrews University Seminary Studies 46 (2008) 91-108; at 96-97). Let’s put that into common English: the term “legalism” is so imprecise that it means nothing. It means whatever the person who is using the term thinks it means, or wants it to mean. But that’s not how communication is accomplished. We communicate when we both use words that we understand in the same way. When someone uses a word (like “legalism”) in a way that they alone define, then they are not actually communicating anything.Very often, I suspect that the charge of legalism, when it is hurled at us by denominational folks, simply means “you think that a person has to do something to be right with God, something more than just believing in Jesus.” In other words, “legalism” often means that I do not believe in the denominational doctrine of “faith only.” Even when Christians accuse each other of being legalists, the term turns out to be empty. Christians are sometimes accused (by other Christians) of legalism who are doing nothing other than being conscientious about obedience, just more so than the person who charges them with legalism. So the charge of legalism thus simply means “you are paying more attention to that particular aspect of obedience than I do.” To put it plainly, when someone says “you’re a legalist,” all it really means is “you do not conform to my idea of how Christianity saves us.” I suppose, then, that I’m a legalist. Whatever that means. focusmagazine.org/defining-legalism.php God gave us some rules to follow to keep us out of trouble. Some people call this "legalism." Yes, some people call obedience legalism but the Bible calls obedience to God righteousness...."obedience unto righteousness" (Rom 6:16).....salvation is impossible apart from obedience. Law breaking has not saved anyone.
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Post by gomer on Sept 6, 2022 5:45:59 GMT -8
The hymn says nothing about the blood of Christ unconditionally cleansing away sins of those living is disobedience/rebellion to God's will. Purchase a Dictionary......go to the “ N” section.....find out what “ NOTHING” means..... I can assure you that if you are Trusting in the Blood Of Jesus to Save you, you are DOING “God’s Will”........ The Disciples asked Jesus what the “Will Of The Father” was ——- Jesus told them..... “ The WILL Of the Father is to Believe in the One that He sent”...... Do THAT and God will put His Spirit in you and *HE* will go to work on that “ rebellion and disobedience”....He will concentrate on “ The Inside Of the Cup” as he Transforms you into the Image Of His Son.....something Only HE can do......You finish your Christian Walk the way that you started it—- by FAITH —-and God will take care of that “ Transformation” part thank only HE can do..... “ The JUST shall LIVE by Faith”.... Does "nothing" eliminate grace? Faith? Repentance? Obedience? "Nothing" does not eliminate any of these things because apart from these things the blood of Christ does not save.
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Post by gomer on Sept 6, 2022 5:54:09 GMT -8
Since God has instructed man on how to be saved, then those who obey those instructions are in that sense saving themselves....Paul said we have "cleansed ourselves" (2 Cor 7:1). Peter said 'see you have purified your souls' (1 Pet 1). Obviously men do not cleanse/purify themselves by themselves apart from God, but by choosing to obey God's instructions on how to be cleansed/purified men are in that sense cleansing/purifying themselves. You can “ obey” yourself to Hell, if you think your “ obedience” is what Saves you....Obedience us great—- God likes it and He will bless you for it.......He just won't SAVE you because of it.....The Bible could not be clearer that we are Saved by Grace Through Faith..... There is only “ONE” Obedience that we must concern ourselves with, this side of the Cross ....That would be “ THE OBEDIENCE TO THE GOSPEL” that Paul warns about in Rom10:16—- you can the most “moral “, the best Commandment keeper, and the “ holiest” man on your block—— it you don’t have that obedience to the Gospel, ( 1Cor15;1-4) you are Lost..... There are numerous verses in the Bible that speak to the fact obedience saves, Rom 5:16-18; Acts 2:38; Mark 16:16; John 3:16; 2 Thess 1:8 are just a few. Man is saved by grace through faith and faith itself is obedience...Jn 3:36 "believeth" is set in contrast to the one who "obeyeth not" for NT belief is not just an assent of the mind but belief is obeying what Christ says (Lk 6:36). People disobey their way to hell.
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Post by gomer on Sept 6, 2022 6:01:56 GMT -8
The issue is who does God save and why? God saves ALL that will ” come to Him”.......wanna get Saved? All ya gotta do is ASK! ( ROM 10:13) ........who Asks? Only those with Contrite ( Repentant) hearts....Who has the Contrite Heart.....Those who have been blessed with “ eyes to see and ears to hear”........one must “ see and hear” that they are Lost and Hopeless Sinners that MUST have a Savior to make into Heaven.....You must not only HEAR the Gospel, you gotta have your “Heart Opened” to the reception of it—— you gotta be like “ Lydia, the Seller Of Purple” in Acts......it was said that God “ opened her heart” to believe the Gospel.....I Don’t Know why it would be different for anybody else.... To be saved one must hear the gospel (Rom 10:17) which teaches man of his sin and the need to do something about that sin. Hearing then leads one to have faith in the gospel and faith leads one to do something about his sin by repenting (Lk 13) confessing Christ (Mt 10:32-33) and submit to water baptism where the blood of Christ washes away those sins. Rom 10:14-16 how can one call on the name of the Lord (do what the Lord says in repenting confessing, be baptized) unless he believes, how can he believe unless he hear, how can one hear unless they that preach be sent but all are not saved for all "have not obeyed the gospel".
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Post by bloodbought1953 on Sept 7, 2022 1:40:49 GMT -8
Law breaking has not saved Anyone
Truer words were never spoken......but it is also true that “ Law Keeping” never Saved anyone either.....that's because nobody can do it....may I suggest you go out and get some Grace that will cover your “ Law Breaking”, because you break the Laws Of God every hour of every day......wanna talk about the “ Sins Of Omission?”
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Post by bloodbought1953 on Sept 7, 2022 1:45:34 GMT -8
salvation is impossible apart from obedience
The Bible talks about “ The Obedience to the GOSPEL”.........concern yourself with “ THAT” one or the rest of your obedience will be a waste of time
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Post by bloodbought1953 on Sept 7, 2022 2:40:51 GMT -8
Does "nothing" eliminate grace? Faith? Repentance? Obedience? "Nothing" does not eliminate any of these things because apart from these things the blood of Christ does not save.
“ Without the Shedding Of Blood, there is NO FORGIVENESS of Sins ! ” All those things that you mentioned—- Grace, Faith, etc, —- as Great and as Important as they are , they would never have even come into play had not Jesus Shed His Blood on the Cross ...
** BECAUSE** Christ Shed His Blood and took that Blood and sprinkled it atop the Heavenly Mercy Seat that resides in Heaven.....NOW Faith actually Means something and those that are Blessed with it can obtain the Grace of God That Saves them ...It was the Shed Blood Of Jesus plus NOTHING that set everything in motion as far as the Salvation Of man was concerned.....
Jesus did not have to go to the Cross......He could have called down thousands of Angels to take Him from the Garden Of Gethsemane the night He was captured and He could have returned to Heaven without one word of apology... Jesus did NOT have to die for us and we surely did not Deserve it! It was a testimony of His Great Love for us that put Him on that Cross and kept Him there...
No Cross meant no Sacrificial Blood....That meant that No Blood that would be applied to the Heavenly Mercy Seat .....That meant that God would still remember our Sins .....Because Of what Jesus did, God cannot See our Sins underneath that Mercy Seat Without first seeing the Shed Blood Of Jesus ....That Blood is what backs up the Salvation of every of man that has Faith.....Without That Blood ,nothing else would matter....that explains the Importance and the Truth Of “ NOTHING BUT THE BLOOD of JESUS”. When it comes to Salvation....
It’s gonna be a mighty interesting Day for you when you tell God that His Son’s Blood does not Save....good luck with that blasphemy !
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Post by gomer on Sept 7, 2022 4:59:04 GMT -8
Does "nothing" eliminate grace? Faith? Repentance? Obedience? "Nothing" does not eliminate any of these things because apart from these things the blood of Christ does not save. “ Without the Shedding Of Blood, there is NO FORGIVENESS of Sins ! ” All those things that you mentioned—- Grace, Faith, etc, —- as Great and as Important as they are , they would never have even come into play had not Jesus Shed His Blood on the Cross ... ** BECAUSE** Christ Shed His Blood and took that Blood and sprinkled it atop the Heavenly Mercy Seat that resides in Heaven.....NOW Faith actually Means something and those that are Blessed with it can obtain the Grace of God That Saves them ...It was the Shed Blood Of Jesus plus NOTHING that set everything in motion as far as the Salvation Of man was concerned..... Jesus did not have to go to the Cross......He could have called down thousands of Angels to take Him from the Garden Of Gethsemane the night He was captured and He could have returned to Heaven without one word of apology... Jesus did NOT have to die for us and we surely did not Deserve it! It was a testimony of His Great Love for us that put Him on that Cross and kept Him there... No Cross meant no Sacrificial Blood....That meant that No Blood that would be applied to the Heavenly Mercy Seat .....That meant that God would still remember our Sins .....Because Of what Jesus did, God cannot See our Sins underneath that Mercy Seat Without first seeing the Shed Blood Of Jesus ....That Blood is what backs up the Salvation of every of man that has Faith.....Without That Blood ,nothing else would matter....that explains the Importance and the Truth Of “ NOTHING BUT THE BLOOD of JESUS”. When it comes to Salvation.... It’s gonna be a mighty interesting Day for you when you tell God that His Son’s Blood does not Save....good luck with that blasphemy ! Heb 2:9 Christ shed His blood for all men yet all men will not be saved for all men will not obey Christ, Heb 5:9. Therefore the blood of Christ does not save those who will not obey Christ.
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