Tong2020 said:
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Now, for the sake of argument, making that parable to support your view, consider the following implications, among others.
1. That God is one who after have granted forgiveness, will take it back.
2. That one’s forgiveness of sins will be taken back when one sins.
3. That one’s forgiveness of sins by God isn’t absolute and that God remembers one’s sins even after having forgiven them.
Those are only a few. What can you say about those?
Oh, I really don't care about the osas argument and whether or not one can lose the gift of salvation. I believe what I believe about it and you believe what you believe about it. What's important is that we both agree that you must remain in believing in order to be saved when Jesus comes back. I don't even care that you think that is accomplished in a different way than how I think it's accomplished. What matters is that we agree that only BELIEVERS will go into the kingdom when Christ comes back, not unbelievers who used to believe.
But anyway, just for fun....
1. As you know, I believe you lose the forgiveness of sin you have while a believer if you go back to unbelief. Christ's completed, but ongoing ministry of intercession (Hebrews 7:25) only applies to the person who is trusting in it, not the person who doesn't trust in it.
2. No, not taken back when one sins. Taken back when one goes back to unbelief. All sins are covered for the
believer,
not for the unbeliever.
3. Forgiveness of sin is absolute, as long as the gospel message remains in your heart. Guilt is reinstated if/when the believer goes back to unbelief. Because he no longer has the ministry of Christ to prevent sin guilt from exposing him to the wrath of the coming judgment.
<<<Oh, I really don't care about the osas argument and whether or not one can lose the gift of salvation.>>>
Then why all the many post under this thread arguing against the truth that one is ever safe in Christ Jesus?
<<<What's important is that we both agree that you must remain in believing in order to be saved when Jesus comes back.>>>
I haven’t agreed to that.
<<<What matters is that we agree that only BELIEVERS will go into the kingdom when Christ comes back, not unbelievers who used to believe.>>>
Yes, I agree that only believers will go to heaven.
I am not among those who hold the idea of true believers who later become unbelievers. What I hold to is that one is either a true believer or not.
<<<But anyway, just for fun....
1. As you know, I believe you lose the forgiveness of sin you have while a believer if you go back to unbelief. Christ's completed, but ongoing ministry of intercession (Hebrews 7:25) only applies to the person who is trusting in it, not the person who doesn't trust in it.>>>
Why suddenly just for fun? Well,...
1. That God is one who after have granted forgiveness, will take it back.
What you said there does not refute such implication that result from your misuse of the passage under consideration in our discussion here. By what you make out of the passage, God took back what forgiveness He have granted to the servant. So, if you will, please address that, perhaps by showing us here how that is not what the passage makes of God considering what you make of the passage that it supports your idea about one giving up the forgiveness of his sins.
<<<2. No, not taken back when one sins. Taken back when one goes back to unbelief. All sins are covered for the
believer,
not for the unbeliever.>>>
2. That one’s forgiveness of sins will be taken back when one sins.
But that is what you make out of the passage, that the servant’s forgiveness of his debts by his master, was revoked when he sinned against the other servant. Do you now take back your position? If so, that’s good. And so, it’s clear then that there is a misuse of that passage.
<<<3. Forgiveness of sin is absolute, as long as the gospel message remains in your heart. Guilt is reinstated if/when the believer goes back to unbelief. Because he no longer has the ministry of Christ to prevent sin guilt from exposing him to the wrath of the coming judgment.>>>
3. That one’s forgiveness of sins by God isn’t absolute and that God remembers one’s sins even after having forgiven them.
What you say there is quite contradictory. For if forgiveness of sins is absolute, then is done and no condition future to that will change it. What you say there seems to be that forgiveness of sins is not had by any Christian until the end of his earthly life, and only when he fulfills the condition you say. And that until then, his sins are really not yet been forgiven and not forgotten by God, so that, of one fails to comply with the condition you say, God will not forgive him and remember his all his sins against him. I know you know that this goes against the words and promise of God under the new testament.
Tong
R2903