Lanman87
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 30, 2020
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- 733
- Age
- 55
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- Bible Belt
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- Non-Denominational
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- Married
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- Yes
When you stress it's what the unsaved person DOES that thus makes that person saved, then it's not only a work but the work of that person - and the very thing that means he is saved.
I think this boils down to how you perceive that belief is a work.
I don't believe that belief is a work. Romans 4:5 shows that works and belief are not the same thing.
5 And to the one who does not work but believes in him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is counted as righteousness,
A work is something we do to earn something. Belief is not earning anything, it is how we accept the Gift of Eternal life.
If I have $100 bill for you that is completely free with no strings attached and I say "here is your $100" and you reach up and take the $100 in your hand and put it in your pocket then have you worked for $100. No, you did nothing to earn the $100. You accepted a free gift.
Belief/faith is the mechanism God ordained for us to accept His free gift. But because or wills are in bondage to sin, so much so that we are spiritually dead, we can't accept the gift of Eternal life by an act of our own will. You can wave $100 bills in front of a dead person all day long and nothing will happen. Before our will can make a decision to receive the gift of eternal life by faith, God must move in our hearts to bring us to Spiritual Life and Free our will from the bondage of sin. It is only then that a person can respond to the Gospel in faith.
God brings us to life and sets our wills free. As a result, we respond to God by reaching out for him in Faith. Our "reaching out" is not us saving ourselves or doing our part to "earn" salvation. Faith is like taking the $100 and putting it into our pocket. We did something, but we didn't "earn" something. My Reformed friends would say that this process is irresistible. That when God brings us to life and frees our wills so that we can believe then we will believe. Not because God is holding a gun to our heads and forcing us to believe, but because when we truly understand our sinfulness and the beauty of Christ we want to believe. The Holy Spirit changes our affections and desires so that we "want Jesus". We desire to "Drink the living water" and "Eat the bread of life" and "do all to the Glory of God".
We can preach the gospel all we want, give alter calls, do personal witnessing, and develop relationships all we want but until God moves to overcome death and bondage then nothing will happen.
At the same time, we can very clumsily and inarticulately share the gospel with someone and tell someone to "believe and repent" and if the Holy Spirit is moving on that person they will be brought from death to life and be set free from the bondage of sin and reply "I do believe and repent".
To bring us back to the original topic.
I understand why alter calls are considered bad by many people. The chief problem is that they can lead to "false professions of faith" where someone gets caught up in the emotion or peer pressure to respond and "come forward" and "say the sinners prayer", yet God has not brought them from death to life. They may live their life thinking that they are "saved" because they went forward and said the sinner's prayer and now they have fire insurance and can go on like nothing happened.
On the other hand, we need to present the gospel and give people an opportunity to respond at every opportunity. We don't know what seeds have been planted, what conversations have taken place, and whom the Holy Spirit is moving upon to bring to faith.
I wonder if, because of the possible issues of the former, we have neglected the latter.