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Once Saved, Always Saved?

Frankj

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So listen, Frank tango etc., if you're interested in learning from the Bible about OSAS, the video is very comprehensive and covers just about every single argument in favor of OSAS. The only verses I didn't notice them mentioning are the verses that prove that we can be blotted out of the Book of Life. Are you interested in discussing those verses, under any of your various User Names?
CrossWalk, I only have one user name and it's my real name and middle initial. I don't use made up names but I do keep my last name private because it is a very uncommon name and there are a lot of really weird people on the internet.

Also since this is a very long running theological debate I would be interested in discussing both those verses and more so what led you to choose to believe the way you do.
 

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So listen, Frank tango etc., if you're interested in learning from the Bible about OSAS, the video is very comprehensive and covers just about every single argument in favor of OSAS. The only verses I didn't notice them mentioning are the verses that prove that we can be blotted out of the Book of Life. Are you interested in discussing those verses, under any of your various User Names?
I can assure you I am not Frank or Tango and in fact I blocked Frank.

Let's talk about OSAS. What do you want to ask me first?
 

Frankj

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jswauto

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This is a very common debate within Christianity. Though it appears that OSAS is taught by the minority of churches today, it seems to be pushed as the majority opinion online in many places. For those who are unfamiliar with the concept, here is a video that opposes OSAS, but lays out all of the arguments very succinctly and uses lots of Scripture.

God bless.

Once Saved, Always Saved
The doctrine of “Once Saved, Always Saved” (OSAS) teaches that true salvation is permanent and cannot be lost—but it’s debated among Christians, with strong biblical arguments both for and against.

🔐 What “Once Saved, Always Saved” Means
This doctrine—also called eternal security or perseverance of the saints—holds that once a person is genuinely saved by faith in Jesus Christ, they are forever secure in that salvation. It’s rooted in the belief that salvation is a sovereign act of God, not dependent on human effort.

📖 Key Scriptures Supporting OSAS
John 10:28–29 — “I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one will snatch them out of my hand.”
Romans 8:30 — Those God predestined, called, justified, and glorified are eternally secure.
Ephesians 1:13–14 — Believers are sealed with the Holy Spirit as a guarantee of their inheritance.
John 3:15 — Eternal life is promised to those who believe—if it can be lost, it was never truly eternal.

⚠️ Biblical Warnings That Challenge OSAS
Some passages suggest that believers can fall away or abandon the faith:
1 Timothy 4:1 — “Some will depart from the faith.”
Galatians 1:6 — Paul rebukes believers for “quickly deserting” the gospel.
Hebrews 2:1–3 — Warns against drifting and neglecting salvation.
1 Thessalonians 3:5 — Paul fears his labor may have been in vain if believers were tempted away.
These verses raise questions about whether some who appear saved may later prove they were never truly regenerated—or whether genuine believers can fall away.

🧠 Theological Divide
Calvinist/Reformed View: True believers will persevere to the end. If someone falls away, they were never truly saved.
Arminian/Wesleyan View: Salvation can be forfeited through unbelief or persistent sin.
Middle Ground: Some believe salvation is secure but requires ongoing faith and repentance—not passive assurance.

🧭 Practical Implications
Regardless of stance, Scripture calls believers to:
• Examine themselves (2 Corinthians 13:5)
• Hold fast to the gospel (1 Corinthians 15:2)
• Walk in obedience and bear fruit (James 2:26

📖 Key Scriptures for Reflection

Matthew 7:21–23 — “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom…”
James 2:17 — “Faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead.”
1 John 2:3–6 — “We know that we have come to know Him if we keep His commands.”
2 Corinthians 13:5 — “Examine yourselves to see whether you are in the faith…”

🧭 Summary
A life focused on the Lord is marked by ongoing surrender, growing intimacy, and visible fruit.
A life that is merely “secure” without concern may reflect false assurance or a shallow understanding of grace.

Here’s the comparison, crafted to highlight the heart-level contrast between a life of active devotion and one of passive assurance:

The Two Lives
There is a profound difference between someone who lives each day focused on the Lord—through prayer, praise, Scripture, and service—and someone who feels secure in their salvation yet lives with little concern for spiritual growth. The devoted disciple sees salvation not as a checkbox from the past, but as a daily miracle that fuels awe, gratitude, and surrender. Their prayer life is vibrant and relational, not just reactive. They open the Bible not out of duty, but because they hunger for God’s voice. Worship flows from the heart, and obedience is not optional—it’s the natural response to grace. They grieve sin, repent quickly, and bear fruit that reflects the Spirit’s work. Their assurance is anchored in Christ, but they regularly examine their walk, knowing that true faith perseveres and produces transformation.

Complacency
In contrast, the carefree professor may sincerely believe they are saved, but their life shows little evidence of intimacy with God. Prayer is sporadic, Scripture is rarely opened, and worship may be routine or disengaged. They may say “I’m good with God” while ignoring sin or justifying compromise. Their confidence rests on a past decision, not a present relationship. They feel no urgency about eternity, no burden for holiness, and no hunger for truth. While they may affirm “once saved, always saved,” their life suggests a misunderstanding of grace—treating it as a license for passivity rather than a call to devotion.

The results
Scripture warns us not to rely on mere profession. Jesus said, “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom…” (Matthew 7:21). James reminds us that “faith without works is dead” (James 2:17), and Paul urges us to “examine yourselves to see whether you are in the faith” (2 Corinthians 13:5). True salvation is secure—but it is also alive, active, and evident. The question isn’t just “Did you believe once?” but “Are you walking with Him now?”

🔻 How a Misapplied OSAS Mentality Can Lead to Apostasy
The doctrine of eternal security, rightly understood, is a comfort to the truly converted. But when distorted into a license for complacency, it becomes spiritually dangerous. A person may say, “I prayed the prayer,” “I walked the aisle,” or “I was baptized as a child,” and then live the rest of their life with no hunger for God, no repentance, and no fruit—yet still claim they are eternally secure. This mindset can lull millions into a false assurance, convincing them they are safe while their hearts grow cold.

Over time, this passive confidence can erode the fear of God, the urgency of repentance, and the call to holiness. The Bible warns that in the last days, many will fall away—not because they lost salvation, but because they never truly knew Christ. Jesus said, “Because lawlessness will increase, the love of many will grow cold” (Matthew 24:12). Paul echoed this in 2 Thessalonians 2:3, warning of a great apostasy before the return of Christ.

When OSAS is treated as a spiritual insurance policy rather than a call to perseverance, it can produce a generation of professing believers who are unprepared for persecution, seduced by comfort, and deceived by false teaching. They may resist conviction, dismiss warnings, and scoff at calls to examine their faith. The result? A great falling away—not from true salvation, but from the appearance of it.
Scripture doesn’t call us to live in fear—but it does call us to “work out your salvation with fear and trembling” (Philippians 2:12). True believers endure. They abide. They bear fruit. They don’t just rest in a past decision—they walk daily in surrender to Christ.


🔻 The Drift of Unrepentant Sin Under a Misapplied OSAS Mentality
🧊 1. False Comfort Sets In

• “I’m saved, so sin doesn’t matter anymore.”
• Grace is misunderstood as permission instead of power to overcome sin (Titus 2:11–12).
• Conviction is silenced by slogans like “God knows my heart.”

🪞 2. Sin Becomes Habitual and Hidden
• Secret sins are tolerated, minimized, or rebranded as “struggles.”
• Repentance is delayed or dismissed entirely.
• The conscience dulls; the heart hardens (Hebrews 3:13).

🛑 3. Spiritual Growth Stalls
• No hunger for the Word, no urgency in prayer, no fruit of the Spirit.
• Fellowship becomes shallow or abandoned.
• The soul drifts while the person still claims assurance.

🌀 4. Truth Is Replaced by Deception
• False teachers appeal to itching ears: “You’re fine just as you are.”
• Biblical warnings are labeled “legalistic” or “fear-based.”
• The person becomes resistant to correction or accountability.

❄️ 5. Love Grows Cold
• Worship becomes mechanical or absent.
• Compassion fades; selfishness increases.
Matthew 24:12 — “Because lawlessness will increase, the love of many will grow cold.

🚨 6. Faith Is Shipwrecked
• The person may eventually walk away from Christ altogether.
1 Timothy 1:19 — “Some have rejected [faith and a good conscience] and so have shipwrecked their faith.”
• They may still claim to “believe,” but no longer follow or obey.

🔥 7. Judgment, Not Reward
Hebrews 10:26–27 — “If we deliberately keep on sinning… only a fearful expectation of judgment remains.”
Matthew 7:23 — “I never knew you. Depart from Me…”
The tragedy: they were never truly saved—or they abandoned what they once professed.
 
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🔍 Seeking the Lord Builds Eternal Foundations
Deepens Your Identity
• You discover who you truly are—not by the world’s labels, but as a child of God.
Colossians 3:3 — “Your life is now hidden with Christ in God.”
Transforms Your Desires
• As you seek Him, your heart shifts from temporary pleasures to eternal priorities.
Psalm 37:4 — “Delight yourself in the Lord, and He will give you the desires of your heart.”
Strengthens Your Faith
• Daily prayer, praise, and Scripture root you in truth, preparing you to stand in trials.
Romans 10:17 — “Faith comes by hearing… the word of Christ.”
Produces Eternal Fruit
• A life abiding in Christ bears fruit that lasts—souls reached, lives changed, love multiplied.
John 15:5 — “Whoever abides in Me… bears much fruit.”
Builds Heavenly Rewards
• Every act of obedience, prayer, and sacrifice is remembered by God.
Matthew 6:20 — “Store up for yourselves treasures in heaven…”
Prepares You for Judgment Day
• Those who know the Lord won’t shrink back in fear—they’ll be welcomed with joy.
Matthew 7:23 warns of those who knew about Him but never knew Him.
Shapes Your Eternal Capacity
• The depth of your relationship with Christ now shapes your role and reward in eternity.
Luke 19:17 — “Well done… because you have been trustworthy in a very small matter…”
Anchors You in the Last Days
• As deception increases, only those who know His voice will endure.
Daniel 11:32 — “The people who know their God shall be strong and do exploits.”

A strong, vibrant relationship with the Lord transforms every part of your being—building spiritual armor, shaping Christlike character, and igniting a consuming passion to do His will. It’s not just devotional—it’s destiny-defining.

🔥A Strong Relationship with the Lord
Daily Communion
A vibrant walk with God begins with consistent prayer, worship, and Scripture. This isn’t ritual—it’s relational. You speak with Him, listen for His voice, and align your heart with His.
Faith and Trust
You learn to trust God’s character and promises, even when circumstances are unclear. Proverbs 3:5–6 calls us to “trust in the Lord with all your heart… and He will make your paths straight”.
Obedience and Surrender
A strong relationship leads to joyful obedience. You don’t just believe—you follow. Jesus said, “If you love Me, keep My commandments” (John 14:15).
Love and Humility
You begin to reflect Christ’s love, patience, and humility. Philippians 2:5–8 shows how Jesus emptied Himself—your relationship with Him shapes you to do the same.

🛡️ Spiritual Armor
Truth: Your Belt
You know God’s Word deeply, discerning lies from truth (Ephesians 6:14).
Scripture becomes your foundation, not opinion or emotion.
Righteousness: Your Breastplate
You walk in purity and integrity—not self-righteousness, but Spirit-led holiness.
This guards your heart from compromise and accusation.
Peace: Your Shoes
You carry the gospel with confidence and calm, even in chaos.
Your relationship with Christ gives you peace that passes understanding (Philippians 4:7).
Faith: Your Shield
You trust God’s promises and character, deflecting doubt and fear.
Faith grows through trials, and your shield strengthens with every victory.
Salvation: Your Helmet
You know who you are in Christ—secure, forgiven, chosen.
This protects your mind from shame, confusion, and identity theft.
The Word: Your Sword
You wield Scripture with precision, authority, and power.
You don’t just quote verses—you live them, and they pierce darkness.

✝️ How It Shapes Christlike Attributes
Love
You love others with patience, forgiveness, and compassion—even when it costs you.
1 Corinthians 13 becomes your lifestyle.
Holiness
You pursue purity—not out of fear only, but out of fear and love for God.
Your life is a testimony of transformation.
Wisdom
You make decisions rooted in prayer and Scripture, not impulse or culture.
James 3:17 describes wisdom that is “pure, peace-loving, considerate…”
Boldness
You share the gospel with courage, clarity, and urgency.
Acts 4:13 shows how intimacy with Jesus produces fearless proclamation.

🔥 How It Fuels Passion for His Will
You’re consumed by His mission
You don’t just live for yourself—you live to make Christ known.
Romans 12:1 calls you to be a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God.
You’re sensitive to His Spirit
You hear His promptings, obey His nudges, and walk in step with Him.
Galatians 5:25 — “Since we live by the Spirit, let us keep in step with the Spirit.”
You’re anchored in eternity
You live with urgency, knowing this life is preparation for forever.
Colossians 3:2 — “Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things.”

🌿 The Anatomy of a Vibrant Walk with Christ
🧎‍♂️ 1. Daily Communion with God
• Prayer becomes your lifeline—not just requests, but relationship.
• Worship shifts your focus from self to the majesty of God.
• Scripture becomes your food—daily bread that renews your mind and anchors your soul.
• Listening becomes just as important as speaking—sensitive to the Spirit’s whispers.

🛡️ 2. Spiritual Armor Is Forged in Intimacy
• Truth becomes your belt—holding everything together with clarity and conviction.
• Righteousness guards your heart—living in purity, not perfection, but repentance.
• Peace steadies your steps—your confidence isn’t circumstantial, it’s rooted in Christ.
• Faith becomes your shield—able to extinguish lies, fear, and doubt.
• Salvation protects your mind—you know who you are and whose you are.
• The Word becomes your sword—you don’t just quote Scripture, you wield it with authority.

✝️ 3. Christlike Character Is Formed
• Love becomes your default—sacrificial, patient, and pure.
• Humility replaces pride—you serve rather than seek status.
• Holiness becomes your pursuit—not to earn favor, but to reflect your Father.
• Wisdom guides your decisions—rooted in truth, not trends.
• Joy and peace overflow—even in trials, because your source is unshakable.

🔥 4. Passion for God’s Will Ignites
• You don’t just want to be saved—you want to be spent for His glory.
• You live with urgency, knowing time is short and eternity is real.
• You share the gospel boldly, love sacrificially, and serve joyfully.
• You hunger to please Him more than to be praised by others.

🌍 5. Eternal Impact Is Multiplied
• Your life bears fruit that outlasts you—souls reached, lives changed, truth proclaimed.
• You store up treasure in heaven—not just accomplishments on earth.
• You’re ready for Christ’s return—not with fear, but with longing.

🛤️ Two Paths, Two Destinies — A Summary of Diverging Spiritual Attitudes
🔹 1. The Narrow Gate — The Way of Pursuit and Surrender

Attitude: Seeks the Lord daily in prayer, worship, Scripture, and obedience.
Posture: Humble, repentant, hungry for truth, sensitive to conviction.
Fruit: Christlike character, spiritual discernment, endurance in trials, love for others.
Armor: Fully equipped—truth, righteousness, peace, faith, salvation, and the Word.
Mission: Passionate about doing the will of Christ, reaching others, and living for eternity.
• End Result: Eternal life, reward, and intimacy with Christ.
Key Verse: “Small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.” — Matthew 7:14

🔸 2. The Wide Gate — The Way of Assumption and Passivity

Attitude: Relies on a past decision or belief; feels secure without ongoing pursuit.
Posture: Self-assured, resistant to correction, indifferent to sin or spiritual growth.
Fruit: Little to none—spiritual stagnation, compromise, and coldness toward God.
Armor: Unworn or incomplete—vulnerable to deception, temptation, and false teaching.
Mission: Focused on comfort, reputation, or self-preservation; little urgency for the gospel.
End Result: Risk of falling away, self-deception, and eternal separation.
Key Verse: “Wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it.” — Matthew 7:13

🧭 Other Pertinent Details

Matthew 7:21–23 — Many will say “Lord, Lord” but be turned away because they never truly knew Him.
2 Timothy 3:5 — “Having a form of godliness but denying its power…”
Hebrews 10:26–27 — Deliberate sin after receiving truth leads to judgment, not reward.
James 2:17 — Faith without works is dead—not saving, not enduring.
Revelation 3:16 — Lukewarm believers are spit out—not embraced.

🧠 Summary Thought
The difference isn’t just behavior—it’s trajectory.
One path leads to transformation, intimacy, and eternal reward.
The other leads to deception, stagnation, and ultimate loss.
The narrow gate demands surrender—but it leads to life.
The wide gate offers ease—but ends in destruction.
 
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mailmandan

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I actually prefer the terms, "preservation of the saints" (Psalm 37:28; Jude 1:3) and eternal security of the believer (Ephesians 1:13-14) over the term OSAS because of all the negative connotations that get attached to OSAS (license to sin/license for immorality etc..) by those who strongly oppose it. I believe in eternal security of the believer, but I don't believe in eternal presumption.
 
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Let me think.....no.
"Once saved, always saved," like the Reformed argument for eternal predestination, are akin to get-out-of-jail-free cards.

Salvation isn't earned, it is a gift from God through the shed blood of Jesus Christ but since God also gave us free will, He therefore cannot go back and pre-determine who is to be saved and who is to be damned. It is a theological logic bomb that has ensnared many a Christian over the centuries.

 

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I don't believe in OSAS. I was baptized and in more formal religious schooling as a kid for a time. I think many kids are baptized without even having sinned before, and to think they would get a free pass of sinning for their entire lives seems absurd to me.

For me, we are judged on an accumulation of our thoughts, behaviors and actions. I think it's more about the outcome than the journey in the sense that a life of sinning can be forgiven, but a saved life does not afford the right to sin.

I think someone can be saved, and unsaved, as-in they fall out of the teachings and faith. They would need to repent and seek forgiveness for their new sins.

They say Jesus died for our sins, not the right to keep sinning. If Jesus' sacrifice cleansed humankind but didn't give the right to keep sinning, then why does a baptism or saving? I don't think they do.
 

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For me, we are judged on an accumulation of our thoughts, behaviors and actions.

That would be a Jewish view (along with Zoroastrian. Egyptian, Muslim and some questionably identifying as Christian sects, FWIW)). Many seculars think this way too.

It is not a Christian view since it negates the need for Christ and places 'salvation', or redemption, on the actions of the person instead of through the death of Christ alone.

They say Jesus died for our sins, not the right to keep sinning. If Jesus' sacrifice cleansed humankind but didn't give the right to keep sinning, then why does a baptism or saving? I don't think they do.

In Christianity it is noted that 'The wages of sin is death' (consider that animal or even human sacrifice to appease the god or gods is almost universal at some point in history for all peoples) and Jesus being perfect, being God incarnate himself and sinless, was the perfect sacrifice and not an imperfect or blemished by sin so that the wages are fully paid by his sacrifice instead of only a partial payment made on them through imperfect sacrifice.

A question: Since you are not Christian why do you post here, you obviously have knowledge of Christianity from your youth so why are you at all interested in presenting different views when your own post is saying that you are already condemned for having rejected salvation through Christ in Christian thinking?
 

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That would be a Jewish view (along with Zoroastrian. Egyptian, Muslim and some questionably identifying as Christian sects, FWIW)). Many seculars think this way too.

It is not a Christian view since it negates the need for Christ and places 'salvation', or redemption, on the actions of the person instead of through the death of Christ alone.



In Christianity it is noted that 'The wages of sin is death' (consider that animal or even human sacrifice to appease the god or gods is almost universal at some point in history for all peoples) and Jesus being perfect, being God incarnate himself and sinless, was the perfect sacrifice and not an imperfect or blemished by sin so that the wages are fully paid by his sacrifice instead of only a partial payment made on them through imperfect sacrifice.

A question: Since you are not Christian why do you post here, you obviously have knowledge of Christianity from your youth so why are you at all interested in presenting different views when your own post is saying that you are already condemned for having rejected salvation through Christ in Christian thinking?
I respect your take, but where exactly does the Bible say that our salvation is guaranteed based on the death of Christ alone? As far as I understand the Bible, it actually makes the opposite clear. That being saved in this way does NOT guarantee us salvation and redemption forever. The Bible has plenty of passages that make it obvious that a saved person can fall away from their faith.

“It is impossible for those who have once been enlightened, who have tasted the heavenly gift, who have shared in the Holy Spirit, who have tasted the goodness of the word of God and the powers of the coming age, if they FALL AWAY, to be brought back to repentance, because to THEIR LOSS they are crucifying the Son of God all over again and subjecting him to public disgrace.”
Hebrews 6:4-6

“Now the Spirit expressly says that in later times some will DEPART from the faith by devoting themselves to deceitful spirits and teachings of demons.”
1 Timothy 4:1

I am posting here because I am exploring my faith more and I can learn from people here. I write in a way that might come across more argumentative than it reads in my head. I don't agree that I am condemned for rejecting salvation though.

I think there's obviously a lot of different takes people can have. For example, in Matthew 4:7, Jesus is quoted as telling Satan that we must only serve God.
7 Jesus said to him, “Once again it is written: ‘You are not to put the Lord your God to the test.’” 8 Again, the devil took him to a very high mountain, and showed him all the kingdoms of the world and their grandeur. 9 And he said to him, “I will give you all these things if you throw yourself to the ground and worship me.”

10 Then Jesus said to him, “Go away, Satan! For it is written: ‘You are to worship the Lord your God and serve only him.’” 11 Then the devil left him, and angels came and began ministering to his needs.



Jesus mentions that he is the door to worshipping the Father, in the same way there is a door for a crook to enter a home during a robbery. It is not the door that is at fault for the robbery, nor is Jesus truly responsible for the worship. He is a pathway to faith, not the end-all-be-all of faith.



In Revelation 22:6+, we're told that for the return, we will be judged and rewarded based on what we have done.
It also is worded like we must maintain the faith and beliefs throughout life.

7 (Look ! I am coming soon!
Blessed is the one who keeps the words of the prophecy expressed in this book.)

12 (Look ! I am coming soon,
and my reward is with me to pay each one according to what he has done!



I'm all for analyzing different perspectives, but there are thousands of Christian denomination and interpretations. I don't think I've said anything that's anti-Christian, I just don't think some of the opinions on the forum are fully aligned with the Bible. For example I can't find anything that proves OSAS or anything that hints at removing our free will or says we can sin indefinitely, or anything that suggests we must worship and focus only on Jesus Christ. Quite the opposite, we're expected to live in a way that adheres to the faith and Jesus Christ is the path to salvation, not the outcome of salvation.

Happy to clarify anything, but really hope this isn't too controversial. I'd love to see some actual Bible verses if there's anything you think is incorrect here.
 

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I respect your take, but where exactly does the Bible say that our salvation is guaranteed based on the death of Christ alone?

John 3:16 comes to mind: For God so loved the world that He gave His only-begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.

I am posting here because I am exploring my faith more and I can learn from people here. I write in a way that might come across more argumentative than it reads in my head. I don't agree that I am condemned for rejecting salvation though.

There's no problem being 'argumentative' in a discussion forum, Argumentative does not imply hostility or belligerence which should be avoided and you don't seem hostile or belligerent to me.

But a question, if rejecting salvation doesn't mean condemnation what does it mean? Christians believe in salvation through the sacrificially paid wages of sin by Jesus on the cross, you apparently believe differently and, to me, seem more in line with either Jewish or New Age thinking which looks at a different source of salvation such as earning it through your own actions.

Other than salvation or condemnation I don't see anything else available.
 

tango

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John 3:16 comes to mind: For God so loved the world that He gave His only-begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.

I''m not sure your verse here counters Ghost's claim. The fact that "...whoever believes in Him..." implies that those who do not believe will perish and will not have everlasting life.

There's no problem being 'argumentative' in a discussion forum, Argumentative does not imply hostility or belligerence which should be avoided and you don't seem hostile or belligerent to me.

But a question, if rejecting salvation doesn't mean condemnation what does it mean? Christians believe in salvation through the sacrificially paid wages of sin by Jesus on the cross, you apparently believe differently and, to me, seem more in line with either Jewish or New Age thinking which looks at a different source of salvation such as earning it through your own actions.

Other than salvation or condemnation I don't see anything else available.

If we're talking about belief systems other than Christianity, other options include reincarnation until we reach nirvana, or annihilation, and a few others.
 

Frankj

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I''m not sure your verse here counters Ghost's claim. The fact that "...whoever believes in Him..." implies that those who do not believe will perish and will not have everlasting life.
Yes, this is what it means.

What do you say it means instead and why?
 

tango

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Yes, this is what it means.

What do you say it means instead and why?

Ghost asked for verses that indicated that salvation is guaranteed by the death of Christ alone. Your response of John 3:16 doesn't fit the bill because it stipulates that "all who believe in Him" will not perish. If those who do not believe will perish then the death of Christ alone is not sufficient, if we do not believe.
 

Frankj

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Ghost asked for verses that indicated that salvation is guaranteed by the death of Christ alone. Your response of John 3:16 doesn't fit the bill because it stipulates that "all who believe in Him" will not perish. If those who do not believe will perish then the death of Christ alone is not sufficient, if we do not believe.
Are you saying that even without Christ's death our sins would not result in our condemnation?

This is what I'm seeing you saying but if that's not what you mean could you explain it differently or more fully so I understand your point the way you mean it.

Consider that Jesus said no one comes to the father except through him.
 

The Jason

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The Catholics were who were big on free will were highly corrupt for centuries. The instance on free will simply is a scare tactic by them.
 

Frankj

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The instance on free will simply is a scare tactic by them.

Can you explain how this works?

Or what you are referring to when you say 'free will'.
 

tango

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Are you saying that even without Christ's death our sins would not result in our condemnation?

This is what I'm seeing you saying but if that's not what you mean could you explain it differently or more fully so I understand your point the way you mean it.

Consider that Jesus said no one comes to the father except through him.

That's not even remotely close to what I'm saying. I honestly have no idea how you could possibly conclude that from what I said but I guess here we are.

John 3:16 says "whoever believes in him shall not perish", implying that those who do not believe shall perish. In other words, if we believe we will not perish. Our sins required a sacrifice but we have two options here - one is that we have to respond in some way (repent, believe etc as demanded by John the Baptist and Jesus), the other goes down the path of universalism in which all are saved regardless of what they do. Given what Jesus said about people being sent away to eternal torment we can safely conclude that universalism is false, and given John, Jesus and others called people to repent it's reasonable to conclude that some kind of response from us is required.
 

Frankj

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That's not even remotely close to what I'm saying. I honestly have no idea how you could possibly conclude that from what I said but I guess here we are.

John 3:16 says "whoever believes in him shall not perish", implying that those who do not believe shall perish. In other words, if we believe we will not perish. Our sins required a sacrifice but we have two options here - one is that we have to respond in some way (repent, believe etc as demanded by John the Baptist and Jesus), the other goes down the path of universalism in which all are saved regardless of what they do. Given what Jesus said about people being sent away to eternal torment we can safely conclude that universalism is false, and given John, Jesus and others called people to repent it's reasonable to conclude that some kind of response from us is required.
Well, you don't believe that there are any other ways to be saved from sin than through the death of Christ alone or mean to imply any other way that his death alone?

Maybe we're just seeing a difference in semantics between us, not a conflict of belief.
 

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Your Relationship With the Lord
The fact that you’re even asking this tells me something powerful: the Spirit is already pulling you into a deeper, moment‑by‑moment walk. What you’re describing isn’t hype, emotion, or a “spiritual high.” It’s the abiding life Jesus talked about — the life where every breath becomes worship and every heartbeat becomes surrender.
Let’s build this in a way that fits your style: clear mechanics, daily rhythms, and a spiritual operating system you can actually live inside.

🌿 1. The Core Shift: From “Trying Harder” to “Yielding Deeper”
Giving everything to the Lord isn’t about effort.
It’s about yielding.
Trying harder = self‑powered
Yielding = Spirit‑powered
The moment you stop striving and start yielding, intimacy becomes natural.
Internal posture:
“Lord, I am Yours. Lead every moment.”

🔥 2. The Minute‑by‑Minute Lifestyle (Abiding Mechanics)
Here’s the actual mechanic of living every breath with Him:
A. Awareness
You keep turning your attention back to Him throughout the day. Not with long prayers — with micro‑moments.
• “Thank You, Lord.”
• “I trust You.”
• “Lead me.”
• “I’m listening.”
These tiny recalibrations build a continuous connection.
B. Surrender
Every time anxiety, frustration, or temptation rises, you hand it over immediately.
• “Lord, I give this to You.”
• “Take this thought.”
• “I choose Your way.”
Surrender becomes reflex.
C. Dependence
You stop assuming you can handle anything alone.
• “Help me speak.”
• “Guide this decision.”
• “Strengthen me.”
Dependence is not weakness — it’s alignment.

💓 3. Every Breath, Every Heartbeat (The Inner Rhythm)
This is where it becomes real.
You begin to live with a continuous inner conversation with God.
Not out loud.
Not formal.
Not forced.
Just a steady awareness:
• “You’re here.”
• “I love You.”
• “Stay close.”
• “I’m Yours.”
This is what Paul meant by “pray without ceasing.”
It’s not nonstop talking — it’s nonstop connection.

🛡️ 4. The Three Daily Anchors (Your Spiritual Framework)
To live minute‑by‑minute, you need three anchor points:
1. Morning Consecration
Before anything else:
• “Lord, this day is Yours.”
• “My mind, my words, my decisions — all Yours.”
This sets the trajectory.
2. Midday Reset
A 30‑second pause:
• “Lord, realign me.”
• “Keep me close.”
This keeps the fire burning.
3. Night Release
Before sleep:
• “I give You everything that happened today.”
• “Wash me. Restore me.”
This keeps your heart clean and soft.

🌟 5. The Heartbeat of Intimacy: Loving Him Back
You magnify your relationship with the Lord by loving Him intentionally.
Love expressed becomes love expanded.
Ways to express love:
• gratitude
• worship
• obedience
• trust
• surrender
• attention
Love is the fuel of intimacy.

⚔️ 6. The Barriers You Must Lay Down
To give everything to the Lord, you must surrender:
• self‑reliance
• hidden fears
• unconfessed sin
• old wounds
• pride
• control
These are the things that block the flow of intimacy.
When you lay them down, the Spirit fills the space they once occupied.

🌈 7. The Transformation: What Happens When You Live This Way
When you live breath‑by‑breath with Him:
• anxiety loses its grip
• fear dissolves
• sin loses power
• peace becomes your atmosphere
• worship becomes natural
• decisions become clearer
• your heart becomes tender
• your spirit becomes strong
• your love for Jesus becomes fierce
This is the life you’re craving — and it’s absolutely possible. Take it to a new level. devote everything to the Lord!


Foundational Truths
You’re reaching for a minute‑by‑minute, breath‑by‑breath walk with God, and Scripture actually speaks directly to that kind of life.
Below is a curated set of passages that form the biblical backbone of that mindset— surrender, intimacy, awareness, dependence, and continual connection.

🌿 1. Scriptures on Giving EVERYTHING to the Lord (Total Surrender)
Romans 12:1

“Present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God…”
Luke 9:23
“If anyone would come after Me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow Me.”
Proverbs 3:5–6
“Trust in the Lord with all your heart… in all your ways acknowledge Him…”
Psalm 37:5
“Commit your way to the Lord; trust in Him, and He will act.”
Galatians 2:20
“I have been crucified with Christ… the life I now live… I live by faith in the Son of God.”
These verses define the mechanic of surrender:
yielding your will, your plans, your identity, your strength.

🔥 2. Scriptures on Abiding Every Moment (Minute‑by‑Minute Connection)
John 15:4–5

“Abide in Me… apart from Me you can do nothing.”
1 Thessalonians 5:17
“Pray without ceasing.”
Psalm 16:8
“I have set the Lord always before me…”
Isaiah 26:3
“You keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on You…”
Colossians 3:2–3
“Set your minds on things above… your life is hidden with Christ in God.”
These passages describe the inner posture of constant awareness and dependence.

💓 3. Scriptures on Every Breath Belonging to God (Heart-Level Intimacy)
Acts 17:28

“In Him we live and move and have our being.”
Psalm 73:25–26
“Whom have I in heaven but You… God is the strength of my heart.”
Psalm 42:1–2
“As the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for You…”
Psalm 27:4
“One thing I ask… to dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life.”
These verses capture the heartbeat‑level longing you’re describing.

🛡️ 4. Scriptures on Magnifying the Lord (Making Him Your Atmosphere)
Psalm 34:1–3

“I will bless the Lord at all times… magnify the Lord with me.”
Philippians 1:20–21
“That Christ will be magnified in my body… for to me to live is Christ.”
Psalm 63:1–8
“My soul clings to You; Your right hand upholds me.”
Magnifying the Lord is not hype — it’s focus, affection, and attention.

🌬️ 5. Scriptures on Walking in the Spirit (Breath-by-Breath Guidance)
Galatians 5:16

“Walk by the Spirit…”
Galatians 5:25
“If we live by the Spirit, let us also keep in step with the Spirit.”
Romans 8:14
“All who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God.”
Ezekiel 36:27
“I will put My Spirit within you and cause you to walk in My statutes.”
This is the moment‑to‑moment leading you’re craving.

⚔️ 6. Scriptures on Yielding Every Thought (Breath-Level Surrender)
2 Corinthians 10:5

“Take every thought captive to obey Christ.”
Philippians 4:6–7
“Do not be anxious… let your requests be made known… and the peace of God…”
Psalm 139:23–24
“Search me, O God… lead me in the way everlasting.”
This is the micro‑mechanic of surrender: thought by thought.

🌈 7. Scriptures on God’s Nearness (Every Breath, Every Heartbeat)
James 4:8

“Draw near to God, and He will draw near to you.”
Psalm 145:18
“The Lord is near to all who call on Him.”
Deuteronomy 30:14
“The word is very near you… in your heart.”
These anchor the truth that God is always present, always accessible.

🔥 “Lord, Take Everything” Consecration Prayer
A prayer you can use each morning or whenever you feel the need to reset.

“Lord, take everything.
Take my thoughts, my desires, my fears, my plans.
Take my strengths and my weaknesses.
Take my habits, my reactions, my motives.
I surrender my will to Yours.
Lead me in every moment today.
Fill me with Your presence.
Guard my heart.
Guide my steps.
Let every breath belong to You.
I am Yours — completely, fully, joyfully.
Amen.”
This is a whole‑life offering, not a momentary feeling.
 
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