Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeffrey
From RCC, all us Protestants are of a 'Reformed' nature.
No, I'm not a Calvinist. I'm not even overly concerned with what I'm called. I'm soaked and convinced in the writings of the NT, it's power, it's beauty and it's deliverance.
Since you mention it, I can't think of a position any closer to the words of Jesus. I'm saved because he called and I believed. As a consequence of my belief and faith, I've continued to respond to Him, have grown in Him, am perfect in Him, and will eventually be taken away with Him.
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ROFL... and you do that so straight typed... as if "believe" doesn't have a authors context to what is meant. You are saved if you "endure" within Christ. Not by a single moment in time. Faith is a present participle active or present progrssive... not one moment but a continous aspect with the "whole" in view which would be just like Abraham...
Throughout this passage an important truth is presented that
again might be missed by many English translations. When
Jesus describes the one who comes to him and who believes
in him (3:16, 5:24, 6:35, 37, 40, 47, etc.), he uses the present
tense to describe this coming, believing, or, in other passages,
hearing or seeing. The present tense refers to a continuous,
on-going action. The Greek contrasts this kind of action
against the aorist tense, which is a point action, a single
action in time that is
not on-going.... The wonderful promises
that are provided by Christ are not for those who do not
truly and continuously believe. The faith that saves is a living
faith, a faith that always looks to Christ as Lord and Savior.
(White pg 10-11) JAMES WHITE "Drawn by the Father"
Dana and Mantey "A Manual Grammar of the Greek New Testament"
likewise explain the Greek present tense has a primary meaning of action in
progress. Dana and Mantey explain the present progressive (active) tense
"The fundamental significance of the present tense is the idea
of progress. It is the linear tense... the progressive force of the
present tense should always be considered as primary, especially
with reference to the potential moods, which in the
nature of the case do not need any ‘present punctiliar’
tense..."
There are three varieties of the present tense in which its fundamental
idea of progress is especially patent. Under the Progressive
Present…[t]his use is manifestly nearest the root
idea of the tense. It signifies action in progress, or state of
persistence….
Rydberg likewise explains:
Present. The present tense denotes an action in the present
time with continuing aspect.
Thus Abraham just like everyone else and ACCORDING TO JAMES sees "believed" in the continous view or outlook from a narrative standpoint of what was known of the future. Thus he "believed".... which is in view of the continous aspect not just a moment in time. Which we see
right after Gen 15:6 him doing what God said and God making the "land covenant" thus he was believing as
Gen 15:6 as he was in
Gen 12 all the way to Isaac.