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Beastie, I would only point out here that Jersey Girl apparently hopes to tickle your ear, for whatever reason. Personally, I have no such expectation and hope to do the exact opposite. Thereby, I hope we're being more rigorously honest with each other than her blithe commendation suggests.
No, I don’t think Jersey Girl was tickling my ear, and certainly Hoops, with whom I’ve had contention on this thread, wasn’t tickling my ear. I think they were simply applying the basic foundation of Evangelical belief.
Now, I understand that not all EVs adhere to this belief. There are variances of beliefs within mainstream Christianity as a whole and even within the subset movements. But many EVs believe “once saved, always saved.” When Hoops stated that being a Christian means being forgiven of one’s past, present, and FUTURE sins, I suspected Hoops, like many other EVs, accepts “once saved, always saved.”
I’m not familiar enough with your specific beliefs to understand where you’re coming from in regards to whether or not I was saved. But if you accept what I’m saying as truthful, which you should, I would first guess you are saying that it is my actions subsequent to my accepting Jesus as my Savior which render me unsaved. Many EVs believe that no actions subsequent to accepting Jesus as one’s Savior can render the person unsaved.
I’ve talked to believers about this numerous times in the past. I think that part of the reasoning, from these past discussions, is that since I sincerely accepted Jesus as my Savior in 1995, while I may be confused and wandering right now, eventually I will find my way “home.” LDS teach something similar, but it’s in regards to the faith of the parents. If LDS parents are faithful and teach their children well, even if those children stray from the path, they will one day return “home.”
I think that some of the EVs I’ve talked to in the past blame Mormonism for my current problems with belief and cut me some slack due to that. But to accept that I’m unsaved because of my subsequent actions after accepting Jesus as my Savior means that salvation is conditional on more than just accepting Jesus as one’s Savior. As I said, I understand that not all EVs adhere to “once saved, always saved” and maybe you don’t. So I understand, if you reject that idea, you saying I’m not saved NOW.
But what I don’t understand is why you would say I wasn’t saved in 1995, unless you have some Calvinist tendencies, and believe God has predestined who will be saved, and if God hasn’t chosen you, then trying to get saved on your own won’t work. You say you accept my honesty, so there must be some reason you’re saying that, despite my sincerity and then-beliefs, I still wasn’t saved after accepting Jesus as my Savior. I’m hoping you’ll clarify.