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Results from: Answered Bible Questions, Answers, Unanswered Bible Questions, Notes Ordered by Verse | ||||||
Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
1 | How deep can the Gospel go | Acts 17:30 | DocTrinsograce | 180888 | ||
Amen! God is the author and finisher of our faith! "The nature of the Divine goodness is not only to open to those who knock. but also to cause them to knock and ask." --Augustine "To suppose that whatever God requireth of us that we have power of ourselves to do, is to make the cross and grace of Jesus Christ of none effect." --John Owen "Grace is not like a box of candy that you can send back if you don't want it. Grace is divine favor, an attitude of God's own heart. We cannot stop Him from loving us, if He chooses to do so. Nor can we stop Him from giving us blessings of salvation: regeneration, justification, adoption, sanctification, glorification. His purpose in us will certainly be fulfilled, Philippians 1:6, Ephesians 1:11." --John Frame "...the conversion of a sinner being not owing to a man's self determination, but to God's determination, and eternal election, which is absolute, and depending on the sovereign Will of God, and not on the free will of man; as is evident from what has been said : and it being very evident from the Scriptures, that the eternal election of saints to the faith and holiness, is also an election of them to eternal salvation; hence their appointment to salvation must also be absolute, and not depending on their contingent, self-determining will." --Jonathan Edwards |
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2 | How deep can the Gospel go | Acts 17:30 | New Creature | 180933 | ||
Doc Compare the Edwards commentary you posted in a reply to me, in contrast with the following commentary. John 5:40 And you are not willing to come to Me that you may have life. And ye will not come ... - Though the Old Testament bears evidence that I am the Messiah; though you professedly search it to learn the way to life, and though my works prove it, yet you will not come to me to obtain life. From this we may learn: 1. that life is to be obtained in Christ. He is the way, the truth, and the life, and he only can save us. 2. that, in order to do that, we must “come to him” - that is, must come in the way appointed, as lost sinners, and be willing to be saved by him alone. 3. that the reason why sinners are not saved lies in the will. “The only reason why sinners die is because ‘they will not come’ to Christ for life and happiness: it is not because they ‘cannot,’ but because they ‘will not’” (Henry). 4. Sinners have a particular opposition to going to “Jesus Christ” for eternal life. They would prefer any other way, and it is commonly not until all other means are tried that they are willing to submit to him. (Barnes Notes) "Jesus, who told some Jews in John 5:34: "I say these things that you may be saved." But "saved" they were not. Why? Because Christ added in verse 40, "You are unwilling to come to Me, that you may have life." Here is a clear case of "but ye would not," despite the clear offer of salvation." Jer. 9:6 they refuse to know me, saith the LORD. Blessings NC |
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3 | How deep can the Gospel go | Acts 17:30 | DocTrinsograce | 180965 | ||
Hi, NC... Yes, one of the benefits of regeneration is that the will of man is freed from its slavery to sin. Thus, through grace, God divinely restores what the Fall destroyed. Albert Barnes departs from orthodoxy in his stance on the operation of the will. A thing that brought censure to him from his own denomination. Keeping that single weakness in mind, I still use his commentary from time to time. "Whilst a man is persuaded that he has it in his power to contribute anything, be it ever so little, to his salvation, he remains in carnal self-confidence; he is not a self-despairer, and therefore is not duly humbled before God, he believes he may lend a helping hand in his salvation, but on the contrary, whoever is truly convinced that the whole work depends singly on the will of God, such a person renounces his own will and strength; he waits and prays for the operation of God, nor waits and prays in vain." --Martin Luther In Him, Doc |
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