BilliardsBall
Veteran Member
There is no judicial specific word for 'work' in Greek. The words one can use for works or work all have more common uses. Words like: ergon, pragma, praxis, poeio etc. all have a more general use and meaning. The larger and more critical point is all such require an acting agent and this is the rub. Works, like faith or grace, are acts: deeds, things done by a subject. Now the subject may be Divine, as in theo ergon, Divine work, or Anthropo ergon the work of men. There is still an agent.
To my question and your reply: it appears, once on the bus, you cannot leave. The conclusion then is no act, however heinous or vile could change your ultimate destination: salvation and heaven. This means morality is irrelevant. Think back on the syllogism I gave you that was tied to your earlier statements:
1) God is good
2) Men must be like God to be saved (per your post #85)
3) Then, men must be good to be saved.
Based on your reply to the bus analogy and you prior assertion found in 2), you must reject 1). Therefore, Deity must be an amoral or immoral being. If you agree with 1) and still hold to 2) then there must be a moral element to a saved state. If there is a moral element to salvation (one must be good), then there must be free agency: only a free agent can be moral. This would then mean your notion that one can never get off the bus to salvation is wrong.
BilliardsBall, I think you've painted yourself into a corner. I think this has happened because of a dogmatic loyalty to a particular reading of scripture (that itself is a reading foreign to early Christianity). If you open yourself up to a larger Christian hermeneutic, you would not have to abandon reason to hold a theological position on either the atonement or salvation.
I would modify what you shared to the following:
Morality has no bearing on salvation, but it has bearing on reward. Remember that I would hold that line for both Christians and unbelievers. The unbeliever receives degree of punishment per their morality but a very good unbeliever cannot be saved apart from trusting in God for salvation.
Also, I would modify what you wrote to say:
1) God is perfect
2) Men must be perfect to be saved (per my posts and per Matthew 5:48 - "Therefore you are to be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect"
3) Men cannot achieve perfection by their efforts, but Jesus may impute them perfection via trust/faith
I apologize for all the posts. I'm not trying to hog the thread but am wanting to reply to everyone and each excellent point they have raised.