What happens when one changes their mind? Do they not turn from their sin?repentance was strictly a change of mind, not turning from sin.
What happens when one changes their mind? Do they not turn from their sin?repentance was strictly a change of mind, not turning from sin.
What gave you the idea that Ryrie was anti-Lordship?
What happens when one changes their mind? Do they not turn from their sin?
“You can’t tell me you can trust Christ as Savior and live like the Devil and still go go heaven. Yes I can tell you that. That’s what the Bible says. If you don’t come to that conclusion that yes, you can trust Christ as your Savior and live like the Devil, and still go heaven when you die, you don’t get grace because that is the exact truth. I do not have to change my life. I don’t have to stop one sin.” Yankee ArnoldWhat happens when one changes their mind? Do they not turn from their sin?
What happens when one changes their mind? Do they not turn from their sin?
Snark much? Lol. I hope your conversations with people who disagree with you aren't as condescending as they come across on this forum."In those days came John the Baptist, preaching in the wilderness of Judaea, And saying, Repent ye: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand." -Matthew 3:2
"Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the gospel of the kingdom of God, And saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel." -Mark 1:14-15
"And as ye go, preach, saying, The kingdom of heaven is at hand." - Matthew 10:7
The principles of dispensationalism, if ...
"Verily I say unto you, There be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the Son of man coming in his kingdom." - Matthew 16:28. My question for dispensationalists who believe in the "deferred kingdom" and the 2000- year "parenthesis" in God's plan, forced on Him by mere mortal men - give us the names and current locations of those who heard Christ's word in Matthew 16:28 and who never died and are still alive today - presumably in old folks' homes somewhere.
And keeping things brief, this is why I asked the question earlier about partial, or dual fulfillment.It's claimed that Jesus would have established the Kingdom in the first century (thus fulfilling prophecy), but the Jews rejected him, thus requiring that a prophecy intended to be fulfilled in that event was delayed to some distant, indefinite future.
This is nonsense. If a prophet gets all the details right in his prophecy, except the timing (because he didn't foresee the Jews rejecting Christ), then his prophecy is wrong, and he is a false prophet.
If God would have done one thing if not for circumstances, and those circumstances caused a prophecy's fulfillment to be delayed into the indefinite future, how does that differ from open theism--saying God didn't see the circumstances coming?
Of course, Jesus did not come to establish a temporal kingdom in the first century. The Jews tried to crown him king at one point, and he ran away. When he said to Pilate that his kingdom was not of this world, he was telling Pilate that he wasn't horning in on his turf. Then the Dispensationalists came along and insisted that yes, it was in fact that kind of temporal kingdom.
I heard an illustration from J Vernon McGee that I thought summed up the whole repentance thing perfectly. (Forgive me, I'll probably butcher it...)What Ryrie taught was that the repentance Peter preached at Pentecost was a change of mind concerning Christ: salvation came from recognizing him as the Messiah. Turning from one's sins is not in itself salvific.
I used to have a Ryrie Study Bible. He was opposed to Lordship salvation and believed repentance was strictly a change of mind, not turning from sin. Just do a quick search on the subject. He may not have been as extreme as Zane Hodge though.
Reading his stuff.
That would be works, you see.
Or what Johnny Mac would say, "easy believism".So he was not strictly profess only like Zane Hodges and Bob Wilkin.
Or what Johnny Mac would say, "easy believism".
On The sermon on the mount, Jesus showed us the spiritual nature of the Law. Here is a short summary by Ray Comfort.It isn't works if the Holy Spirit is the one conforming us to be more like Christ because all the credit goes to Him. It would be works if it's by my own efforts.
Based upon what I have read in his "Biblical Theology" book, I would have to agree. I disagree with him regarding dispensationalism but nothing regarding his soteriology.It is my understanding that Charles Ryrie was very Calvinistic in his soteriology.
How do you know? did you jump into Doc. Emmett Brown's Time Machine to find out?It didn't happen tomorrow.
I just wanted to comment on this for a moment. Ransom is absolutely right. Repentance will not save anyone. If someone goes to court and tells the judge he should be forgiven and set free after he murdered a man because he was sorry and would never do it again, he would be laughed out of court, not only by the judge but by everyone who has a sense of justice.What Ryrie taught was that the repentance Peter preached at Pentecost was a change of mind concerning Christ: salvation came from recognizing him as the Messiah. Turning from one's sins is not in itself salvific.
I just wanted to comment on this for a moment. Ransom is absolutely right. Repentance will not save anyone.