90sBear said:
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
It doesn't have to be deathbed conversions. Anytime someone dies shortly after becoming a Christian, there's a good chance they won't have the works to show for it. What are you going to say to that person as they are dying, or to their loved ones who wonder if they are in heaven after their death - that "works matter in whether they go to heaven or not?" No, you wouldn't.
See my comment regarding the thief on the cross - did what he could for as long as he could.
The point overall is this: if works do not determine your salvation, then we shouldn't be saying that works matter in whether you go to heaven or not. You're putting the focus on our performance and diverting away from what Jesus accomplished in our stead.
I am not. That is your view of works, not everyone's. Some consider works to be a gift from God to help them on their way. Viewed in that light, how can you say they aren't giving credit where it belongs?
"I don't think any of them would say that their works 'didn't matter' in connection with their faith" - that's not what we're talking about, right? We're talking about works mattering in whether one goes to heaven. You're creating a straw man.
That's exactly what we are talking about. You say faith in Jesus saves, right? I'm telling you for many people works have led to, help maintain, and reinforce their faith in Jesus.
To answer your hypothetical, the only "Christians" who would stop works of any kind are those who aren't really Christians but only say they are. Because as we have all acknowledged, a true Christian with true faith will do works if they are able, regardless if works don't matter in getting into heaven. Because as you alluded to in your bible verse, true Christians want to please God.
I thought you didn't approve of evading questions. What would happen if every single Christian stopped doing works because they "don't matter" in terms of getting into heaven?
Again, no one is saying "works don't matter". You seem to be trying really hard to change this discussion into something different.
I'm not. Again, for many people, works have led to, help maintain, and reinforce their faith in Jesus. Doesn't mean Jesus doesn't get the credit, but they are a part of the path and can serve as tool to help keep people on the path and show where they are at.
- "The thief on the cross did everything he could for as long as he could" - he didn't do any works, he just confessed his faith to Jesus. You can consider that a "work" if you want, but whatever works you want to ascribe to him, those aren't what saved him. Do you believe if he just held his belief in his heart and died without doing anything, that he still would have been saved? If so, then works didn't matter towards his salvation.
I didn't say his works saved him. I said he did what he did because of his faith. Many Christians consider confession a work.
- the physically disabled don't have the same opportunities to do works as healthy people, especially if they are severely disabled. So there will be a much greater chance that their faith won't be reflected in their works, that's the point. How much work can someone with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gherig's) show? I don't think you can credit them with "listening to someone". I don't think they have that choice.
You are really limiting works to swinging a hammer here. Again, see my comment regarding the thief on the cross - did what he could for as long as he could. We have all been blessed with different gifts to use in serving God and you seem to have a very limited view on what different people do in service. I've met some truly inspiring physically disabled Christians who did what they could. Sing loudly, offer free Christian based financial advice, share your struggles so that someone else might see a way through theirs, smile and greet people at church, sit at the church office and fold mailers, help maintain a church website, and yes - listen to someone and pray for them. I've seen a lot of different works over the years. No one is saying Christians in a coma aren't getting into heaven because they have been lying around doing nothing.
- some Christians struggle with sin more than others. New Christians might be coming out of a deeply rooted sinful lifestyle that might have a stronger hold and thus take more to come out from. Therefore, early on they might be short on works. I would like to think that with time, though, Christians go through a sanctification process where the struggle with sin becomes less and less, and the "fruit" of their faith becomes more and more apparent. Every Christian is different and at a different stage in their sanctification, and each may progress at different rates and in different ways which would make the relationship between true, saving faith and works highly variable. Therefore, at a given point in time, works can be an unreliable indicator of someone's saving faith.
I agree with just about all of this, but you seem to be viewing works in a cumulative and rank order way (1 point for this, 5 points for that). As said before, no one is perfect and works aren't a perfect reading for exactly what is going on in someone's heart. I don't envision St. Peter at the pearly gates with a tally sheet counting up works points or taking someone's temperature at the exact moment of death. But for a lot of people, works have been a part of getting to and staying at that "true, saving faith."
- the thief on the cross shows that works don't matter in whether one goes to heaven or not.
- saying that "works matter in whether or not one goes to heaven" is putting the focus of your salvation on your works, not faith. It doesn't matter what your view of works is. Even if works somehow led to or help someone maintain their faith in Jesus, that statement is still focusing on what you did, and not what Jesus did. What you did was NOT determinative of your salvation. What Jesus did, and your faith in him,
is. This isn't difficult.
- I'm not sure how works "leads to, maintains, or reinforces" faith in Jesus, but saying that it does is saying that your works was determinative of your salvation. You're putting the cart in front of the horse. You're saying that had you not done something, you never would have been saved.
- I didn't evade your question. I said that true Christians would NOT stop doing works. Your asking a question that is akin to asking "what if God sinned?". The answer would be first and foremost that God does not sin, otherwise He wouldn't be God. Similarly, if all Christians stopped doing works, then they wouldn't be Christians. So your question is self defeating. Make sense?
- Yes, you said the thief on the cross did what he did because of his faith. But now
you're evading the question - do you believe that had he not "done" anything but rather believed in his heart, that Jesus still would have saved him? Because if you do, then works didn't matter whether he went to heaven or not. So we shouldn't say that it does.
- If someone is physically incapable of doing anything, even communicate, but in their heart they come to believe in Jesus, and all they can do is lie there afterwards - if you're not saying that person isn't going to heaven, then don't say that "works matter whether someone goes to heaven or not".
You're really trying hard to justify the statement "works matter in whether you go to heaven or not", but it's easier just to try to understand it's colloquial meaning to be saying that works are
determinative of one's salvation. In that light, if that's wrong, and if it's not what you believe, then you shouldn't be saying it.