BusyTarpDuster2017 said:That is a mischaracterization of how Christianity is framed in the U.S. The belief is not that repeating certain words in a prayer saves, it's the belief in your heart that Jesus is Lord and that he died for your sins and rose from the dead - just as it is presented to us by the apostle Paul.Realitybites said:
A discussion about the meaning of repentance and salvation to ensure that these concepts are fully understood.
I have a sense that the current framing of Christianity in the US goes something like this: (1) I feel bad for the bad things I do, and I don't want to go to hell, so I'll pray the sinners prayer and go to church to avoid it or (2) Jesus ate with sinners and loves me just as I am, and I go to church for a positive emotional fix.
I suspect that the former described much of evangelical / fundamental church gospel presentations in the second half of the 20th century with the 1990s being a transition to the latter which dominates today.
Both fail to grasp the whole truth.
Genesis tells us that God created us in his *image* and *likeness* to be in communion with Him. In the fall, that image was marred, that likeness was lost, and that communion was broken.
Fundamentally, salvation is more than saying a prayer to change ones legal status so that you can avoid hell. It is the process of reversing the effects of the fall and restoring communion with God. Yes, this process saves you from sin and death, but only because it reverses the effects of the fall.
Remorse and repentance are two different things. The former can lead to the latter, but real Christian repentance - a change in direction - is much more similar to AA's twelve step program than most gospel presentations let on...and it is this change in direction that enables God to begin undoing the effects of the fall.
If we merely feel remorse for what we have done and pray a sinners prayer (for the Evangelicals) or go to confession (for the Roman Catholics) without repentance as defined above we are still following a way that seems right to a man but leads to death.
Just so we are clear about what these terms actually mean.
If salvation is a "process" of reversal of the effects from the fall, then at what point is that reversal completed enough to acquire salvation? What happens if death comes before completion? How was the thief on the cross saved, if all he did was believe in his heart and confessed it to Jesus?
Agreed. I never said that merely reciting an empty prayer would save. Salvation is by God's Grace Through us placing our Faith in Christ and believing in our heart that He died and rose again, shedding His bood as a Sacrifice for our sins.
The prayer, only IF done in Faith, sums these things up and confirms our belief to God. The prayer is not required for Salvation, but Faith in the things listed IS required for Salvation.
Christ is the payment for our sins, not good deeds or lack of sin, but if we are truly saved, we should desire to please God and do good works for Him, not so that we can be saved but because we are already saved.