You can't if you are not here to do so, which was the point of the examples I used.Sam Lowry said:If I get angry, I'll ask forgiveness and resolve to confess it as soon as I can. There's no particular number of times to receive the sacrament that is "enough" or "not enough."Mothra said:You think the "simpler" position is: "I have a lot of work to do to be saved. Don't know if it will be enough, but I sure hope so"?Sam Lowry said:I do all of those things...sometimes. I don't see how anyone can honestly say they do all of them all of the time. So the question remains, how do I know whether I'm in the super secret club?BusyTarpDuster2017 said:When you are a true believer, you find yourself running to God everytime you have a problem, like a child runs to his "daddy" (Galatians 4:6 - "Abba" means something like "daddy"). You try your best to keep Jesus' commandments (1 John 2:5). You exhibit love for God over wordly things (1 John 2:15). You have a love for all other Christians (1 John 3:14). You don't just say you love others, you actually do something (1 John 3:18-19). These are just some of the signs that the Bible tells us that our faith is real.90sBear said:Belief: trust, faith, or confidence in someone or something.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:The analogy was not about faith. It was about the unlikelihood of true belief becoming unbelief. If you can't understand the analogy, then make your point relevant by explaining how what you're saying has to do with the fact that a true believer can never really un-believe.90sBear said:The problem is your analogy is explicitly incorrect according to the Bible's definition of faith. In what way is quoting how the Bible defines faith in a discussion on faith just being argumentative?BusyTarpDuster2017 said:You're making the same mistake Sam Lowry is making. The color analogy is just an analogy. I'm not making an exact comparison. You even noted this yourself, and now you're going back on it, presumably just to be argumentative.90sBear said:We base our faith on a conviction of things unseen. There is no seeing color. Anything tangible cannot be compared to faith.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Whether it's revealed by hindsight or not, or whether I'm personally deceiving myself right now or not, really doesn't have anything to do with the fact that a true believer can't really ever "unbelieve", any more than someone can "unsee" color after one has already seen it.90sBear said:Sure, but again it sometimes is only with human hindsight that this may be revealed.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:If something happens to them and it causes them to unbelieve, then what happened brought their self-deception to light. That's why sometimes those bad things that happen are actually good.90sBearWe are not floating in a sea of uncertainty as you're making it out to be. We can know if we're lying to ourselves, and sometimes it takes other people to reveal that to us. We each know what we really believe, if we are honest with ourselves. said:Quote:Right, because they're deceiving themselves. Only later do they realize it.Quote:
You just said before that they might not realize it at the time.
Or something happens to them.
As the learned scholar Mike Tyson once said, "Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth."
You could be deceiving yourself right now and just haven't been spiritually punched in the mouth yet.
The truth of Jesus doesn't depend on what happens in one's life. If you believe that it did, that it really was that tenuous, then your belief in it was self-deception.
It's not rare for a believer to be "punched in the mouth" and have their faith shaken. But if they are a true believer, it's only shaken, it doesn't fall (Psalm 37:22-23).
Again, you could be deceiving yourself right now and just haven't been spiritually punched in the mouth yet.
Faith is confidence in what we hope for. You hope and have confidence that you will be saved. But by your own statement you could be deceiving yourself right now but as humans we don't know if you are what you consider a "true believer" without the gift of hindsight.
The fact remains that true believers can't really ever "unbelieve". Your "hindsight" point is just a "what if" scenario, and has nothing to do with this fact.
I understand that your point was not seeing the color but rather the personal and potentially permanent change that came after an event. But it must be clarified that there is no tangible event the way there is when you see a color. If it is faith, it is intangible. And IMO that is an important distinction.
"True believers" as you describe them can't tangibly know if they truly believe and are changed the way they know they saw the color red because there is no tangible aspect to faith.
Again, it is confidence in what we hope for.
Again, I think the passage is relevant.
Imagine someone's surprise if they got to the pearly gates and St. Peter said, "Yes, you showed unwavering faith in your life. But what you don't realize is that if your wife had stepped in front of a bus you actually would have gone into a spiral and eventually denied God. Sorry, no heaven for you."
How was this person to ever know they weren't a "True" believer since their wife never stepped in front of a bus?
You seem to equate your use of "True" believer with "Objective knower".
An objective knower can have any number of tests done to determine if they saw the color red. After the fact if they decide they didn't see the color red, a piece of paper can be shown confirming they did.
If someone takes a polygraph (yes I know they aren't scientifically perfect) asking if they believe in God at that moment and they pass, does that confirm they are "True" believers? If not, how were they to know otherwise at that moment?
The challenge is no human objectively knows they are what you call a "True" believer until God says so and we don't when that is. Until then IMO there are no Annie's Secret Circle of True Believers, there are just believers with varying levels of faith.
Just the way some are concerned about believers trying to rely on works to get into heaven, I worry that belief in Annie's Secret Circle of True Believers would lead to a false presumption that they are members.
That's why it is called faith and not fact.
It seems a lot simpler just to admit I have work to do.
Wow. To me, that kind of faith is absolutely crazy-making when you consider the repercussions. It's not a matter of life or death, but heaven or hell for eternity. What if I die before failing to take a lustful thought captive? What if I get unjustifiably angry before suffering a widow-maker heart attack, and didn't have a chance to confess or perform a sacrament? Or perhaps, what if I simply didn't engage in enough sacraments and God deems me unworthy?
There is absolutely nothing simple, or biblical, about that position. It also demonstrates misplaced motives and an incredible misunderstanding about works. If we are performing works because we are hoping and praying that it will be enough to get us into Heaven, then we are doing it for all the wrong reasons. Works should be an outcropping of our salvation - our faith and trust in Christ, love for our fellow man, and our desire to save the lost. If we are merely going through the motions in the hope it will be enough to save us, that is not what God had in mind.
The idea that a loving God is going to condemn a Christian to an eternity in hell simply because, despite having faith in him, the individual didn't immediately repent after getting angry not only makes no logical sense, but is also anti-biblical.
And it's also got to be crazy-making. I guess you just better hope you did enough to satisfy God's wrath against you before you die because if you screw up, there'll be hell to pay.