That is why I object to anyone who appeals to the Greek when it is not in any of our translations. I have had three years of Greek. But I know that I am a novice compared to the translators of the Bibles we have. One of my teachers was Dr. Murray J Harris, who was on the committee of translators for the NIV New Testament. I could not compete with him in his knowledge of Greek. I am not trying to say that I know Greek better that Dr. Jeremiah. But I am saying that the Bible translators, such as Dr. Murray J Harris know a lot more than Dry. Jeremiah. You do not need to be a Greek expert to know that! It is just common sense. If Dr. Jeremiah knew as much as Dr. Murray J Harris, then Jeremiah would have been invited to be one of the Bible translators.But he was not. So when Jeremiah goes against what the translations say, I am sticking to the translations.
You say what you say; Dr. Jeremiah says what he says. Here's what he says:
"
Is working out our salvation the same as earning it?
"We must be careful when we interpret the words
working out our salvation. The term does not mean we can earn our salvation. We have no part in the true reconciling work of forgiveness - only the blood of Jesus Christ can do that. But we are called to work out what God has worked in. This is called
the divine cooperative.
"In the Greek, to
work out describes those who worked in the mines. They mined out of the ground what the Creator had placed there and then brought those riches into the light. The work of God delivers the gift of salvation to us. We then take that gift and, by the power of the Holy Spirit, diligently work to perfect ourselves as followers of Christ (1 Cor. 12:6; 15:10; 2 Cor. 3:5; Eph. 2:8,10; 3:20; 1 Tim. 4:7; Titus 3:5, 8; 2:14; Heb. 13:20, 21; 1 Pet. 1:3-7, 10).
"Unless gifts are put to use, they are wasted. If someone gives us a shirt for Christmas, we wear it. If we receive a book, we read it. As recipients of God's salvation, we must put to use the gifts we have received if we are to become His light-bearers to the world. Thank God we have been given the indwelling of the Spirit to enable this work, as apart from that gift, such a 'working out' would be impossible."
I was once Reformed when I was Protestant. I found that the Reformed theology can be psychological harmful, especially to an OCD person. Eternal security becomes eternal insecurity. It is a vicious cycle.
1. One accepts Christ - his theology tells him he is eternally secure IF he genuinely accepted Christ. If he did really accept Christ, God will produce the fruit that proves he his saved.
2. But the person cannot be sure of the fruit in the future. Since it is a possibility that future fruit may be not happen, then his past acceptance of Christ would be all an illusion.
3. He starts to doubt his past acceptance of Christ. So he accepts Christ again. It is like being "born again" again!
Bob, if you remain a Protestant, it would be good to at least be something like a Wesleyan Methodist. John Wesley preached what he called "present assurance". Present assurance is that as long as he currently trusts Jesus Christ as his Savior and Lord, he is then saved. There is no introspection of what happened years ago. As long as he follows Jesus Christ now he knows that he is saved now.
Almost all Protestant Christians that I know not only believe in eternal security, they do NOT keep questioning their salvation, as I do. The vicious cycle you mention applies certainly to me and to some other OCD people, and maybe other people.
I have a book called
Stop Asking Jesus Into Your Heart: How To Know You Are Saved, by JD Greear. He also says to concentrate on where your faith is resting in the present, not on a past prayer you prayed. He said that by the time he was eighteen, he had asked Jesus into his heart 5,000 times. He says he got permanent assurance one night in college, after reading Luther's commentary on Romans 10:9-10. He indicates that it is possible for doubts to come up for him now, but when they do, he does not look back to past experiences of his, not even to the night reading Luther's commentary. He says he looks back 2,000 years to what Christ accomplished on Calvary.
After being sure I was saved this past Monday, I came to severely doubt my salvation again today. That is why I logged on. I, again, certainly experience the vicious cycle you refer to. Then I saw your response and decided to respond to it before posting my thing about my current doubt.
You wrote:
"But I think you were exposed to the same preaching and teaching from only one viewpoint - the Protestant, Reformed, Evangelical viewpoint. What about the Arminian viewpoint? What about Methodist? What about Assemblies of God? What about Orthodox? What about Catholic?"
I was also in the Assemblies of God (I was quite a church hopper). In terms of salvation, they believe something similar to John Wesley's "present assurance". They believe that you can lose your salvation. If you presently no longer believe in Jesus as Savior and Lord then you are not saved. If you then start living for Christ again, then you are saved again.
What attracted me to the Assemblies of God was their worship. I was tired of three hymns and then a long sermon. But then the Pentecostal worship started bothering me. It seemed to be more about getting on a emotional/spiritual high than glorifying God.