More conflating. You are now lumping in sanctification with salvation. Try to stay on point. I'm not talking about sanctification. I'm talking about salvation and the role of God in it.
Saving faith is only possible for those who are free to acquire it. Until you reconcile what God has said concerning the nature of the fallen natural man and the nature of salvation, you will continue to misunderstand it.
Conflating means harmonizing or interpreting Scripture in context with the whole of GW,
which is what we all ought to be doing, and all fallen men are free to acquire salvation,
which begins the process of sanctification as the Scripture I cited teach, so be slow to divorce them.
TOP #55: Believers should renew their minds so that they will appreciate God’s good, pleasing and perfect will. [Rom. 12:2]
TOP #45: God has the power to determine what is required for salvation, and He is just to destroy those who resist His will. [Rom. 9:16-29] After noting (in verses 6-13) that God had chosen which one of Rebecca’s sons (through whom Messiah’s lineage would be traced) before they were born (cf. Mal. 1:2-3) . The word translated as “hate” (miseo) is the same as in Luke 14:26 with reference to family, so a better translation would be “preferred”: loving Jacob/hating Esau refers to God preferring that Jacob’s descendants serve as the heritage for Messiah rather than to individual salvation.
31. Romans 9:14-16 stresses that s/e depends on God’s mercy rather than being achieved by human effort, although the preceding context has shown that (the non-meritorious condition of) faith is involved, which truth can be stated as “God initiates; sinners cooperate—or not”, because of MFW.
32. Romans 9:17 refers to pharaoh in Exodus 9:13-35 as an example of someone whom God allowed to oppose His will so that His power might be manifested by the plagues. The OT passage indicates that pharaoh was conscious of his sin but “He and his officials hardened their hearts” (v.34b).
TOP #18: Those who ignore God’s urging of repentance will reap divine wrath on the day of judgment. [Rom. 2:3-5] God’s kindness or patience with sinners is meant to lead them toward repentance, which implies that sinners are able to repent because of God’s leading, and those who do not repent but instead stubbornly resist God’s leading are storing up wrath against themselves
TOP #19: On Judgment Day God will enforce just punishment via souls reaping what they have sown or done. [Rom. 2:5-6, cf. TOP #83 & #141] Punishment is just because God does not show favoritism (TOP #22). This truth is akin to karma (Gal. 6:7-9).
TOP #20: Those who persevere in seeking God’s salvation will receive eternal life. [Rom. 2:7-8&10, cf. 3:22-24 & 6:23b] Paul explains in detail that seeking to earn salvation by obeying moral law perfectly is impossible, so we should accept God’s plan of salvation/election (s/e) via faith in the Gospel of Christ’s atonement. Seeking echoes what Jesus commanded (in Matt. 7:7) and connects with the doctrine of perseverance (cf. Heb. 10:36 & Jam. 1:3-4).
[As a former tulipist who learned its error by reading GW for himself with an open mind/heart,
I pray all CC readers will be edified, enriched or given a spiritual boost because of what I share
or pass on before I pass on.]
It only takes a spark To get a fire going
And soon all those around Can warm up in the glowing
That’s how it is with God’s love Once you’ve experienced it
You spread His love To everyone
You want to pass it on.
What a wondrous time is spring When all the trees are budding
The birds begin to sing The flowers start their blooming
That’s how it is with God’s love Once you’ve experienced it
You want to sing It’s fresh like spring
You want to pass it on
I wish for you my friend This happiness that I’ve found
You can depend on Him It matters not where you’re bound
I’ll shout it from the mountain top I want the world to know
The Lord of Love Has come to me
I want to pass it on.