4 For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost,
5 And have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the world to come,
6If they shall fall away, to renew them again unto repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame.
I came across these verses a few minutes ago while doing an engine search on something entirely different. When I read the verses I was stunned. The few of you who know me ,know that I have a hard time with believing that God would except me back after walking away from Him or even accepting that I belonged in the first place. I read these verses over and over again and I cant see them meaning anything different than what they say. In one time in my life I thought I had tasted of the heavenly gift and was made partakers of the Holy Ghost. <--- not words I would have used but I did believe that I had beautiful dealings with the Holy spirit...
These verses must be why I always feel lost. If any one reads this and feels led to respond, it is my hope you respond with what you believe these scripture verses mean to you and hopefully not think I am wanting to talk about OSAS . Thank you for any replies. I am really upset about this. Is it now impossible for me?
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"I believe that apostasy and blasphemy of the Holy Spirit aren't the same thing and apostasy can be forgiven."
I agree. However, often apostates refuse to repent. This is not for me to judge, but Christ alone; however I have great concern for those who "turn away from the Living God" to fables and myths and human inventions. The can have "the form of Godliness, denying the power thereof".
Funny you should talk about this new age stuff. Watchman just posted a blog about this kind of thing & how they are trying to work it into our schools & in the minds of our children.
Or out of it & replaced with whatever. Thanks for the link.
Amanda, I think a person can have a false understanding, without necessarily being apostate. Most new believers are confused about a lot of stuff. If they are seeking and growing, they will mature and learn the truth and adhere to it eventually.
To me, an apostate is someone who knows what scripture says and just chooses to ignore it for sake of what is convenient, popular or easier. I have known some who have done that. It became too painful to admit that they were not following Christ and worshipping in spirit and truth, so they chose to stop believing or practicing the truth. To me, that is where apostasy comes in.
So it goes like this: you know that the Bible teaches that God answers prayer and that the Spirit restores and heals. Yet, you find that you are not getting answers to your prayers and not being healed. So, therefore you conclude that the message about restoration and healing ended with the Apostles because it isn't working for you. Why? because that is easier than finding out why God isn't answering *YOUR prayers.
I'm not an expert on the topic of apostasy at all.
I think this is where discernment comes in. We have to seek God through his Word and let Him teach us what we cannot find for ourselves. Sometimes Christians figure out the truth about something last, because they are so caught up in a cultural understanding that blinds them to what God tells us already in His word. Sort of like the Church arguing against Galileo about the earth orbiting the sun and denying the earth is round, when scripture reveals these things to us, which they simply were not aware of the passages showing it.
To me, it also sometimes seems that false religion gets some things right where Christians have missed what God was already telling us. And that's where many Christians fall prey. They see something that appears to be a nicer way to apply what they already know the Bible teaches and so they abandon essential truth and follow the more pleasant or popular version of what God has already said. They try somehow to apply it backward into their Christian experience. Or they add it to their Christian view, and begin to add all of the lies with it.
There is another danger, though. Which is to automatically rule something out simply because it comes from a person who comes from outside the Christian worldview. A lot of people get all spun up that Western Medicine practices are acceptable, but Eastern Medicine practices are not. Well, there's some things that Eastern Medicine has known about the human body for a thousand years that Western doctors are just starting to learn and study now.
Some Christians are afraid to go to a Chiropractor, because the notion of Chiropractics originated in eastern teachings. Ridiculous. Some people would rather have a nerve cut by a surgeon than have a bone adjusted that is out of place. Yet, that same person would crack their knuckles if a finger became jammed and would never consider having the nerve cut in their finger to make it stop hurting. But they will in their neck or back.
If you use meditation as a way to calm yourself and increase your breathing, it's all good. That is a simple part of learning self control. But... If you start humming the name of a pagan idol while you do it - you have serious trouble.
If we were to rule out a health practice because of where it originated, well then you couldn't take Aspirin. Because the Native Americans who worshipped the wind and the rain also were the ones who first discovered the pain relieving properties of the Willow Leaf, which is where Aspirin ultimately comes from.
So, I think the Christian must let the Word of God be our comprehensive guide to all things in life and simply use Biblical discernment to find what is Good, True, Right and Praiseworthy in the world.
*[NOTE: I'm saying You and Your in a totally generic sense, not picking on you personally. ]
You are definitely right in this observation: a lot of people think Jesus was just a teacher of Zen Buddhism which is to miss his message by a mile.
Apostasy.
Turning against God, as evidenced by abandonment and repudiation of former beliefs. The term generally refers to a deliberate renouncing of the faith by a once sincere believer rather than a state of ignorance or mistaken knowledge. Apostasy is distinguished from heresy (denial of a part of the faith), and from transfer of allegiance from one religious body to another within the same faith. Also, it is possible to deny the faith, as Peter once did, and then at a later time reaffirm it.
Originally, “apostasy” meant literal rebellion. Thus the Jews were described as “rebels” against King Artaxerxes (1 Esd 2:23) and Jason as a “rebel against the laws” (2 Mc 5:6–8). OT descriptions of spiritual rebellion include departure from the Law, forsaking temple worship, and willful disobedience toward God himself (Jos 22:22, rebellion or unfaithful act; 2 Chr 29:19, transgression kjv, or faithlessness; Jer 2:19, backslidings kjv, or apostasy). The prophetic writings of Isaiah and Jeremiah provide many examples of Israel’s defections (Is 1:2–4; Jer 2:19). Israelite kings were often guilty of apostasy (Rehoboam—1 Kgs 14:22–24; Ahab—1 Kgs 16:30–33; Ahaziah—1 Kgs 22:51–53; Jehoram—2 Chr 21:6, 10; Ahaz—2 Chr 28:1–4; Manasseh—2 Chr 33:1–19; Amon—2 Chr 33:21–23).
In NT times many disciples withdrew from Christ (Jn 6:66), the most notorious example being Judas Iscariot. The Greek word from which “apostasy” is derived appears in only two passages. The apostle Paul was accused of apostasy for being “against the laws of Moses” (Acts 21:21 lb). Apostasy was given an eschatological significance in 2 Thessalonians 2:3. Christians were warned not to be carried away and deceived in the widespread apostasy to come in the end times before the Lord’s return. That apostasy is linked to the rise of a “man of rebellion” who will be “Satan’s tool” (2 Thes 2:3–12 lb; cf. 1 Tm 4:1–3).
Many other NT passages, using different words, convey similar warnings. In the last days, tribulation and persecution will cause many to “fall away” (Mt. 24:9, 10); false prophets will arise and “lead many astray” (Mt 24:11). Other causes of apostasy include temptation (Lk 8:13) and unbelief (Heb 3:12). Paul cited Hymenaeus and Alexander as examples of those who had rejected the faith (1 Tm 1:20). The writer of Hebrews referred to those who had believed and then departed from the faith as being in a hopeless state with no possibility of further repentance (Heb 6:1–6). The consequences of willful sinning after receiving Christ are terrifying (Heb 10:26–31). The apostle Peter said that, for believers in Christ who knowingly turned away, “the last state has become worse for them than the first” (2 Pt 2:20–22). The apostle John addresses this same problem (1 Jn 2:18, 19).
Ten periods of persecution intensified the problem of apostasy during the first four centuries of the church’s existence. Repentance and public confession were required before offenders could be accepted again. The Roman emperor Julian (361–63) renounced the Christian faith and made such a vigorous effort to establish paganism in the empire that he became known as “the Apostate.” Apostasy continues to be a danger to the Christian church, especially where the church is undergoing persecution.
James D. Price and Luder G. Whitlock Jr
blasphemy of the Holy Spirit, an offense that Jesus identifies as an “eternal sin” that can never be forgiven (Mark 3:28–30). In the immediate context for this passage, the works of God performed by Jesus through the Holy Spirit are being attributed to the spirit of Beel-zebul (3:22). Those who identify the saving work of God as something evil commit a sin that is unpardonable because, ironically, the power they reject holds their only hope for pardon. See also blasphemy.
S.B./M.A.P.
I posted a Commentary & Dictionary but it was really interesting & I couldn't improvise it without cutting some of it out & didn't want to take any of it out.
I was told by a friend who is Catholic that there is a whole chaoter missing out of our bible. Does anyone know if there is or not.
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