Should We Ever Say, "I Am Saved"? / Douglass, Herbert E / (PB/2003-2003/B+/USED)

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Description

*Condition Note: This book is gently used and clean.*

 

Many Seventh-day Adventist Christians have been taught to believe that to claim salvation as theirs now is presumption. That we should never say, "I am saved." That our names will soon come up in the investigative judgment and we might be found wanting. The result has been churches filled with heartsick Adventists who, though raised as "good" SDAs (never eating meat, being ready for the Sabbath at sundown on Friday, reciting memory verses, attending camp meetings, etc.), exist under a gloomy cloud of uncertainty. If you walk under the same gloomy cloud, this book may bring the sunshine back into your life.

The compelling insights found in Should We Ever Say, "I Am Saved"? summarize doctor Herbert Douglass's study and personal discovery through the years of what it means to be assured of salvation. In these pages you will learn the difference between genuine and false assurance; how to have genuine assurance now; what Ellen White really said about assurance; how grace relates to faith; what works, legalism, and perfection have to do with assurance and much more. If you long to be a happy child of God, delivered from doubt and filled with faith, this book is must-reading.

 

Table of Contents

1. Uncomfortable Questions
2. Genuine Assurance Now
3. False assurance
4. How John found Genuine Assurance
5. Ellen White on Genuine Assurance
6. Ellen White's Misused Statements
7. How to Maintain Genuine Assurance
8. How Much Faith Must I Have?
9. How Grace relates to Faith
10. But What About "Works"?
11. And What About "Legalism"?
12. Also, What About That "Wedding Garment"?
13. Perfection--the Relentless Pursuit
14. What Do Habits Have to Do With Assurance?
15. Investigative Judgement--Good News!
16. Can Assurance Be Lost?
17. The Good News Always Gets Better

 

Used Book Information

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Details

Binding:
Paperback
Copyright:
2003
Printed:
2003
Pages:
158
Publisher:
Pacific Press Publishing Association
Condition:
B+

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