I've never said that individual accountability needs to be eliminated.
That's good. I've previously talked to a Calvinist believer in predestination who didn't believe in free will or individual accountability. In my opinion that view is entirely unscriptural and incorrect.
I said our works cannot earn our salvation. I cannot figure out why you don't get it.
And I've agreed with that many times. Not sure why you think I don't get it.
Our works are evidence of our faith, but they do not gain/earn us faith or salvation.
I'm OK with that.
As for predestination, it's clearly taught in the Bible that the believers are the elect, aka, the chosen. Now we can go to the Arminian point of view, or the Calvin point of view on those, but they aren't really salvation points so I don't see the point. What isn't up for discussion is that predestination, election, is taught in the Bible. Now as for our choices, yes, we have to make choices, as we have free will.
I'm on board with election being taught in the Bible. I'm not going to call it predestination, though, due to my previous bad experience with the Calvinist.
But God grants us the ability to do so. So yes we have to repent, but we cannot do that without God allowing us to do so.
Still in agreement, I think, but I'm not exactly sure what you mean by "God allowing us to do so". If you mean "God has provided a Savior whose atonement pays the price of our sin when we repent, and without that Savior we would be unable to be cleansed from sin", then we're together.
Now I'll say this again, because it seems to get forgotten continually...if you claim to have faith, but your works do not show that, then you do not have faith. You cannot have true faith without works.
Agreed.
But we can have works without faith. There are many people who do good that are not saved.
I'm not going to judge whether or not people are saved, I will let Jesus do that. But Matthew 25
strongly suggests that people who do good
will be accepted by the Lord, even if they weren't knowingly serving Him at the time. That matches C.S. Lewis's belief as expressed in The Last Battle (don't know if you are familiar with the Narnia books), where a follower of Tash was saved by Aslan at the end.
So what does this tell us? Works do not save, but faith does. Works are just evidence. We absolutely need works, but it's not so that we can earn anything by them.
As you said, faith without works is dead. So if you cannot have faith without works I'm not sure why you are so insistent on the bolded point. Seems to me like they BOTH are required for salvation. And of the two, Jesus himself seemed much more concerned about people's actions than about their beliefs. (By the way, this is entirely reconciled by the LDS doctrine that the gospel is taught in the hereafter... people who do good in this life will accept Jesus in the next, so they can be saved despite not necessarily having been Christian in this life.)