Interplanner
Well-known member
He will never give you a direct answer to that.
lol
Christ's righteousness justifies me from my sins. next?
He will never give you a direct answer to that.
lol
Christ's righteousness justifies me from my sins. next?
You have that righteousness now?
Imputed righteousness is not the same as personal transformation. Imputed--reckoned--credited--transferred righteousness covers the DEBT of sin; it does not indicate how much personal transformation has taken place.
The church's teaching about the two aspects of salvation is so poor that there is mass confusion. People mix them all the time, even though there used to be well-known hymns that kept the two properly distinct. 'Save me from sins double curse / ...from its guilt and power.'
Credited righteousness is the great gift discussed in Rom 3, 4, 9, 10, Gal 3, 4, Phil 3. Enjoy.
Imputed righteousness is not the same as personal transformation. Imputed--reckoned--credited--transferred righteousness covers the DEBT of sin; it does not indicate how much personal transformation has taken place.
The church's teaching about the two aspects of salvation is so poor that there is mass confusion. People mix them all the time, even though there used to be well-known hymns that kept the two properly distinct. 'Save me from sins double curse / ...from its guilt and power.'
Credited righteousness is the great gift discussed in Rom 3, 4, 9, 10, Gal 3, 4, Phil 3. Enjoy.
this is the utter dishonesty of the 2P2P garbage. No where in the whole NT is there the sentiment that there is a 2nd or a close 2nd or one for one group, one for another, BUT THEY DON'T KNOW THIS because of their isolated and compartmentalized way of reading.
The Greek word translated "gospel" means good news or glad tidings. Was it not good news to the Jews when it was preached to them that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God? Of course it was. And belief in that good news resulted in salvation (Jn.20:30-31; 1 Jn.5:1-5).
It was good news to the Gentiles that the Lord Jesus died for our sins and belief in that truth results in salvation (1 Cor.15:1-4).
So we see two different instances of good news or "gospel" where belief in either resulted in salvation.
Let me ask you a question. What was the "content" of the gospel which was being preached here?:
"And he sent them to preach the kingdom of God, and to heal the sick. And he said unto them, Take nothing for your journey, neither staves, nor scrip, neither bread, neither money; neither have two coats apiece. And whatsoever house ye enter into, there abide, and thence depart. And whosoever will not receive you, when ye go out of that city, shake off the very dust from your feet for a testimony against them. And they departed, and went through the towns, preaching the gospel, and healing every where" (Lk.9:2-6).
Thanks!
That the Messiah who would sacrifice for sins, take them away as a sacrificial lamb was HERE.
Was the passover lamb a sin offering?
:idunno:
That the Messiah who would sacrifice for sins, take them away as a sacrificial lamb was HERE.
As silent as the audience, who witnesses STP's "smooth" moves with Mary Grace.
Imputed righteousness is not the same as personal transformation. Imputed--reckoned--credited--transferred righteousness covers the DEBT of sin; it does not indicate how much personal transformation has taken place.
The church's teaching about the two aspects of salvation is so poor that there is mass confusion. People mix them all the time, even though there used to be well-known hymns that kept the two properly distinct. 'Save me from sins double curse / ...from its guilt and power.'
Credited righteousness is the great gift discussed in Rom 3, 4, 9, 10, Gal 3, 4, Phil 3. Enjoy.
Do you stand before God at this moment with the perfect righteousness of Christ?
We either do or we don't. Which is it?
Yes. How does this answer the grammar question of Gal 2?
How did you get it?
Even if you can't read Greek, with a few tools you can still diagram it. You need to know a few things Greek does that English does not: word endings change spelling when they are in the different diagram slots of Noun, Object of Preposition, Direct Object and Indirect Object. Those are called 'cases.' And of course for number.
Diagramming is much more important than lists of meanings like Vines. A diagram in English will not be very different from a Greek one, but the case will be 99% exact.
This Gal 2 2-headed gospel myth is entirely due to that kind of mistake and to violating or raping the verb 'gospel-ing' which is about one message; the Direct Object is built-in.
Even if you can't read Greek, with a few tools you can still diagram it. You need to know a few things Greek does that English does not: word endings change spelling when they are in the different diagram slots of Noun, Object of Preposition, Direct Object and Indirect Object. Those are called 'cases.' And of course for number.
Diagramming is much more important than lists of meanings like Vines. A diagram in English will not be very different from a Greek one, but the case will be 99% exact.
This Gal 2 2-headed gospel myth is entirely due to that kind of mistake and to violating or raping the verb 'gospel-ing' which is about one message; the Direct Object is built-in.
Even if you can't read Greek, with a few tools you can still diagram it. You need to know a few things Greek does that English does not: word endings change spelling when they are in the different diagram slots of Noun, Object of Preposition, Direct Object and Indirect Object. Those are called 'cases.' And of course for number.
Diagramming is much more important than lists of meanings like Vines. A diagram in English will not be very different from a Greek one, but the case will be 99% exact.
This Gal 2 2-headed gospel myth is entirely due to that kind of mistake and to violating or raping the verb 'gospel-ing' which is about one message; the Direct Object is built-in.