If Christ is the believer's life, I'm unsure what a believer "trying to live for God in his own strength" even means.
Depends on your definition of "Christ is the believer's life" - on how that "life" operates, works, or functions.
I take it to mean exactly and simply that. His life is the believer's life, just as a body's life is the same life in each part of it. Believers are His Body; as their Head, He is their life...not lives, life.
Can't think of another way to figure it, don't feel the need to try.
Gal 2:20; Col 1:27, 3:4,
One of us misunderstands the other. Don't feel the need to try.
Are all Christians carnal?
Romans 7:14 For we know that the law is spiritual, but I am carnal, sold under sin.
Romans 8:6-7 For to be carnally minded is death, but to be spiritually minded is life and peace. Because the carnal mind is enmity against God; for it is not subject to the law of God, nor indeed can be.
Paul is noting a distinction between two realities within the Believer. As in...
It's an allegory.
No, because he didn't say that. He did not thank God that with the flesh he is bound, as if by law, to serve the sin which indwells it. That's what flesh does. That's ALL it does. He simply stated it as a fact because it is a fact for now.
Notice two very important things...
1. Paul starts this section telling us not to be ignorant of our death to law and condemnation. Why would he begin with that? Why would we need told this if there's not a problem here?
2. Because Paul clearly distinguishes the flesh that sins as now completely separate from his NEW life and identity in Christ...which is a distinction many people today do not make. This, I believe, is the key to your question.
He...the new man...is still trapped with the body of sin for now, but God says it is no longer him and he is no longer it. In God's view they are as separate from one another as sin is from Christ. Why? Because He is the believer's life.
We are counted as having died to flesh and sin and Paul says that's right where our freedom in our walk lies. That's what this section is about.
So the new man--the true Paul, the only one God acknowledges--is not under condemnation because of the flesh that can do nothing BUT sin (Rom 7:18). THE NEW MAN CANNOT SIN.
Old man, New man. One already condemned, the other already counted as died and so beyond all condemnation (Rom 8:1). Gotta see the difference.
I find it helps to read Rom 5-8, as much as possible, as a complete unit with no chapter stops. I white them out.
Yes, the NEW man does not. But the OLD man, who we are to be constantly putting off, can and does. That's Paul's point, here and elsewhere.
Ignorance always says that.
For it is obvious in Scripture that Paul himself had also had his moments in the fleshly mind's perspective.
The apostle Paul was saved when he wrote Ro 7. lain:
O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death? [Rom. 7:24].
"This is not an unsaved man who is crying, “O wretched man that I am”; this is a saved man. The word wretched carries with it the note of exhaustion because of the struggle. “Who is going to deliver me?” He is helpless. His shoulders are pinned to the floor—he has been wrestled down. Like old Jacob, he has been crippled. He is calling for help from the outside." McGee, J. V. (1991). Thru the Bible commentary: The Epistles (Romans 1-8) (electronic ed., Vol. 42, pp. 133–134). Nashville: Thomas Nelson.
See:
Ro 7, 8 The Outline Bible
He'd be the first to say he didn't have to.
Paul was not saved when he was a Pharisee (under the law) and struggling to do what the law demanded. That's the point. There was no indwelling Spirit. So, as long as a man desires to do right, but can't carry it off, he is a worker - not saved and walking according to the Spirit....not empowered by the Spirit.
Yep.
And how are you? You are sorely missed, dear sister!
You're out of touch
I'm out of time (time)
But I'm out of my head
When you're not around
Oh, oh-oh, oh
Oh, oh-oh, oh
- Hall and Oats
Paul wrote Romans 7 as a saved man. :dizzy:
Related:
Lordship
"Ro 7:24 wretched man. In frustration and grief, Paul laments his sin (cf. Pss. 38:14; 130:1–5). A believer perceives his own sinfulness in direct proportion to how clearly he sees the holiness of God and perfection of His law. deliver. This word means “to rescue from danger” and was used of a soldier pulling his wounded comrade from the battlefield. Paul longed to be rescued from his sinful flesh (cf. 8:23). body of death. The believer’s unredeemed humanness, which has its base of operation in the body (see notes on 6:6, 12; 7:5). Tradition says that an ancient tribe near Tarsus tied the corpse of a murder victim to its murderer, allowing its spreading decay to slowly infect and execute the murderer—perhaps that is the image Paul has in mind.
7:25 The first half of this verse answers the question Paul just raised (v. 24)—he is certain that Christ will eventually rescue him when He returns (cf. 8:18, 23; 1 Cor. 15:52, 53, 56, 57; 2 Cor. 5:4). The second half summarizes the two sides of the struggle Paul has described (vv. 14–24). with the mind. See note on v. 23. I myself. Paul’s new redeemed self (see note on 6:6). the flesh. See notes on 6:6, 12; 7:5. law of sin. See note on v. 23." MacArthur, J., Jr. (Ed.). (1997). The MacArthur Study Bible (electronic ed., p. 1706). Nashville, TN: Word Pub.
Christians go through experiences of struggling with their own flesh.
Rom 7:21 I find then a law, that, when I would do good, evil is present with me.
Rom 7:22 For I delight in the law of God after the inward man:
Rom 7:23 But I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members.
Every Christian experiences this from time to time,until deliverance comes, upon submitting to the Lord from the heart.
LA
Yes, I was wondering where your greasy grace 'what sin?'Do you have anything to say for yourself?
See:Paul longed to be rescued from his weak flesh. He was beaten and persecuted. It wasn't pleasant, but it wasn't sin.
Also, because there is no chapter breaks or punctuation in the Greek, it looks like Paul's actual thought here flows more like this...
Paul, the new man, is free. His flesh, in which he was imprisoned, was not.
Are all Christians carnal?
Romans 7:14 For we know that the law is spiritual, but I am carnal, sold under sin.
Romans 8:6-7 For to be carnally minded is death, but to be spiritually minded is life and peace. Because the carnal mind is enmity against God; for it is not subject to the law of God, nor indeed can be.